Kim Burrell
Kimberly Jean Burrell (born August 26, 1972) is an American gospel singer, songwriter, arranger, producer, and pastor from Houston, Texas, noted for blending jazz elements with traditional gospel music through her powerful vocal range and improvisational style.[1][2]
Raised in the Church of God in Christ as the daughter of pastor Julius Burrell Jr. and evangelist Helen Burrell, she performed her first solo at age eight and began recording professionally in the early 1990s.[2][3] Her breakthrough album Everlasting Life (2000) earned her a Stellar Award for Contemporary Female Vocalist of the Year, and subsequent releases like Live (2002) and No Way Tired (2009) garnered multiple Grammy nominations for Best Contemporary Gospel Album and Performance.[2][4] She has collaborated with secular artists, including features on tracks by Frank Ocean and Pharrell Williams, while maintaining a focus on faith-based music that critiques cultural shifts away from Christian doctrine.[5][6]
In 2010, Burrell established the Love & Liberty Fellowship Pentecostal Overcoming Holy Church in Houston, where she serves as senior pastor and delivers sermons rooted in literal biblical interpretation, including condemnations of homosexuality as perversion, which have resulted in professional repercussions such as canceled television appearances despite her refusal to retract such teachings.[7][5] Her career exemplifies a commitment to gospel artistry and pastoral authority amid tensions between evangelical convictions and mainstream entertainment norms.[4]
Early life
Family and upbringing
Kimberly Jean Burrell was born on August 26, 1972, in Houston, Texas, as one of four children to Julius Burrell Jr., a pastor and musician, and Helen Ruth Graham, an evangelist and gospel singer affiliated with the Church of God in Christ (COGIC).[8][4] Her siblings included brother Kevin and sisters Karen and Kathy, with whom she later formed a youth performance group known as the "4 Ks."[9] The family maintained a deeply pious household centered on COGIC principles, which stress biblical literalism, holiness standards, and expressive worship.[8] Burrell's upbringing revolved around her father's congregation, where she was immersed from infancy in church services, choir rehearsals, and ministerial activities that blended music with preaching.[4] This environment sparked her initial engagement with gospel music; she performed her first solo at age one and began regular singing in local choirs, including the Greater Emmanuel COGIC Choir in Houston.[10] Family gatherings often involved collaborative songwriting around the piano led by her brother Kevin, reinforcing the integration of artistic expression and spiritual devotion inherited from her parents' vocations.[11] The Burrell home's emphasis on evangelical discipline and communal worship provided a formative foundation in both vocal performance and oratory, distinct from secular influences, amid Houston's vibrant Black church culture during the 1970s and 1980s.[4][9]Career
Early musical beginnings (1980s–2003)
Burrell, born in Houston, Texas, began performing gospel music in local church settings during her childhood, singing her first solo at the age of one and participating in various choirs thereafter.[10] She developed her skills within the Greater Emmanuel Church of God in Christ (COGIC), recording with the church choir under the direction of Evangelist Myra Summers.[11] Early in her career, Burrell contributed vocals to group recordings, including those with the Gospel Music Workshop of America (GMWA) Youth Choir and the Trinity Temple Full Gospel Mass Choir of Dallas.[4] By the early 1990s, Burrell was actively performing live in gospel circuits, including appearances at events such as the Gospel Explosion in Houston, where archival footage captures her as a young singer delivering powerful renditions.[12] These performances helped establish her presence within niche gospel communities, though she remained focused on traditional and contemporary gospel styles without broader commercial reach.[13] She traveled internationally for gospel engagements during this period, building a dedicated following through independent and church-affiliated outlets.[13] Burrell's first solo album, Everlasting Life, was released on November 24, 1998, by Tommy Boy Gospel, marking a maturation in her spiritual and musical expression compared to prior group work.[14][15] The 13-track project, produced by Asaph Alexander Ward and spanning approximately 48 minutes, featured songs such as "I'll Keep Holding On," "Holy Ghost," and "Over and Over, Again," blending contemporary gospel elements with personal vocal intensity.[16][2] It earned her the 1999 Gospel Music Excellence Award for Contemporary Female Artist of the Year, solidifying her reputation in gospel circles prior to mainstream crossovers.[17]Mainstream recognition and collaborations (2004–2016)
Burrell's album No Ways Tired, released on April 7, 2009, by Shanachie Records, featured interpretations of classic gospel standards and earned her Grammy nominations in 2010 for Best Contemporary Gospel Album and Best Contemporary Gospel Performance for the track "Happy".[18][19] This release solidified her standing within gospel circles, blending traditional influences with her signature jazz-inflected vocal style, though it achieved modest commercial traction primarily in niche markets.[2] Her follow-up, The Love Album, issued in 2011 by Shanachie, received a Grammy nomination in 2012 for Best Gospel Album, highlighting tracks that explored themes of divine affection through contemporary arrangements.[20] Burrell also garnered Stellar Award nominations during this period for Contemporary Female Vocalist of the Year, reflecting sustained peer acclaim in gospel despite her work's limited crossover to secular charts, where gospel artists often face structural barriers to broad radio play and sales.[2] These accolades underscored her vocal prowess and interpretive depth, earning praise from industry outlets for bridging gospel purity with accessible production.[21] By 2016, Burrell expanded into mainstream collaborations, contributing vocals to Frank Ocean's Blonde on the track "Godspeed," which introduced her timbre to broader R&B and alternative audiences.[6] That same year, she partnered with Pharrell Williams on "I See Victory," featured on the Hidden Figures: The Album soundtrack released October 28, blending gospel uplift with pop production; the duo performed it live on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon on December 8, amplifying her visibility beyond ecclesiastical venues.[22][23] These ventures marked a pinnacle of inter-genre fusion, though her core output remained rooted in gospel, with mainstream exposure serving more as episodic nods than sustained commercial dominance.Recent projects and reflections (2017–present)
In August 2017, Burrell released the live album Kim Burrell Live in Miami, recorded during her Ephesians 4 Conference and featuring performances of gospel standards emphasizing themes of spiritual endurance.[2] She continued contributing guest vocals to projects within the genre, including a feature on Charles Jenkins & Fellowship Chicago's EP Grace: The Remixes, which blended traditional gospel with contemporary production.[24] Burrell maintained visibility through high-profile gospel events, receiving the Aretha Franklin Icon Award at the 39th Annual Stellar Gospel Music Awards on July 20, 2024, recognizing her contributions to the field over decades.[25] In October 2024, she joined pianist Robert Glasper for an unannounced appearance, showcasing her vocal range in a jazz-gospel fusion setting that preceded her formal residency.[26] Expanding into theater in 2025, Burrell debuted as Theseus in a revival of The Gospel at Colonus at Little Island's Amph theater from July 8 to 26, portraying the role in Lee Breuer and Bob Telson's gospel adaptation of Sophocles' Oedipus at Colonus, where her performance integrated soaring vocals with narrative depth.[27][28] That April, she headlined a residency at Blue Note Jazz Club, delivering sets that highlighted her improvisational style and sustained appeal in live settings despite industry shifts.[26] In public statements and interviews, Burrell has reflected on balancing her musical output with pastoral duties, noting in a January 2025 social media update her anticipation for divine direction in ongoing work without compromising core scriptural convictions.[29] During an April 2025 appearance on the Jamal Bryant Podcast, she addressed career persistence amid challenges, underscoring the primacy of unyielding biblical fidelity over market-driven adaptations in her artistry and ministry.[30] These reflections align with her pattern of prioritizing thematic consistency, as seen in 2025 performances like a hymn medley rendition emphasizing providential themes.[31]Ministry
Pastoral roles and Love & Liberty Church
Kim Burrell founded Love & Liberty Fellowship Pentecostal Overcoming Holy Church in Houston, Texas, in November 2010, where she serves as Senior Eldress and Overseer-Bishop.[32][7] Prior to this, she had served as an assistant pastor at Jericho City Church of God in Christ and was installed as the lead pastor of the new congregation around late 2010 or early 2011, following a period of personal trials including multiple heart attacks.[9] The church, initially established near the Acres Homes neighborhood and later relocated to a modest facility at 16730 Hedgecroft Drive in the Greenspoint area, maintains a mission centered on proclaiming the Gospel of Christ through Pentecostal doctrines.[33] With approximately 100 regular members as of 2011, the congregation has shown steady growth, operating in a space identified primarily by a simple banner.[9] Burrell's pastoral leadership emphasizes efficient delivery of scriptural teaching, stating her commitment to "getting in, getting the information out and getting done" during services that incorporate praise, prayer, and congregational singing.[9] Her sermons prioritize sound biblical principles and doctrine, focusing on building up members through direct exposition rather than performative elements, aiming to foster genuine spiritual comprehension of God's nature.[33] While music features prominently in worship—reflecting her dual calling—Burrell distinguishes her approach by urging congregants to grasp the divine essence behind expressions of faith, countering superficial engagement with substantive evangelism.[9] This framework aligns with conservative gospel traditions that stress unaltered scriptural authority on moral causation and redemption.[33]Controversies and public statements
LGBTQ-related comments and responses
In a sermon delivered on December 31, 2016, at Love & Liberty Fellowship Church in Houston, Kim Burrell characterized homosexual acts as stemming from a "perverted homosexual spirit" that induces delusion and confusion, deceiving individuals and straining familial bonds. She warned that anyone "playing with" such sin in 2017 would "die from it" within the year, invoking a biblical framework where God distinguishes love for people from hatred of sin, consistent with prohibitions in Leviticus 18:22 and Romans 1:26-27 against male same-sex relations as detestable or unnatural. Adherents to traditional evangelical theology praised the remarks as unflinching adherence to scriptural mandates against sexual immorality, viewing them as prophetic cautions against cultural normalization of what scripture deems sin, akin to warnings on fornication or adultery.[34][35][36] The sermon's viral spread elicited swift condemnation from secular media and entertainment figures, who deemed it homophobic and discriminatory. On January 3, 2017, Ellen DeGeneres announced the cancellation of Burrell's scheduled appearance on her show, asserting no tolerance for prejudice against LGBTQ individuals. Pharrell Williams, a collaborator on the track "I See Victory" from the Hidden Figures soundtrack, publicly rejected the comments as "hate speech," leading to BMI withdrawing Burrell's performance slot at its Gospel Music Awards. Urban One terminated her radio program "Bridging the Gap" on January 5, 2017, citing misalignment with inclusive values. Mainstream outlets, often aligned with progressive advocacy, amplified narratives of harm to LGBTQ mental health and visibility, though Burrell countered that her words targeted behavior, not identity, and expressed love tempered by divine judgment on sin. Defenders highlighted inconsistencies in outrage, as similar biblical stances prevail among gospel artists and black church leaders—Pew Research data from 2019 shows 59% of black Protestants believe homosexuality should be discouraged—suggesting selective scrutiny driven by cultural shifts rather than doctrinal novelty.[37][38][39] Burrell stood firm initially, reiterating in January 2017 interviews that she harbored no regrets, as her views mirrored New Testament exhortations like 1 Corinthians 6:9-10 listing homosexual practice among acts barring inheritance of God's kingdom unless repented. Supporters in faith circles, including some preachers, affirmed this as fidelity to unchanging scripture amid encroaching relativism, contrasting with academic and media sources prone to framing traditional theology as bigotry without engaging textual exegesis.[40][35] On July 20, 2024, while accepting the Aretha Franklin Icon Award at the Stellar Gospel Music Awards, Burrell issued an apology, acknowledging the "hurtful" effects of her prior statements on LGBTQ people and urging collective strength through dialogue and bridge-building. GLAAD, an LGBTQ advocacy group, welcomed the gesture but contextualized it against her history, while skeptics attributed its timing to career rehabilitation post-backlash. In an April 2025 interview with Rev. Jamal Bryant, Burrell elaborated that she now viewed elements of her 2016 delivery as erroneous—not the underlying doctrine, which she maintained as biblically derived—but the phrasing that amplified pain without sufficient pastoral nuance.[41][42][43] Debates resurfaced in July 2025 when Burrell starred as Theseus in a revival of The Gospel at Colonus at Little Island in New York, sharing the stage with queer performers including serpentwithfeet under direction emphasizing inclusivity. Critics questioned consistency, positing performative reconciliation or rebranding to regain secular footing, while proponents saw it as extending grace without doctrinal compromise, mirroring scriptural calls to minister amid diversity.[27][44]Other criticisms and defenses
In July 2022, during a guest appearance at Kingdom City Church, Burrell drew criticism for referring to some congregants as "broke" and "ugly" in a sermon segment intended to motivate self-improvement and faith-based transformation.[45] Critics, including social media users and commentators in outlets like Black Enterprise, accused her of classism and body-shaming, arguing the remarks demeaned economically disadvantaged and physically unappealing attendees rather than offering constructive spiritual guidance.[46] Burrell responded with a partial apology, clarifying the comments as hyperbolic "tough love" to challenge complacency and encourage prosperity through diligence, while threatening legal action against those sharing decontextualized clips that misrepresented her intent.[47] Burrell has defended her overall public stance against attempts at professional ostracism, attributing resilience to empirical outcomes like her church's sustained operations and personal career longevity post-2017 backlash.[48] In a 2022 interview, she highlighted facing physical threats after high-profile cancellations, framing such episodes as evidence of targeted suppression rather than organic reputational decline, with her continued invitations to minister—such as at events in 2024—demonstrating viewpoint durability over cancel-culture pressures.[49] Observers from conservative theological circles have echoed this, noting her Love & Liberty Church's focus on personal agency aligns with data showing correlations between emphasis on individual responsibility and reduced poverty persistence in faith-based communities, countering narratives of inherent victimhood.[50] In a April 2025 podcast interview with Jamal Bryant, Burrell addressed perceived inconsistencies in black church leadership, critiquing selective moral outrage that overlooks internal economic stagnation and favors performative progressivism amid broader attendance declines in traditional congregations—from 66% weekly participation among black Protestants in 2000 to 46% by 2019 per Pew Research.[51] She argued such hypocrisy perpetuates cycles of dependency by prioritizing external alliances over rigorous doctrinal application, positioning her direct style as accountable realism derived from pastoral observations of unchanged congregant outcomes under softer approaches.[52] Mainstream coverage often amplified outrage without full sermon transcripts, a pattern attributable to institutional biases favoring progressive framings, yet Burrell's rebuttals emphasize verifiable ministry metrics like repeat attendance as rebuttal to efficacy claims.[53]Personal life
Marriage, family, and losses
Kim Burrell married musician Joseph Wiley, also known as "Joseph 'Jo Jo' Wiley," prior to 2017.[54][55] The couple has faced persistent rumors of separation or divorce since at least early 2017, when reports emerged of Wiley allegedly leaving Burrell for another man, though no official confirmation of divorce has been documented as of 2025.[56][57] Burrell and Wiley have two children: a son named Christian and a daughter named Danielle, who was reported to be 8 years old in September 2025.[3][54][58] Burrell has publicly emphasized the centrality of faith and family structure in raising her children, drawing from her own upbringing in a religious household in Houston, Texas. In February 2017, amid heightened public scrutiny from her professional controversies, Burrell suffered a significant personal loss when her older brother, Kevin Jordan, died from a massive stroke on February 6.[35][59] This event compounded familial strain during a period of intense external pressure, though Burrell has described it as a time when her faith sustained her family unit.[60]Discography
Studio albums
Everlasting Life, Burrell's debut studio album, was released on November 17, 1998, via Tommy Boy Gospel.[15] Featuring 13 tracks rooted in contemporary gospel, it includes songs like "Holy Ghost" and "Prodigal Son," which explore themes of spiritual perseverance, divine intervention, and personal redemption through worshipful lyrics and soul-infused arrangements.[61] The production blends traditional gospel elements with urban contemporary influences, showcasing Burrell's vocal range and improvisational style in a format distinct from her later works.[62] Following an 11-year gap, No Ways Tired arrived on April 7, 2009, under Shanachie Records, marking her return to original studio material after focusing on live recordings and collaborations.[63] This album maintains a gospel core while incorporating jazz and R&B fusions, with tracks emphasizing endurance in faith amid life's trials, reflecting Burrell's evolving sound from strictly traditional roots toward broader stylistic experimentation.[64] The Love Album, released on May 17, 2011, also by Shanachie, consists of ten self-composed or covered tracks that meditate on love's dual nature—romantic intimacy and spiritual devotion—delivered through jazzy gospel phrasing and honest vocal delivery.[65] Critics noted its boundary-blurring approach, praising Burrell's emotive spirituality akin to influences like Aretha Franklin, though some gospel purists critiqued the lyrical ambiguity between earthly and divine affection for potentially diluting doctrinal clarity.[66] [67] The record received positive artistic acclaim for its production and Burrell's interpretive depth, earning an 8.8/10 average user rating on AllMusic.[65]Singles and collaborations
Kim Burrell released "I See Victory" as a duet with Pharrell Williams in September 2016, featured on the Hidden Figures film soundtrack, which broadened her exposure to secular audiences through performances on platforms like The Tonight Show.[68][69] The track, blending gospel vocals with pop production, peaked within gospel airplay charts and contributed to the soundtrack's commercial success.[70] In 2008, Burrell collaborated with funk pioneer George Clinton on "Mathematics of Love," a track from Clinton's album George Clinton and Some Gangsters of Love, fusing her gospel style with P-Funk elements in a remake emphasizing relational themes.[5][71] She also featured on Harry Connick Jr.'s "Song for the Hopeful" that year, showcasing her vocal range in a jazz-gospel hybrid.[5] Burrell's standalone singles include "Special Place" (2001) on Bad Boy Entertainment and "Thank You Jesus (That's What He's Done)" (2015), the latter ascending gospel radio charts amid anticipation for her full-length projects.[72] More recent efforts feature her on Renee Spearman's "Tap Into It (The Source)" (2023), which reached number one on the Billboard Gospel Airplay chart, and Elijah Blake's "Battlefield" (2024), highlighting ongoing cross-artist engagements.[73][74] These works have sustained her presence in gospel rankings while attracting diverse collaborators, though purists occasionally critique genre-blending for potentially softening traditional gospel purity, evidenced by persistent chart loyalty in core formats.Awards and nominations
Burrell has received multiple nominations for the Grammy Awards, including Best Contemporary Soul Gospel Album for Live in Concert in 2002, Best Gospel Performance for "I Understand" in 2009, and Best Gospel Album for The Love Album in 2012.[20][19] In the gospel music genre, she won the Stellar Award for Contemporary Female Vocalist of the Year in 2000 and received the Aretha Franklin Icon Award at the 39th Annual Stellar Gospel Music Awards on July 20, 2024.[5][25]| Year | Award | Category/Nomination | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2002 | Grammy Award | Best Contemporary Soul Gospel Album (Live in Concert) | Nominated[3] |
| 2009 | Grammy Award | Best Gospel Performance ("I Understand") | Nominated[19] |
| 2012 | Grammy Award | Best Gospel Album (The Love Album) | Nominated[20] |
| 2000 | Stellar Gospel Music Awards | Contemporary Female Vocalist of the Year | Won[5] |
| 2024 | Stellar Gospel Music Awards | Aretha Franklin Icon Award | Won[25] |