Roots After graduating with a
bachelor's degree from Northwestern College (now
University of Northwestern – St. Paul), Cameron Floria was asked to lead music for a chapter of
Youth for Christ in
Lansing, Michigan, Floria's hometown. Then, in the autumn of 1962, he took a paid staff position as music director at Youth for Christ's chapter in
Portland, Oregon. During his work in
Portland, Floria organized a five-week tour for the choir with a final stop at the choral competition at the
Winona Lake Bible Conference in the summer of 1963. The following autumn, he produced an album with the choir entitled
Sing A Happy Song credited to, "Cam Floria and the Continentals" with 14 medleys of songs commonly sang at Youth for Christ chapter meetings nationally, which
Word Records agreed to distribute. He produced three more albums in 1964 and 1965, took time to obtain his
master of music degree in
music education from
Michigan State University, and relocated to
southern California to be closer to acquaintance and composer
Ralph Carmichael. Together, Floria and
Carmichael sought to start a traveling music ensemble fashioned after Thurlow Spurr's group The Spurrlows, with whom Floria had worked previously.
Growth The Continentals filed its articles of incorporation in 1967, with Floria and
Carmichael listed as the board members. In the early 1970s, the Continentals collaborated with affiliated groups New Hope and Jeremiah People, to produce three musicals ''It's Getting Late,
The Apostle
, and Share
. In 1983, Floria finished composing the musical Dreamer'' about the life of
Joseph the
Israelite patriarch, which the Continentals produced and for which it received a
Dove Award in 1984 from the
Gospel Music Association. Throughout this time, the Continentals continued to produce other music albums of individual
worship songs and
Christian music. In 1975, Floria started organizing an annual week-long conference called
Seminar in the Rockies which consisted of workshops held by
Christian music and other professionals. The conference was abundantly attended by both established and hopeful industry participants and helped Floria maintain the Continentals' relevance in
Christian music, which grew significantly during the 1980s and 1990s. The organization started recruiting 13- to 15-year-old youth in 1992 for a distinct classification of groups and music albums called the "Young Continentals." Similarly, in 1994, it started a classification of groups called the "Encore Continentals" for members over 25 years old, as well as in 1996 renamed groups with members from the organization's historical demographic as "Frontline Continentals." In 1996, Floria composed a new musical ''
David: A Man After God's Own Heart'' about the life of the
Israelite king
David, which he premiered globally with a performance near
David's Citadel in
Jerusalem with approximately 800 performers and musicians. The Continentals later produced an album of the musical, which the Continental Orchestra performed during several tours starting in 1998. By 1999, more than 400 groups had presented about 26,000 performances of Continentals-produced content; == Financial Model and Decline ==