Camp attended
Roosevelt University, where he majored in musical composition and theory. He studied under Ralph Dodds. He also studied business law/music at the
College of DuPage. In the late 1970s, he began a longtime relationship with a then-unknown
Rob Frazier, a one-time
Petra member, who co-wrote songs for Camp's own albums. Camp was reunited with Frazier on Frazier's 1992 compilation
Retrospect, on which Frazier and Camp sang duet vocals for the song "Why, Why Why?" He had a long-term friendship with Scott Wesley Brown, and he played
acoustic guitar and sang
backups on
Brown's 1977 album, ''I'm Not Religious, I Just Love The Lord'', one year before he went on his own. Five of Camp's albums ''
Sayin' It with Love (1978), Start Believin' (1980), For Every Man (1981), Only the Very Best (1983), and It's a Dying World'' (1984) have never been released on CD.
Musician Prior to becoming a conference speaker and lecturer, Camp was a popular contemporary Christian music singer-songwriter. In 1977, he signed a recording contract with
Myrrh Records, releasing several songs as a solo artist. In 1983, Camp signed a contract with
Sparrow Records, with whom he released nine successful albums. On his first album,
Fire and Ice, Camp paired up with
Michele Pillar to sing "Love's Not A Feeling". In 1989, Camp released his 10th studio album,
Justice, on which he recorded a duet with BeBe Winans, entitled "Do You Feel Their Pain?" After Camp's contract with Sparrow ended in 1992, he signed with
Warner Alliance, with whom he released two albums. On his 1993 release
Taking Heaven By Storm, Camp teamed up with veteran keyboardist and songwriter
Michael Omartian, and together they produced a series of No. 1 hits in a single year (1994), including a contemporary remake of "The Lord's Prayer". Later that same year, he released a worship-themed project titled
Mercy in the Wilderness.
Appearances Along with other popular
contemporary Christian artists of the 1980s, Camp made several front covers of
CCM Magazine,
World Magazine, and
Christianity Today, among many others. At the same time, he also wrote several articles for leading Christian publications, in addition to giving numerous interviews on Christian radio. After recording several albums, Camp began attending Christian conferences and making frequent guest appearances at Christian colleges. In 1996, he was an honorable invitee at the Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals Conference, where the Cambridge Document was drafted. One year later, he appeared at the Summit on Church Music Ministry held at
Cedarville College in Ohio, contending for sound Biblical theology in Christian music. In late 1998, Camp was in
Celina, Ohio at a benefit for Harbor House Maternity Home, a Christian home for pregnant teens. 440 people were present to hear Camp perform four songs, including Keith Green's "Asleep in the Light" and Camp's own "He's All You Need." He followed up his first set of songs with an even more passionate exhortation, possibly causing some in attendance to be a bit uncomfortable with Camp's straightforward approach to his messages: they must do everything possible to save the unborn and be seen as proactively pro-life.
Radio show and writing In the mid-1990s, Camp was a frequent guest on radio stations all across the country. Between 1995 and 1997, he also hosted his own radio talk show,
No Compromise with Steve Camp. He also made guest appearances on
The Bible Answer Man with Hank Hanegraaff,
The Janet Parshall Show,
The Dick Staub Show,
Prime Time America with Jim Warren,
Iron Sharpens Iron, and many more. He is also a well-known writer for the AudienceONE Ministries website. ==Discography==