Early bands While still in high school, Norman formed a group called The Back Country Seven, which included his sister Nancy Jo and friend Gene Mason. People! performed about 200 concerts a year, appearing with
Van Morrison and
Them,
the Animals,
the Dave Clark Five,
Paul Revere & the Raiders,
the Doors,
the Who,
Janis Joplin,
Jimi Hendrix,
Moby Grape, and San Jose bands
Syndicate of Sound and
Count Five. The band's cover of
the Zombies'
"I Love You" became a hit single, selling over one million copies and charting strongly in several markets. Norman left People! just as
Capitol released the band's first album in mid 1968, but reunited with Mason for concerts in 1974 and 2006. According to rock historian Walter Rasmussen,
Pete Townshend once said that The Who's 1969 album
Tommy was inspired by the rock opera "Epic" by People!; however, Townshend has since denied the connection.
Hollywood street ministry Soon after Norman left People!, he had "a powerful spiritual encounter that threw him into a frenzy of indecision about his life [and] for the first time in his life, he received what he understood to be the Holy Spirit". In July 1968, following a job offer to write musicals for Capitol Records, Norman moved to
Los Angeles where he "spent time sharing the gospel on the streets". As he described in 2006: "I walked up and down
Hollywood Boulevard several times a day ... witnessing to businessmen and hippies, and to whomever the Spirit led me. I spent all of my Capitol Records' royalties starting a halfway house and buying clothes and food for new converts." He was initially associated with the First Presbyterian Church of Hollywood, and its Salt Company coffee house outreach ministry, where he explored and pioneered the rock-gospel genre.
Musical theatre In 1968 Norman wrote several songs for the rock musicals
Alison and
Birthday for Shakespeare, both of which were performed in Los Angeles. The next year, Norman and his friend
Teddy Neeley auditioned for the Los Angeles production of the rock musical
Hair and were offered the roles of George Berger and Claude Bukowski, respectively; Neeley accepted, but Norman rejected the role of George, despite his own financial struggles, because "of its glorification of drugs and free sex as the answers to today's problems". Also in 1969, Norman wrote a musical called
Love on Haight Street and a
rock opera called ''Lion's Breath'', which led Capitol to re-sign Norman to record an album, with the promise of complete creative control.
Recording career In 1969, Capitol Records released Norman's first solo album,
Upon This Rock, produced by Hal Yoergler, is now considered to be "the first full-blown Christian rock album". Norman was denounced by various
television evangelists, and Capitol deemed the album a commercial flop and dropped Norman from the label. However, his music gained a large following in the emerging countercultural movements. Sales of the album rose following its distribution in Christian bookstores. By the early 1970s, Norman was performing frequently for large audiences, and appeared at several
Christian music festivals, including
Explo '72, a six-day
Dallas event which has been called the "Jesus
Woodstock." Norman established a
half-way house where he "housed and fed various groups of people, supervised their Bible studies and drove them to church on Fridays and Sundays". He earned $80 per month from Capitol for polishing and refining songs for Capitol artists. He recorded two studio albums,
Only Visiting This Planet and
So Long Ago the Garden, in London's
AIR Studios. Released in 1972,
Visiting "was meant to reach the
flower children disillusioned by the government and the church" with its "abrasive, urban reality of the gospel", and has often been ranked as Norman's best album. In 1974, Norman founded
Solid Rock Records to produce records for Christian artists "who didn't want to be consumed by the business of making vinyl pancakes but who wanted to make something 'non-commercial' to the world". Norman produced music on the label for artists including Randy Stonehill,
Mark Heard and
Tom Howard. Norman also worked with several artists who were signed to other labels, including
Malcolm and Alwyn, Bobby Emmons and the Crosstones, Lyrix, James Sundquist and David Edwards. Norman signed a deal with
ABC Records to distribute Solid Rock's releases, but was later moved to ABC subsidiary
Word Records. In the same year, Norman founded the Christian artist
booking agency Street Level Artists Agency.
In Another Land, the third album in Norman's trilogy and the best-selling album of his career, was released in 1976 by Solid Rock and distributed through Word. Soon afterward, Norman recorded the
blues-rock
concept album Something New under the Son, but it would not be released until 1981. Following clashes with Word over
Something New and several other projects, Norman started Phydeaux Records in 1980 to release his albums. In 1978, Norman was injured during a plane landing at
Los Angeles International Airport. William Ayers wrote in 1991: "As family, friends and fans watched, his life spiraled downward. He was unable to record a bonafide album from the time of his airplane accident in 1978 until ... he attempted to release the badly produced
Home at Last [recorded in 1986]. He never expected to be healed." Following a prolonged dispute with Solid Rock artists
Daniel Amos which ended in estrangement, Solid Rock's business manager, Philip Mangano, and several Solid Rock musicians organized an
intervention with Norman in June 1980, which led him to begin closing the company. Religious history professor
Randall Balmer attributed the company's demise to "idealism, marital difficulties, and financial naivete—as well as changing musical tastes." In late 1980, Norman moved to England and, with his father, founded Phydeaux Records, a company designed to compete with the
bootleg market by selling rarities from Norman's own archives. He signed a distribution deal with British label Chapel Lane and released several albums before returning to the United States in 1985. Norman then began work on an anthology project celebrating his career in Christian music, beginning with the album
White Blossoms from Black Roots: The History and the Chronology: Volume One; however, the project collapsed when the head of the distribution company was arrested for
check forgery and the company's merchandise was seized by the FBI. Norman signed to
Benson Records in 1986 and recorded the album
Home at Last, although the album was not released until 1989 due to legal problems. Despite extensive promotion, the album was negatively reviewed, and Norman himself later dismissed the album as "just a collection of tapes I had", although he said separately that he was "extremely happy" with the level of support he'd received from Benson. In 1989, Norman received the Christian Artists' Society Lifetime Achievement Award. Norman maintained that through this prayer God repaired the damage to his brain and he was able to function again. They would reunite for the 2001 album
Tourniquet. Norman continued to perform and release albums throughout his later years in order to raise funds for medical expenses stemming from heart problems. He gave his last official concert on August 4, 2007, in New York City.
Relationship with the church and Christian music industry Throughout his career, Norman had a contentious relationship with the wider Christian church and with the
Christian music industry. He wrote in September 2007, "I love God and I follow Jesus but I just don't have much affinity for the organized folderol of the churches in the Western World." Norman's music addressed a wide range of social issues, such as politics, free love, the occult, the passive commercialism of wartime journalists, and religious hypocrisy, that were outside the scope of his contemporaries. Defending the confrontational approach of his music, Norman said, "My primary emphasis is not to entertain. But if your art is boring, people will reject your message as well as your art." In the 1980s, he complained that Christian music generally meant "sloppy thinking, dishonest metaphors and bad poetry," and that he had "never been able to get over the shock of how bad the lyrics are." Norman disapproved of Christian musicians who were unwilling to play in secular venues or to "preach" between songs. He also criticized what he saw as the "commercialization of Christian music in America", Thompson credited Norman for his impact on the genre as a musician, a producer, and a businessman. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Norman also influenced a number of emerging punk and alternative rock artists. According to documentarian Larry Di Sabatino, Larry Norman was "an early influence" on the
post-punk band
U2. When
Bono met with a summit of Nashville Christian music artists in 2002 to garner support for an African aid campaign, he specifically asked to see Norman. Upon Larry Norman's death, Bono sent flowers to his funeral with the note "Eternal singer, still eternal, Bono." According to
Charles Normal, Larry Norman attended his "first of many"
punk rock shows while touring London in 1977, seeing
Richard Hell and the Voidoids,
the Damned, and
Dead Boys. Regarding the punk movement, Norman stated that while he initially disliked some of the lyrical content, he was generally supportive of it and its youthful energy, which he viewed as preferable to
disco. Norman subsequently introduced his younger brother, Charles, to the genre, including the music of the
Sex Pistols. Within several years, Charles was the lead guitarist for the Bay Area
hardcore punk band, Executioner. Larry paid for the recording of Executioner's first EP in 1982, on the condition that they also record one of his songs. Larry Norman began to meet figures from the L.A. punk scene, and eventually recorded tracks with former Sex Pistols guitarist
Steve Jones. Norman also released a live recording of a punk version of "Why Should the Devil Have All the Good Music?"
Pixies frontman
Black Francis described Larry Norman as having been his "total idol" as a teenager, whom he attempted to imitate. The band's first demo,
The Purple Tape, was to contain a cover of Norman's song "Watch What You're Doing", but it was never released. A lyric from the song "Levitate Me" ("Come on pilgrim, you know He loves you!") formed the basis for the title of Pixies' 1987 EP
Come On Pilgrim. Black was eventually introduced to Norman by members of U2 during the
Zoo TV tour. Black's post-Pixies band, Frank Black and the Catholics, covered Larry Norman's song "Six Sixty Six". Norman and Black performed a duet of "Watch What You're Doing" at Norman's "farewell" concert, and the two were reportedly working on an album together at the time of his death, along with Isaac Brock of
Modest Mouse.
Steve Camp,
Carolyn Arends,
Bob Hartman,
TobyMac,
Mark Salomon,
Martyn Joseph, have credited Norman as influences. Overall over 300 artists have covered songs by Norman. ==Awards and honors==