The Cathedrals’ Interwoven streams for the first time, decades after the group’s farewell

TEXAS GOSPEL VOLUNTEER

For more than two decades, a particular recording by The Cathedrals sat largely beyond reach for most gospel music fans, available only to those lucky enough to own the original physical release. That changes now. Interwoven, one of the beloved quartet’s most cherished albums, has made its debut on digital streaming platforms for the first time, released through StowTown Records with the support of the families of founding members Glen Payne and George Younce.

It is, by any measure, a long time coming.

The Cathedrals were active from 1964 to 1999, rising from their origins as the house group for the Cathedral of Tomorrow church to become what many consider the most popular gospel quartet of their era. Payne and Younce were the heart of that sound, their voices and ministries inseparable from the group’s identity. When the quartet retired in December 1999, they left behind not just recordings but a generation of artists they had mentored, including Ernie Haase, Scott Fowler, Roger Bennett, Gerald Wolfe, Mark Trammell and Kirk Talley.

Interwoven captures the quartet at the height of that artistry. The album is a collection of standards and hymns, rich in harmony and deliberate in its emotional weight, featuring Payne and Younce alongside Kirk Talley and Steve Lee, with Roger Bennett’s piano work anchoring the arrangements throughout. A song like “No Tears In Heaven” illustrates what made the group so enduring: voices in service of something larger than performance, delivering a message of hope that still registers decades after the recording was made.

For Darla Payne, daughter of the late Glen Payne, the release carries a weight that goes well beyond nostalgia. “Interwoven is more than a re-release,” she said. “For our family, it is the continuation of a ministry that meant everything to Dad and to George. These songs brought hope, encouragement and joy to so many people through the years, and we are grateful that listeners can now experience this music again in a new way through streaming platforms.”

That gratitude is not simply sentimental. The Cathedrals have never entirely faded from cultural memory, sustained by devoted fan communities, tribute pages and listeners who have continued passing the recordings along for years. But streaming opens a different kind of door, one that allows a younger audience to encounter the music without needing to track down a physical copy or inherit it from a grandparent’s collection. It is the difference between preservation and genuine accessibility.

StowTown Records, which distributes through Sony/Provident, has positioned the release as both a celebration of what The Cathedrals built and an opportunity for the music to find a wider audience than it has reached in years. Whether that audience arrives already familiar with gospel quartets or entirely new to the form, Interwoven makes a convincing case for why The Cathedrals still matter. The harmonies are tight, the arrangements are confident, and the sense of conviction behind the performances is unmistakable.

Twenty-five years after the group sang their last notes together, it turns out there was still something waiting to be heard.