An Introduction to America’s Music

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CHAPTER 3 | SOUTHERN AND FRONTIER DEVOTIONAL MUSIC 69


authorities and away from God. On the other hand, music centered on praise
emphasized conviction and purity of heart over moral improvement. The pur-
suit of edifi cation by musical means became a driving force in the churches and
meeting houses of the urban Northeast, matched by the vigor with which evan-
gelical revivalism’s music of praise reached out to “plain folk” in the remote cor-
ners of the young republic.

SINGING PRAISES: SOUTHERN AND FRONTIER
DEVOTIONAL MUSIC

In 1933 George Pullen Jackson, a New England–born professor of German at
Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, published a book—White Spirituals
in the Southern Uplands—about a remarkable practice he had encountered among
“plain folk” in the region. Gathering on weekends, groups of Southerners staged
all-day “singings” of sacred music, and they brought their own books: oblong
volumes of psalm and hymn tunes, fuging tunes, and anthems set mostly for
four-part chorus with the melody in the tenor voice. They seated themselves
according to voice part—treble (soprano), counter (alto), tenor, and bass—in a
rectangle with open space in the middle. Into that space stepped a succession of
singers from the ranks, each leading the group in two or three pieces. Typically,
before adding the words to a piece, the group would sing the notes on four syl-
lables: fa, sol, la, and mi (a form of solm ization, as described in the box on page 72).
Jackson, who found the singers’ note-reading ability astounding, learned that
most had attended singing schools. They tended to vocalize at full blast, paying
little heed to voice quality and making no attempt to blend—but with no audi-
ence in sight, such things didn’t seem to matter.
While the singing promoted by the New England reformers always included a
human audience, which it tried to please and edify, singers in Jackson’s Southern
tradition made music to glorify God; theirs was an attitude of praise. According
to their understanding, the power of the music and the absorbed concentration
they brought to their singing made it worthy of the recipient, no matter how
it sounded. Neither self-awareness nor an audience played any role, for when
human judgments of musical quality began to be made, Jackson warned, “at that
moment, this singing of, for, and by the people loses its chief characteristic.”
Conversations at the singings he attended helped Jackson understand what
these gatherings meant to the singers. “Every time I go to one of these singings,”
one veteran confi ded, “I feel t hat I a m attend i ng a memor ia l to my mot her”; when
one of her favorite pieces was sung, it was “as if heaven itself hovers over the
place.” Pleasure in making music was also part of the attraction. But in the end,
the spiritual environment seems to have left the deepest impression. Many of
the people imagined heaven as “a place where they will meet again those beloved
singers who have gone before, and sing again with them, endlessly.”

SHAPE NOTES AND SOUTHERN HYMNODY


Jackson’s research revealed these singings to be the tip of a historical iceberg.
Rather than keeping pace with religious and musical change, people in the
Upland South—which includes the Shenandoah Valley and parts of Maryland,

all-day singing

music of praise

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