The 1950s was a very exciting time in the history of gospel music. Many of the genre’s finest singers and groups flourished in that period. In particular, the number of male quartets in that time was perhaps at an all time high, no doubt influenced by the amazing successes of the Blackwood Brothers and Statesmen quartets.
Some of those quartets originating in that time only lasted a short while, others for many years. One very noteworthy quartet that began in the mid 1950s is still singing and doing quite well today. This month, I will look back on one of the finest yet least recognized of those quartets, the Toney Brothers.
The Toneys were born to sing. Family patriarch Alden Toney, Sr. had been singing in early quartets around their native West Virginia during the 1920s and 1930s. The senior Toney taught his boys to sing at an early age using the familiar “shaped notes” method common at that time. He would teach his children songs from Stamps-Baxter songbooks, and with ten sons and five daughters, he was raising a small choir out in Wayne, WV!
Alden’s wife, Cassie, tragically died in 1942. Most of the children were grown by that time, but there were still two teenage daughters and five boys under 12 left at home. As was the case with a number of families in that part of the country under those circumstances, the family bonded even closer together. Cassie’s prayers were answered mightily as all the Toney children came to know Christ as Lord. These events would shape the lives of all the Toneys in the coming years.
The oldest son, Alden Jr., left West Virginia in 1941 to work in the growing automobile industry in Detroit. He was able to find a good church to attend, the love of his life to marry, and he began to find quartets to sing with as well! One of the early groups that Alden made his singing reputation with was one called the Harmonaires.
But as would happen to so many young men at that time, he was drafted into the military to help fight World War II. Alden spent the mid-1940s in the army, even distinguishing himself by his participation in the famous “Battle of the Bulge”.
When Alden finally made it back to Detroit after the war, he resumed singing, and by 1948 moved to Shenandoah, Iowa to sing with the renowned Blackwood Brothers Quartet. He sang with them until 1951, when he returned to Detroit. By then, his brothers Bob and Kyer were also in the service, Bob in the Army and Kyer in the Navy.

1955, the original Toney Brothers Quartet.
From L-R, Alden Toney, Jim Toney, Bob Toney, and Kyer Toney.
The fledgling quartet went through three non-Toney pianists, the best known of those being Kenneth Apple, before discovering an exceptionally talented pianist in Bryan Jones. Jones’ skills even awed legaendary Blackwood Brothers’ pianist Jackie Marshall, and soon the two became fast friends and even colleagues. Marshall’s famous “Marshall Plan”, a piano course for aspiring students, was actually authored by Jones.

1956. L-R: Alden Toney, Kyer Toney,Bryan Jones, Jim Toney, and Bob Toney
It wasn’t just the unique sound that attracted attention to the Toney Brothers, but the fact that the singers were all actual brothers (unlike the Blackwood Brothers, who had non-family members start entering the group in the 1940s) appealed to many fans, and the fact that for many years they were an official church quartet and stressed evangelism along with their singing anticipated trends in gospel music that reached major proportions with the Weatherford Quartet in the 1950s and 1960s as well as the Couriers Quartet of that same time and the Bill Gaither Trio in the early 1960s.
The Toney Brothers were certainly expert practitioners of gospel music as well as trailblazers in the field. Though they sang songs by well known writers such as Mosie Lister, Vep Ellis, Lee Roy Abernathy, and Gaither, they also came up with material of their own, most of it written by Bob Toney, that defined their sound and their mission. Songs such as “I Want To Live In That Fair Land”, “Elijah And The Prophets of Baal”, “The Narrow Road To Glory Land”, and perhaps their most famous song, “I Believe What The Bible Says”, all written by Bob, became favorites of many gospel music fans.
Alas, change is a constant with gospel quartets. And 1961 saw Bryan Jones leave the quartet to move further into ministry work, and continue to play and teach piano. In 1962, Jones played on the album “Dedicated To The Hymns” by the Couriers Quartet, and the following year, played for the Couriers at their appearance at New York’s Carnegie Hall. He would maintain close ties with the Couriers, playing on their 1966 album “Down Memory Lane”, as well as joining them in concert on occasions when he would happen to be in attendance. Jones continued to play and teach piano until his untimely death in 2005. He will be remembered by many as one of gospel music’s greatest piano stylists, and one of its most devout Christians.

1967. L-R: Ron Booth, Sr., Jimi Talbott, Kyer Toney, Bob Toney, and Jim Toney

ca. 1976. Front: David Toney, Middle: L-R: Jim Toney, Gary G. Toney, Bob Toney, Back: L-R: Ron Booth, Sr., Terry Toney, Jimi Talbott.
The Toney Brothers continued to plug along through the rest of the century, with of course more Toneys (Dave, Gary L., Terry, Jeff, Greg, and Darrell) helping out on vocals and instrumental backing, and a few other noteworthy non-Toneys (Bob Oliver, Mike LoPrinzi, and Dallas Rogers) doing stints in the quartet as well.
Today, the Toney Brothers, now based in Florida, stay busy, with tenor Jon Pennington, lead Royce Taylor, baritone George Amon Webster (formerly of the Cathedral Quartet), and familiar bass Terry Toney continuing the Toney Brothers tradition of fine singing, a strong witness, and faithful service to the gospel music industry and the church which has always been their hallmark since Alden Toney, Jr, began the quartet with brothers Jim, Kyer, and Bob some 52 years ago in Michigan.

This is the surviving original Toney Brothers with their close friends, the original Couriers(who sang at Alden Toney's funeral Friday) L-R: Neil Enloe, Duane Nicholson, Jim Toney, Dave Kyllonen, Kyer Toney, and Gary G. Toney.
Longtime gospel music fans will always have fond memories of the Toney Brothers, who did their best to advance the craft and scope of professional gospel music.
I would like to thank Dean Adkins and Darrell Toney for their invaluable assistance in the preparation of this article.
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