![]() ![]() ![]() Bernice Johnson - Been In The Storm So Long 3:51Ĩ. SNCC Freedom Singers Led By Bernice Johnson - Woke Up This Morning With My Mind On Freedom 2:27ħ. SNCC Freedom Singers Led By Cordell Reagon - Which Side Are You On? 1:55Ħ. CORE Freedom Singers - Get Your Rights, Jack 3:47ĥ. CORE Freedom Singers - Certainly, Lord 2:03Ĥ. SNCC Freedom Singers Led By Rutha Harris - We Shall Not Be Moved 2:08ģ. SNCC Freedom Singers Led By Emory Harris - We'll Never Turn Back 3:28Ģ. Carlton Reese - We're Marching On To Freedom Land 2:29Ģ1. Mabel Hillary - Don't You Think It's About Time We All Be Free 3:39Ģ0. Sam Block - Jesus On The Mainline, Tell Him What You Want 3:31ġ9. Fannie Lou Hamer - Walk With Me, Lord 1:34ġ7. Fannie Lou Hamer - Wade In The Water 2:30ġ6. Fannie Lou Hamer - Go Tell It On The Mountain 3:00ġ4. Perdew & Virginia Davis - Ain' Scared Of Nobody 1:47ġ0. Willie Peacock - Get On Board, Children 2:07ħ. Lord, Hold My Hand While I Run This Race 2:47ĥ. Betty Mae Fikes - If You Miss Me From The Back Of The Buss 3:02Ĥ. Betty Mae Fikes - This Little Light Of Mine 4:16ģ. Freedom Singers - Freedom Medley: Freedom Chant Oh Freedom: This Little Light Of Mine 1:56Ģ. Some of the SNCC performances, however, do stand up on their own as fine folk/gospel, especially "In the Mississippi River," "Governor Wallace," and "Oginga Odinga," imaginative compositions that are movingly sung.' -AllMusic Review by Richie Unterbergerġ. Listeners will need to have a strong interest in the historical context of these recordings to justify their purchase, because as music it can make for a dry experience. This isn't meant to diminish in any way the significance of these songs, just to say that they were effective mostly as organizing tools, not as pure musical statements. Musically speaking, it's not that captivating the fidelity is sometimes rough, and the performances interesting purely from an archival standpoint. ![]() Historically speaking, this is a valuable document of a movement whose importance cannot be underestimated if nothing else, it's interesting to see how folk and pop songs (including such unlikely candidates as Ray Charles' "Hit the Road Jack") were changed to reflect struggle for equality. The SNCC Freedom Singers, including in their ranks future Sweet Honey in the Rock mainstay Bernice Johnson Reagon (who wrote the liner notes), contribute quite a few tracks, but the majority are by less professional soloists and choirs. This is a two-CD, 43-song compilation of such songs, recorded live in mass meetings in churches between 19. 'The civil rights movement used freedom songs to spread their message, adapting folk and pop tunes with contemporary topical lyrics, or writing new songs addressing social injustice in general, and injustice for African-Americans in particular. ![]()
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