Celebration of the "Negro Spiritual"/Jesse Norman, Kathleen Battle and More Singers

My Notes: Celebration of the "Negro Spiritual". Many older stars such as Paul Robeson, Jesse Norman, Kathleen Battle were known for singing Negro Spirituals before they became great opera stars. It provided them with some of the vocal training needed before moving on to opera. Enjoy/


Information Taken from Wikipedia/
Negro spirituals were primarily expressions of religious faith. Some may also have served as socio-political protests veiled as assimilation to white American culture. They originated among enslaved Africans in the United States. Slavery was introduced to the British colonies in the early 17th century, and enslaved people largely replaced indentured servants as an economic labor force during the 17th century. In the United States, these people would remain in bondage for the entire 18th century and much of the 19th century. Most were not fully emancipated until the ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment to the


During slavery in the United States, there were systematic efforts to de-Africanize the captive Black workforce. Slaves were forbidden from speaking their native languages, and were generally converted to Christianity.
Because they were unable to express themselves freely in ways that were spiritually meaningful to them, enslaved Africans often held secret religious services. During these meetings,worshipers were free to engage in African religious rituals such as spiritual possession, speaking in tongues and shuffling in counterclockwise ring shouts to communal shouts and chants. It was there also that enslaved Africans further crafted the impromptu musical expression of field songs into the so-called "line singing" and intricate, multi-part harmonies of struggle and overcoming, faith, forbearance and hope that have come to be known as Negro spirituals.

Restrictions were placed on the religious expression of slaves. Rows of benches in places of worship discouraged congregants from spontaneously jumping to their feet and dancing. The use of musical instruments of any kind often was forbidden, and slaves were ordered to desist from the "paganism" of the practice of spiritual possession.
However, several traditions rooted in Africa continue to the present day in African-American spiritual practices. Examples include the "call and response" style of preaching in which the speaker speaks for an interval and the congregation responds in unison in a continual pattern throughout the sermon. The "call and response" is often accompanied by instruments and sounds much like a song. Speaking in tongues is a persistent practice, as is "shouting." Shouting may involve anything from jumping in one place repeatedly, running through the sanctuary, raising hands and arms in the air, shouting traditional praise phrases, or being "slain in the spirit" (fainting). The locations and the era may be different; but the same emphasis on combining sound, movement, emotion, and communal interaction into one focus on faith and its role in overcoming struggles, whether as an individual or a people group, remain the same





Jessye Norman 'Give Me Jesus' 1990






Kathleen Battle - Over My Head I Hear Music in the Air



Kathleen Battle - 3 Spirituals (Encores) - Salzburg Festival 1987



Kathleen Battle, Jessye Norman: "Deep River" 11 / 22




Cantata, Pt. 1 (Negro Spiritual) / John Carter



Cantata, Pt. 2 (Negro Spiritual) / John Carter




Calvary (Negro Spiritual) / Betty Jackson King



For You There is No Song, Darryl Taylor, countertenor (Adams)



dNessa - I Wanna Be Ready – Spiritual




Over My Head I Hear Music in the Air (Negro Spiritual)



Is There Anybody Here That Loves My Jesus (Negro Spiritual)



Deep River (Negro Spiritual) / H. T. Burleigh



Little Boy (Negro Spiritual) / Roland Hayes




Kathleen Battle, Jessye Norman: "Scandalize My Name



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