Negro Workaday Songs
Guy Benton Johnson
18 chapters
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18 chapters
PREFACE
PREFACE
Negro Workaday Songs is the third volume of a series of folk background studies of which The Negro and His Songs was the first and Folk-Beliefs of the Southern Negro was the second. The series will include a number of other volumes on the Negro and likewise a number presenting folk aspects of other groups. The reception which the first volumes have received gives evidence that the plan of the series to present scientific, descriptive, and objective studies in as interesting and readable form as
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CHAPTER I BACKGROUND RESOURCES IN NEGRO SONG AND WORK
CHAPTER I BACKGROUND RESOURCES IN NEGRO SONG AND WORK
T o discover and present authentic pictures of the Negro’s folk background as found in his workaday songs is a large and promising task of which there are many phases. Here are spontaneous products of the Negro’s workaday experiences and conflicts. Here are reflections of his individual strivings and his group ways. Here are specimens of folk art and creative effort close to the soil. Here are new examples of the Negro’s contributions to the American scene. Here is important material for the new
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CHAPTER II THE BLUES: WORKADAY SORROW SONGS
CHAPTER II THE BLUES: WORKADAY SORROW SONGS
N o story of the workaday song life of the Negro can proceed far without taking into account the kind of song known as the blues, for, next to the spirituals, the blues are probably the Negro’s most distinctive contribution to American art. They have not been taken seriously, because they have never been thoroughly understood. Their history needs to be written. The present chapter is not a complete statement. It merely presents some of the salient points in the story of the blues and offers some
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CHAPTER III SONGS OF THE LONESOME ROAD
CHAPTER III SONGS OF THE LONESOME ROAD
T he blues par excellence are, of course, to be found in those songs of sorrow and disappointment and longing which center around the love relation. [22] But the song of the “po’ boy long ways from home” who wanders “down that lonesome road” is rich in pathos and plaintiveness. The wanderer is not unlike the old singer who sang, [22] See Chapters VII and VIII for the songs of this type. This chapter deals with more general lonesome songs. Typical of the lonesome note in the present-day songs of
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CHAPTER IV BAD MAN BALLADS AND JAMBOREE
CHAPTER IV BAD MAN BALLADS AND JAMBOREE
T here is this fortunate circumstance which contributes to the completeness and vividness of the Negro portraits as found in workaday songs: the whole picture is often epitomized in each of several characters or types of singers and their songs. Thus the picture may be viewed from all sides and from different angles, with such leisure and repetition as will insure accurate impressions. One of these types is the “po’ boy long way from home” singing down “that lonesome road,” as represented in the
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CHAPTER V SONGS OF JAIL, CHAIN GANG, AND POLICEMEN
CHAPTER V SONGS OF JAIL, CHAIN GANG, AND POLICEMEN
N ot all Negro “bad men” achieve an abiding place in jail or chain gang. Not all Negroes in jail or chain gang are “bad men”—not by long odds. And yet the prison population of the South contains abundant representations of both major and minor Negro offenders, although the indications are that the ratio of Negroes to whites is decreasing rapidly. And if one wishes to obtain anything like an adequate or accurate picture of the workaday Negro he will surely find much of his best setting in the cha
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CHAPTER VI SONGS OF CONSTRUCTION CAMPS AND GANGS
CHAPTER VI SONGS OF CONSTRUCTION CAMPS AND GANGS
I n the old days—and sometimes in more recent years—there were characteristic and unforgettable scenes of groups of Negroes singing in the fields. Here was a picture of late afternoon in the cotton field, the friendly setting sun a challenge to reviving energies; rows of cotton clean picked, rivalry and cheerful banter, faster picking to the row’s end, sacks and baskets full for weighing time; group singing, now joyous, then the melancholy tinge of eventide, Swing Low, Sweet Chariot , Since I La
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CHAPTER VII JUST SONGS TO HELP WITH WORK
CHAPTER VII JUST SONGS TO HELP WITH WORK
I n some respects it is unfortunate that classification of the Negro workaday songs must be attempted, for, strictly speaking, accurate classification is not possible. There is much overlapping apparent in most of the best types. There are mixed pictures in the majority and a cross index would be necessary for any sort of complete analysis. And yet the total picture is clearer when the songs are grouped according to prevailing themes, as has been done in other chapters on the wanderer songs, the
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CHAPTER VIII MAN’S SONG OF WOMAN
CHAPTER VIII MAN’S SONG OF WOMAN
T here is probably no theme which comes nearer being common to all types of Negro songs than the theme of the relation of man and woman. It is the heart and soul of the blues. The Negro bad man is often pictured as being bad because of a woman. The jail and chain gang songs abound in plaintive references to woman and sweetheart, and the worker in railroad gang and construction camp often sings to his “cap’n” about his woman. Likewise, in the songs of woman, man plays the leading rôle. These man
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CHAPTER IX WOMAN’S SONG OF MAN
CHAPTER IX WOMAN’S SONG OF MAN
W oman’s song of man is in most respects parallel to man’s song of woman. Her themes are about the same. She sings of her “man” or “daddy,” of her disappointments and failures in love, of her unfaithful lover, and of her own secret amours. It will be noticed that woman’s song conforms quite closely to the blues type as it is popularly known today. In Chapter I examples of the “mama” blues titles were given and in Chapter II it was pointed out that the majority of the formal blues of today deal w
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CHAPTER X FOLK MINSTREL TYPES
CHAPTER X FOLK MINSTREL TYPES
O ne of the most interesting of all the Negro’s secular songs is the folk minstrel type. This minstrel song is similar to the original minstrel, in which one or more wandering musicians and songsters travel from place to place rendering song and music with varied accompaniments. Sometimes one singer goes alone, sometimes two, sometimes a quartette. They are entertainers in the real sense that they exhibit themselves and their art with all the naturalness and spontaneity possible. Furthermore, su
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CHAPTER XI WORKADAY RELIGIOUS SONGS
CHAPTER XI WORKADAY RELIGIOUS SONGS
M any a laborer, although singing his full quota of secular songs, still finds his workaday solace best in his favorite heritage of church and religious melodies. There is surcease of sorrow in the plaintive And the appeal for relief from present difficulties, so eloquently expressed in the previous chapters, finds its counterpart in this favorite of many workers of the present day. There seems to be an impression abroad to the effect that the making of Negro spirituals stopped long ago. On the
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CHAPTER XII THE ANNALS AND BLUES OF LEFT WING GORDON
CHAPTER XII THE ANNALS AND BLUES OF LEFT WING GORDON
H ere is a construction camp which employs largely Negro workers. In four years 8,504 laborers were employed and there was an average labor turnover of once each month, or forty-eight different sets of men working on the buildings and road under construction during that time. This camp employed men from different Southern states in the order named: North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana; while stragglers represented eleven st
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CHAPTER XIII JOHN HENRY: EPIC OF THE NEGRO WORKINGMAN
CHAPTER XIII JOHN HENRY: EPIC OF THE NEGRO WORKINGMAN
L eft Wing Gordon was and is a very real person, “traveling man” de luxe in the flesh and blood. Not so John Henry, who was most probably a mythical character. Whatever other studies may report, no Negro whom we have questioned in the states of North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia has ever seen or known of John Henry personally or known any one who has, although it is well understood that he was “mos’ fore-handed steel-drivin’ man in the world.” Still he is none the less real as a vivid pi
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CHAPTER XIV SOME TYPICAL NEGRO TUNES
CHAPTER XIV SOME TYPICAL NEGRO TUNES
W e have pointed out again and again the utter futility of trying to describe accurately the singing of a group of Negroes when they are at their best. A group of twenty workers singing, carrying various parts, suiting song to work, and vying with one another for supremacy in variations and innovations—this is a scene which defies musical notation and description. And yet the picture which we have tried to present in this volume would certainly be incomplete without the addition of some of the s
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CHAPTER XV TYPES OF PHONO-PHOTOGRAPHIC RECORDS OF NEGRO SINGERS
CHAPTER XV TYPES OF PHONO-PHOTOGRAPHIC RECORDS OF NEGRO SINGERS
W e have referred often in these pages to the wealth of material found in the great variety and number of the Negro’s songs. We have appraised the collections which have been published and those which are to come as valuable source material for the study of folk life and art and especially for their value in the portrayal of representative Negro life. Adequate analysis and presentation of these values will be possible only after a number of the other collections have been completed and comprehen
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BOOKS
BOOKS
Abbot, F. H. , and Swan, A. J. , Eight Negro Songs . Enoch & Sons, New York, 1923. Eight songs from Bedford County, Virginia. Explanatory comments and notes on dialect are given for each song. Allen, W. F. , and others, Slave Songs of the United States . New York, 1867. Words and music of 136 songs are given. Armstrong, M. F. , Hampton and Its Students . New York, 1874. Fifty plantation songs. Ballanta, N. G. J. , St. Helena Island Spirituals . G. Schirmer, New York, 1925. A collection o
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PERIODICALS
PERIODICALS
Adventure Magazine. The files of this magazine for the last few years should be of considerable interest to the student of folk song. A department called “Old Songs That Men Have Sung” is conducted by Dr. R. W. Gordon, a Harvard-trained student of folk song. Many of the songs printed in this department are Negro songs or Negro adaptions. Backus, E. M. , “Negro Songs from Georgia,” Journal of American Folk-Lore , vol. 10, pp. 116, 202, 216; vol. 11, pp. 22, 60. Six religious songs. Backus, E. M.
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