Black-American musical expression during enslavement laid the foundation for blues, jazz, country, gospel, rock ā€˜n’ roll, R&B, & popular music. Emerging from oppression, it reflected resilience & creativity, becoming anthems for civil rights movements the world over. The emotive force and cultural distinctiveness of those early songs endure, nurturing the ongoing struggle for a more just world.

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All African tribal groups brought to the New World as slaves shared a common cultural trait: music played an essential role in every aspect of life. It was present during play, work, mourning, and worship, blurring the lines between these purposes. Creating music was a communal effort, with everyone contributing according to their abilities.

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Even after Africans were forcibly taken from their homes and forced to adapt to a foreign land and culture, music remained central to their lives. Their songs encompassed work, dance, and worship music, forming distinct categories.

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Throughout history, despite the challenges of slavery, the slaves developed a new communication system through these songs. Over time, these musical expressions became the foundation of Black American music, uniting the Black community during years of struggle and hardship.

Subsequent generations built upon this foundation, eventually giving rise to what we now know as Black American culture.

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Enslaved people sang work songs while laboring on railways, cutting woods, and clearing bushes for their masters. These songs served as a way to alleviate boredom, express emotions, frustrations, and dreams of freedom. The lyrics provided insights into their harsh life, reflecting on deaths, punishments, starvation, and family separation.

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Work songs became a means of covert communication among slaves, using coded messages to mock their masters. These songs fostered a strong bond among the slaves, and they sang together in groups, with a leader starting the line and others repeating it as a chorus. This communal singing improved their coordination and enhanced the effectiveness of their tasks, especially during heavy labor involving dangerous tools.

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Work songs varied based on the type of labor, pacing the tasks and making life more bearable. Descriptions of work songs are scarce before 1800, but their modern understanding is based on an intermediate stage of development. These songs evolved from improvised music into roughly predictable rhythmic and metric patterns.

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Most slave music was delivered in a responsorial fashion, with one singer leading and the others joining in, a practice likely influenced by African singing traditions. This style of singing built community and was essential for ensuring worker safety during heavy labor.

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An example of such a song is the railroad work song, which helped coordinate the efforts of workers when hammering spikes or realigning sections of railroad. Chants or songs like "Steel Driving Song" and "Track Callin'" provided the rhythm needed for synchronized labor.

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Field recordings of work songs were typically not captured while the singers were actually working due to the inconvenience of remote work locations for collectors and the disruptive presence of recording equipment for the workers.

John Lomax and his son, Alan Lomax, were folklorists who unearthed some of the most potent vernacular music from the American South within the oppressive and violent prison system of the region.

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These songs had once been sung throughout the South, but the advent of machines led to the disbanding of work gangs. Subsequently, the songs found their last refuge in the road gang and the penitentiary.

Southern agricultural penitentiaries mirrored 19th-century plantations in many ways, where groups of slaves toiled under the watchful eye of armed white overseers, facing constant threats of severe physical punishment.

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Consequently, it was no surprise that the music of plantation culture, including the work songs, also made its way into the prisons.

Within the prison environment, the presence of work song collectors became an intriguing novelty for the inmates, who had no choice but to comply with their wardens. Work tasks, like chopping trees or hoeing fields, were sometimes done with the purpose of recording.

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Field recordings made under such conditions, like "Early in the Mornin'" and "Makes a Long Time Man Feel Bad," provide valuable insight into the integration of work & song. Alan Lomax recorded tie-tamping and wood-cutting chants, field hollers, & occasional blues at Mississippi's Parchman Farm Penitentiary in 1947 and on February 9, 1948.

https://youtu.be/3qsRdLXaWBY

Modern interpretation
https://youtu.be/_XfKHm9g-ig

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No More, My Lawd

YouTube

These recordings were anthologized as "Negro Prison Songs" in 1958 and released in 1997 as two volumes of "Prison Songs" in the Alan Lomax Collection by Rounder Records (1714 and 171).

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A notable example of a work song assimilated into popular culture is the "Night Herding Song." Historically, work songs have been adapted to suit the styles of various singers who then became inspirations for later generations.

For instance, in 1929, Mississippi John Hurt recorded the popular tune "Spike Driver Blues," his own take on the traditional "Take This Hammer."

https://youtu.be/Q5img4o2Wgc

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MISSISSIPPI JOHN HURT - Spike Driver Blues [1928]

YouTube

The work song "Black Betty," originally documented by the Library of Congress, has been recorded by rock bands Ram Jam (1977), Spiderbait (2004), and The Melvins (2011). As a result, contemporary pop music carries traces of the driving rhythms and poignant lyrics that echo the centuries of American workers chopping, hammering, and daydreaming.

https://youtu.be/tiCEVl_9-MM

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Original Black Betty

YouTube

@Deglassco Thank you for your invaluable research and posts.

As FYI: A NYC folkie group also covered "Black Betty" in early 1960s. It's where I first heard it.

Koerner, Ray, & Glover - Black Betty
https://youtu.be/xgL0mM2qPGY

Koerner, Ray, & Glover - Black Betty

YouTube