Episode 362. No More Slavery Chains

Episode 362. No More Slavery Chains

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George Floyd Memorial by Taqi Spateen in southern occupied West Bank

Five years ago, I awoke in Berlin to the horrifying news of the murder of George Floyd by a member of the Minneapolis Police Department. I had been working on cobbling together an episode on French Glamour, which quickly gave way instead to an impromptu episode of protest music through the ages which remains one of the Countermelody episodes of which I am most proud. Yesterday was the five-year commemoration of that horrific event, which sparked worldwide protests and which, for a while, seemed as if it might lead to systemic change. Five years later, we find ourselves in a true global nightmare. Almost everything that has changed has been for the worse, but my feelings about the system that has produced such calamity remains exactly the same as it has always been. For that reason, I am republishing that episode from five long years ago, in which I sought to “defer to those on the front lines to speak of their own experience and truth” in a program of protest music from the early twentieth century to the recent past. Nina Simone’s song of rage “Mississippi Goddam” was a guiding force as I put the episode together, but we hear from a wide range of singers, from Donny Hathaway, Micki Grant, Pete Seeger, Mahalia Jackson, Odetta, Billie Holiday, Aretha Franklin, to Joan Baez, Cher, Barbra Streisand, Paul Robeson, and Marlene Dietrich. If you don’t want to hear a political program, for goddess’s sake, keep away, but if you do want to be infuriated, engaged, and ultimately uplifted, please listen in.

Dr. Shareeduh McGee, cousin of George Floyd, and President of the 929 Foundation

RECORDINGS HEARD IN THIS EPISODE

Keedron Bryant in 2020

Keedron Bryant: I Just Wanna Live

Keedron Bryant today

Abel Meeropol: Strange Fruit. Billie Holiday [live 1959 television performance]

Nina Simone: Mississippi Goddam [live at Carnegie Hall 1964]

Woody Guthrie: Pastures of Plenty. Odetta

Micki Grant in a still from the Stage Three telecast

Marc Blitzstein: Joe Worker (The Cradle Will Rock). Micki Grant [from CBS-TV broadcast of Stage Three, November 1964]

Joe Hill: The Preacher and the Slave [Pie in the Sky]. Pete Seeger

Earl Robinson, Alfred Hayes: Joe Hill. Paul Robeson [1949 live performance for Scottish miners]

Earl Robinson, John Latouche: Ballad for Americans. Paul Robeson; Nathanael Shilkret, Victor Symphony Orchestra, American People’s Chorus

Earl Robinson and Paul Robeson during the recording of the Ballad for Americans

Bob Dylan, Hans Bradtke (German words): Die Antwort weiss ganz allein der Wind [Blowin’ in the Wind]. Marlene Dietrich; Burt Bacharach

Stephen Stills: For What It’s Worth. Cher

Neil Young: Ohio. Crosby, Still, Nash & Young

Prince: Baltimore. Prince, featuring Eryn Allen Kane

Jonas Myrin, Jay Landers, John Shanks, Barbra Streisand: Don’t Lie to Me. Barbra Streisand

Joan Baez: Nasty Man

Paul Simon: Bridge over Troubled Water. Aretha Frankllin

Nina Simone, Weldon Irvine: To Be Young, Gifted and Black. Donny Hathaway

Micki Grant: So Little Time (Don’t Bother Me I Can’t Cope). Micki Grant

Traditional Spiritual: No More Slavery Chains for Me. Shirley Verrett; Leonard De Paur

Martin Luther King, Jr.: We Shall Overcome Sermon

Pete Seeger: We Shall Overcome. Mahalia Jackson

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