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Hear These Beautiful Sacred Selections

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 February 2019

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Extract

Few pioneering works on American culture are as significant as George Pullen Jackson's White Spirituals in the Southern Uplands: The Story of the Fasola Folk, Their Songs, Singings, and “Buckwheat Notes” (1933). To this seminal book Jackson added four others, which fixed his name as the key interpreter of the Anglo-American religious folksong tradition within the United States. In White Spirituals Jackson set for himself a large and ambitious goal: to define and study a corpus not previously recognized as folksong by orthodox ballad scholars. In the process, he added to our understanding of the tune-family concept and helped to establish a multi-faceted model of folk society identified by geography, institutional structure, and philosophic belief.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1971 By the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois 

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References

1 In these footnotes I shall refer to Jackson's books by initials: WSSU, White Spirituals in the Southern Uplands (1933); SFSEA, Spiritual Folk-Songs of Early America (1937); DESO, Down-East Spirituals and Others (1939); WNS, White and Negro Spirituals (1943); ASWS, Another Sheaf of White Spirituals (1952).Google Scholar

2 Yoder, Don, “Introduction,” Folklore Associates reprint of WSSU (1964); Revitt, Paul J., The George Pullen Jackson Collection of Southern Hymnody: A Bibilography (1964), UCLA Library Occasional Papers, Number 13.Google Scholar

3 Lomax quote in Whitten, Norman E. Jr., and Szwed, John, Afro-American Anthropology (1970), p. 197.Google Scholar

4 WSSU, p. 390.Google Scholar

6 Library of Congress album brochure, Sacred Harp Singing (L 11). See also DESO, p. 239.Google Scholar

7 DESO, p. 25.Google Scholar

8 Ibid., p. 2.Google Scholar

9 “Hicks’ Farewell,” WSSU, pp. 202–205; “Ten Blessings of Mary,” ASWS, pp. 63–64.Google Scholar

10 All quotes in paragraph from ASWS, p. 1.Google Scholar

11 Dusenberry, ASWS, pp. 5 and 9; Yoder, pp. 5–6.Google Scholar

12 I am indebted to Joe Hickerson of the Library of Congress and Dick Hulan of Vanderbilt University for bringing these letters to my attention.Google Scholar

13 “Titanic,” SFSEA, pp. 177–178, and WNS, pp. 210–211.Google Scholar

14 Asbury, Samuel E. and Meyer, Henry E., “Old-Time White Camp-Meeting Spirituals” in Tone the Bell Easy, Texas Folklore Society Publications, X (1932), 169–185. See also SFSEA, p. 219.Google Scholar

15 Walsh, Jim, “Religioso Records Always Sold Big,” Variety, CXCV (September 1, 1954), 54.Google Scholar

16 Archie Green, “Hillbilly Music: Source and Symbol,” Journal of American Folklore, LXXVIII (July, 1965), 204–228.Google Scholar

17 The first edition of Blues and Gospel Records 1902–1942 was published in 1963 by Brian Rust of Middlesex, England. In 1969 a revised edition was issued by Hanover House, London.Google Scholar

18 Daniel, Harlan, “78 rpm Recordings of Sacred Harp Songs,” John Edwards Memorial Foundation Quarterly, VI (Spring, 1970).Google Scholar

19 All Okeh brochure quotes from Jim Walsh microfilm at John Edwards Memorial Foundation, UCLA.Google Scholar

20 A paper by Wilgus, D. K. on Jenkins's “Billy the Kid” was read at the 1970 annual meeting of the American Folklore Society.Google Scholar

21 Wilgus, D. K., “Folksong and Folksong Scholarship: The Rationalistic Approach” in A Good Tale and a Bonnie Tune, Texas Folklore Society Publications, XXXII (1964), 227–237; McCulloh, Judith, “Hillbilly Records and Tune Transcriptions,” Western Folklore, XXVI (July, 1967), 225–244. See also Green, Archie, “Commercial Music Graphics: Number Eight,” John Edwards Memorial Foundation Quarterly, V (Spring, 1969).Google Scholar

22 WNS, pp. 65–76.Google Scholar

23 DESO, p. 229.Google Scholar

24 Randolph, Vance, Ozark Folksongs (1950), IV, 14.Google Scholar

25 Austin and Fife, Alta, Songs of the Cowboys by N. Howard (Jack) Thorp (1966), pp. 66–86. John White notes D. J. O'Malley's hand in “Cowboy's Dream” in “A Montana Cowboy Poet,” Journal of American Folklore, LXXX (April, 1967), 113–129.Google Scholar

26 The literature of gospel hymnody is extensive. For unpublished studies see Hartley, Kenneth R., Bibliography of Theses and Dissertations in Sacred Music, Detroit Studies in Music Bibliography (1967), Number 9. For two representative articles see James G. Downey, “Revivalism, the Gospel Songs, and Social Reform,” Ethnomusicology, IX (May, 1965), 115–125; Tallmadge, William H., “The Responsorial and Antiphonal Practice in Gospel Song,” Ethnomusicology, XII (May, 1968), 219–238.Google Scholar

27 Lillian Crabtree in a George Peabody College master's thesis, “Songs and Ballads Sung in Overton County, Tennessee” (Nashville, 1936), p. 93, presented an eight-stanza Holy Roller song, “The Two Rulers,” which seems to be the source for Whitter's disc. On April 9, 1930, Frank and James McCravy from Laurens, South Carolina, secured a copyright (E unp 19950) on “The Dollar and the Devil.” Their text and tune is found in the Southern Music Publishing Company's folio, The Frank & Jim McCravy Album of Fireside Songs (New York, 1933).Google Scholar

28 Yoder, Don, Pennsylvania Spirituals (1961), pp. 434–447.Google Scholar

29 The first serious review of gospel LPs is by Wilgus, D. K., “Record Reviews: Gospel Song,” Journal of American Folklore, LXXIX (July, 1966), 510–516.Google Scholar

30 Barry, Phillips, “American Folk Music,” Southern Folklore Quarterly, I (June, 1937), 34.Google Scholar

31 Bayard, Samuel P., “Decline and ‘Revival’ of Anglo-American Folk Music” in Folklore in Action, American Folklore Society Bibliographical and Special Series, XIV (1962), 21–29.Google Scholar

32 I wish to thank Joe Boyd, Harlan Daniel, Ronald Foreman, Joe Hickerson, Dick Hulan, Bill Malone, Judith McCulloh, and Don Yoder for help in this article.Google Scholar