But that’s exactly the point. Powell isn’t trying to make you comfortable. He’s trying to make you feel .
Doobie Powell falls firmly into the latter category. While many know him as the musical director for Tamela Mann or the man behind the boards for Hezekiah Walker’s Love Fellowship Choir, Powell has quietly (and not-so-quietly) cultivated a sonic fingerprint that defies the standard playbook of modern gospel. Gospel Producers Doobie Powell-s Peculiar Sound...
This isn’t accidental. Powell has often said in interviews that his sound mirrors the Christian walk: beautiful, but not always tidy. Faith, after all, has dissonance. To understand Doobie Powell, you have to look past the church. Yes, he’s a pastor’s kid. Yes, he came up in the COGIC tradition. But his production DNA carries the ghost of Minneapolis. But that’s exactly the point
In an era where gospel music often competes with secular R&B for radio play, Powell’s peculiar sound reminds us that gospel’s roots are in the blues—raw, confessional, and unafraid of brokenness. His production doesn’t sound like a worship service from a megachurch broadcast. It sounds like a late-night prayer when no one is watching. Doobie Powell has already influenced a new generation of producers—from the church to the mainstream—who are now layering 808s with Hammond B3s, who aren’t afraid of a little static, who understand that the Holy Spirit doesn’t require auto-tune. Doobie Powell falls firmly into the latter category
It’s peculiar. And that’s the point. What’s your favorite Doobie Powell-produced track? Drop it in the comments—especially the ones with the “melting synth” moments.
Listen to his work on "I Made It" (Tamela Mann) or "Better" (Hezekiah Walker). The bass lines don’t just walk—they stalk . The chord voicings are often rootless, suspended, unresolved. Just when you expect a triumphant major resolution, Powell leaves you hanging in a minor 9th, forcing the listener to sit in the tension.