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Deep River: The African-American Choral Spiritual

From WFIU | 59:01

From the days of slavery 150 years ago, the African-American spiritual grew out of the earliest days of Black America.

Over time, spirituals spread across denominations, cultures, and concert venues around the U.S. and throughout the world. Many have heard this music without being aware of how deep the meaning and history run beneath the surface.

Listeners will enjoy an hour of choral spirituals with expert commentary by the former director of the IU African-American Choral Ensemble, Dr. James Mumford. Your host is poet Ross Gay.

Aace_photo_small From the days of slavery 150 years ago, the African-American spiritual grew out of the earliest days of Black America.

Over time, spirituals spread across denominations, cultures, and concert venues around the country and the world. Many have heard this music without being aware of how deep the meaning and history run beneath the surface.

Listeners will enjoy an hour of spirituals, including the well-known "Let My People Go," compositions from Undine Smith Moore and more. The compelling songs are contextualized and given new life by spirituals expert and former choral ensemble director Dr. James Mumford. 

Spirituals, according to Dr. Mumford, are “books in the library of primary sources of the real experiences of enslaved Africans.” Spirituals can tell us “how they felt about slavery, were able to endure it; define it; adapt it; hate it; to fight it, and to eventually come out of it.”

The language in spirituals, their poetry, comes out of the necessity to use double entendre in order to veil the messages hidden in each song. As Dr. Mumford says, “one finds in the Spirituals the polarities of hope and despair, joy and sorrow, death and life.”