Although seven-shape books may not be as popular as in the past, there are still a great number of churches in the
American South, in particular
Southern Baptists,
Primitive Baptists, almost all of the non-instrumental
Churches of Christ, some
Free Methodists,
Mennonite, some
Amish,
United Pentecostals, and
United Baptists in the Appalachian regions of West Virginia, Ohio and Kentucky, that regularly use seven-shape songbooks in Sunday worship. These songbooks may contain a variety of songs from 18th-century classics to 20th-century
gospel music. Thus today denominational songbooks printed in seven shapes probably constitute the largest branch of the shape-note tradition. In addition,
nondenominational community singings are also intermittently held which feature early- to mid-20th century seven-shape gospel music such as
Stamps-Baxter hymnals or
Heavenly Highway. In these traditions, the custom of "singing the notes" (syllables) is generally preserved only during the learning process at
singing schools and singing may be to an instrumental accompaniment, typically a piano. The seven-shape system is also still used at regular public singings of 19th-century songbooks of a similar type to the
Sacred Harp, such as
The Christian Harmony and the
New Harp of Columbia. Such singings are common in Georgia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Mississippi, and Alabama, and generally preserve the singing school custom of "singing the notes". The seven-shape (Aikin) system is commonly used by the
Mennonites and
Brethren. Numerous songbooks are printed in shaped notes for this market. They include
Christian Hymnal, the
Christian Hymnary,
Hymns of the Church, ''Zion's Praises
, and Harmonia Sacra''. Some African-American churches use the seven-shape note system. The four-shape tradition that currently has the greatest number of participants is Sacred Harp singing. Books used in the Sacred Harp tradition include:
The Sacred Harp: 2025 Edition, published by the Sacred Harp Publishing Company;
The Sacred Harp, 2012 Revised Cooper Edition, published by the Sacred Harp Book Company; and
The Sacred Harp, Fourth Edition with Supplement (1911/2007), reprinted by the 2007 J. L. White Edition Committee. In addition, there are many other four-shape traditions that are still active or even enjoying a resurgence of interest. Among the four-shape systems, the
Southern Harmony has remained in continuous use at one singing in
Benton, Kentucky, and is now experiencing a small amount of regrowth. The current reawakening of interest in shape note singing has also created new singings using other recently moribund 19th-century four-shape songbooks, such as
The Missouri Harmony, as well as new books by modern composers, such as the
Northern Harmony. Of a hybrid nature, in terms of reviving
Ananias Davisson's
Kentucky Harmony but taking the further step of incorporating songs from 70 other early tunebooks, along with new compositions, is the
Shenandoah Harmony (2013). Thomas B. Malone has specialized in the revival of works by Jeremiah Ingalls, and has published a four-shape edition of Ingalls' 1805
The Christian Harmony. Malone organizes an annual mid-July singing in Newbury, Vermont, where Ingalls was a tavern-keeper and musician between 1789 and 1810. ==See also==