August 24, 2015
 

Indomitable

fannie-lou1

fannie-lou-songs

SONGS MY MOTHER TAUGHT ME

Fannie Lou Hamer

Smithsonian Folkways Recordings

 

While it took a recent act of domestic terror for the polarizing Confederate flag to begin coming down throughout the South, let us not forget that much of the way was paved more than a half-century ago by such freedom fighters as Fannie Lou Hamer.

Hamer, who died in 1977 at age 59, is renowned for her leadership in the Civil Rights movement and specifically for her work with the Mississippi Freedom Party. Equally well known, albeit a sidebar to her life, was her talent as a religious singer. Fannie Lou Hamer was a powerful activist and a stone singer, and her authenticity in oratory and song moved thousands to action.

It is Hamer’s authenticity that comes through most clearly on Smithsonian Folkways’ Songs My Mother Taught Me. Part of the African American Legacy Series co-produced with the Museum of African American History and Culture, the CD is a survey of Hamer’s life as told through her singing, oratory and a 1965 interview with Julius Lester.

From Songs My Mother Taught Me, Fannie Lou Hamer’s ‘This Little Light of Mine’

Here we learn that singing was as much a part of Hamer’s life as breathing. Born the twentieth child—twentieth!—to a sharecropping family, Hamer shares her early life experiences with Lester and on a limited-edition cassette produced by Dr. Bernice Johnson Reagon. This cassette, also titled Songs My Mother Taught Me, is the source for the a cappella songs sung by Hamer on the Smithsonian Folkways CD.

From Songs My Mother Taught Me, an early 1970s recording of Fannie Lou Hamer singing Thomas A. Dorsey’s ‘Precious Lord’ to family members of slain Civil Rights leader Medgar Evers

From a 1965 interview with Julius Lester included on Songs My Mother Taught Me, Fannie Lou Hamer discusses her family’s life as sharecroppers

The most powerful song selections on the album are the aural glimpses of Hamer in action during the headiest days of the Civil Rights movement. Perhaps no cut is as moving and mighty as her rendition of “This Little Light of Mine,” the song that became her theme. The set also includes Hamer leading a mass meeting in the singing of “Certainly Lord” and another Civil Rights classic, “Woke Up This Morning.” Notwithstanding these electrifying moments, an early 1970s recording of Hamer singing “Precious Lord” to members of the Medgar Evers Family is equally captivating. Her take on Thomas A. Dorsey’s gospel monument  is an amalgam of arrangements made popular in the 1950s by Mahalia Jackson and later by Aretha Franklin.

From Songs My Mother Taught Me, Fannie Lou Hamer leading a mass meeting in singing the Civil Rights classic ‘Woke Up This Morning’

Yes, Hamer’s singing could motivate groups to embark on life-threatening marches and sit-ins, but so could her oratory. The most compelling track in a collection of stirring selections is “Mass Meeting Speech,” a 1960s recording of Hamer addressing a mass meeting. The wisdom and meter of her message are as effective as those of any licensed preacher.

Fannie Lou Hamer was one of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “drum majors for justice.” She employed every tool in her kit on behalf of freedom. One could only imagine how proud she would be today to see those flags coming down, but also how insistent she would be in letting everyone know, in no uncertain terms, that the march to freedom is far from over.

bob-marovich-featured-images1

Deep Roots gospel editor Bob Marovich is the founder and editor of The Journal of Gospel Music.

 

 

 

 

 

 





blogging farmer