Portland Observar Section II February 26.1661 Page 7 RICHARD ALLEN o f Philadelphia (1760-1831), who is chiefly noted fo r organizing and heading the first congregation o f the African Methodist Episcopal Zion church was acutely aware o f this. He collected hymns that he felt would appeal to his Black congregation. Printed by John O rm rod in 1801, it was entitled: A Collection o f Spiritual Songs and Hymns Selected from Various A uthors by Richard A lien. African Minister. Because Allen's counterpart in the South at that time had little or no access to a hymnal fo r his “ congregation,” it may be assumed that he or his lead singer was the composer o f many religious songs. It should be noted that long before the white man en­ tered Africa as slavers, explorers, or missionaries, there was a widespread belief in a Supreme Being, and each village had its “ minister” or priest. This allowed for an easier transferrance in the New Land, not the ad­ monitions or forces o f the white master. Here, in the States, ministers enjoyed the same leadership role as did those priests in Africa. This helps to explain why many insurrections were instigated or led by religious men. Two o f the more famous were Nat Turner and Denmark Vesey. Thus, out o f the meger o f the slaves’ songs from A frica and their experience in the New Land, came a form o f music about which much has been written: The S p iritu al. Recognized as a form o f communal com­ munication, this music has served to bind a people as does all folk music; for folk music is a music that re­ flects the tastes and feelings o f a community rather than individual emotions. The spiritual’ s close relationship between the singer (slave) and Jesus m ight be explained by th e ir com ­ m on ality: both had been “ buked (rebuked) and scorned, tortured in some manner, and forced to accept unjust, heavy punishment. This is why he is the diety most often mentioned in the spiritual: He was deemed most sympathetic to their plight. JOHN LOVELL. JR ., in his definitive book on Afro- American spirituals. Black Song: The Forge and the Flame wrote that music “ ...blended the experiences and poetic imaginations o f one folk group and created songs for the human heart.” He further states that the “ pur­ pose” o f the spiritual are: I. To give the com m unity a true, valid and useful song. 1. To keep the Community invigorated. 3. To inspire the unispired individual. 4. To enable the group to face its problems. 5. To stir each member to personal solutions and to a sense o f belonging in the m idst o f a confusing and terrifying world. 6. To provide a code language for emergency use. Recognizing the inherent danger for foment that the slaves’ religious services (or any form o f assemblage) and the singing o f sp iritua ls presented, they were banned in some areas o f the South as early as the 1830s. Most particularly did the Black Methodists come under fire, for they had acquired considerable strength and were thought to be behind the Vesey plot. So too were drums prohibited due to the fear that they would be used as a means o f communicating information. To cir­ cumvent this, meetings had to be held in the woods at night, or in a secure b u ild in g w ith guards posted. Singing was done into a glass or pot filled with water to absorb the sound. Whatever the inconveniences were, they were not enough fo prevent the need from being fulfilled. As has been observed throughout this paper, music had been one o f the primary forces in a slave’ s life. As a century progressed, more docum entation became available. In the South during the earlier decades, entertainment for slaves on the plantation was chiefly offered by in ­ dividual instrumentalists (mostly fiddlers or banjoists) with the group joining in with singing, dancing, or “ pat­ ting.” The latter was a method where the feet were tap­ ped, as well as the thighs and shoulders, by the hands in an in trica te and precise syncopated rhythm . (M ore recently, it is known as “ hamboning” ). However, in New Orleans, there was a section o f the C ity called Congo Square (since renamed Beauregard Square). Here, on Sundays or holy days, whites, who were tourists or locals, came to watch the “ wildest danc­ in g ". The slaves would congregate by tribes to form circles where they would perform a dance or “ shuffle” that was peculiar to West Africa. Hours w ould go by, w ith any who fe ll from exhaustion quickly replaced by another. O f course, the chief instrument, sim ilar to the B anjar or Banjo was made from a calabash. The instrumentalists were within the ring. “ Incessant chanting and the exciting music...” according to an 1808 report, created a state o f frenzy within the participants. This same report stated that, at sundown “ ...the city partols show themselves with their cutlasses, and the crowds immediately dispersed.” “ Ac­ c o rd in g ly ,” Langston Hughes mused, “ some musicologists believed that jazz was born before sunset in Congo Square. Certainly the basic beat was there all day long.” Such entertainment for slaves was chiefly lim ited to the exotic city o f New Orleans, w ith its largest Black population in any American city; fo r one-third o f its inhabitants, about 12,000 were Black. It also had a peculiar caste system based upon color and status: free or slave. The free people (creoles o f color as they were known) and free Blacks o f unmixed parentage, indulged in more sophiscated or genteel pursuits. Perhaps to clearly delineate their status, they eschewed the more African inspired music fo rjh e European variety. In almost every household there was a piano, and some member was able to acquit h im /h e rs e lf well enough to entertain family and friends. Voice lessons were also taken to in­ dulge the petted young ladies o f these m iddle-class creoles. At the white ball, opera houses and thratres, sections were often set aside for the Blacks, and they were almost always Tilled to capacity. So seriously did many music lovers and accomplished instrum entalists view their music, that the Negro Philharmonic Society was formed with over 100 mem­ bers. It served a double purpose; the one just stated, and it prevented those who truly found racial discrimination distasteful from having to attend segregated p erfor­ mances at the white theaters. In addition to performing at concerts in their own building, the Society acted as booking agents for visiting performers. 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