If you have need of some spiritual comfort, give a listen to this week's episode of episode of Kristin Tppett's interview with the late Joe Carter. His singing of the spirituals they talk about is second to none : https://onbeing.org/programs/joe-carter-the-spirituals-aug2018/ Mr. Carter died in 2006. Unfortunately I couldn't find an obit.
Here's the transcript:
Krista Tippett, host: This hour, an exuberant
experience of conversation and singing the spirituals. There are nearly
5,000 spirituals in existence. Their organizing concept is not the
melody of Europe, but the rhythm of Africa. They were composed by
slaves, bards whose names we will never know, and yet gave rise to
gospel, jazz, blues and hip-hop. Joe Carter lived and breathed the
universal appeal and the hidden stories, meanings, and hope in what were
originally called “sorrow songs.”
Joe Carter: What we're talking about is human
suffering, and how do we survive when the worst happens? What are the
mechanisms? I can sing "Motherless Child" in Siberia; they know what it
means. They've been through hell. I can go to Scotland and Ireland and
Wales and sing these. They understand the sentiment. The songs have
become symbolic, I think, of that universal quest for freedom, that
yearning for freedom, and that part of us that says, "I will not be
defeated."
Ms. Tippett: I’m Krista Tippett, and this is On Being.
This was one of our first weekly shows and it’s still one of our most
beloved. Joe Carter remained relatively unknown through his death in
June, 2006. But he performed for more than 25 years in opera and musical
theater and he portrayed Paul Robeson in a one-man musical. I spoke
with him in a music recording studio in 2003, with his pianist Tom West
nearby for whenever Joe might feel called to burst into song.
Ms. Tippett: Tell me what you think of when I ask
the question about how this music played a role in your earliest
religious life, and what songs, or what song, comes into your mind first
and why.
Mr. Carter: It takes me back to my childhood in
Cambridge, Massachusetts, and my church, which was Union Baptist Church,
the main black church in Cambridge at the time. We didn’t have
spirituals in the church, and we didn’t have African-American gospel
music. It was a period of time when there were a lot of African
Americans who were saying, we’re not connecting to our history. We want
to show everyone that we can be integrated. So we were singing European
anthems, so I never heard it in my church except when there was a
baptism. And when the preacher would go into the baptismal pool and he’d
come out, he’d immediately begin to sing [singing] “Everybody
sing amen, amen, hallelujah, amen, amen, amen.” There was no pipe organ,
no piano, he was just singing a cappella and the church would begin to
rock. And as a child I remember — wow, what is that? There’s something
special about that song, about that music — and I was always excited
when I got a chance to hear it, but I didn’t get to hear it very often
in my church.
Another time I heard it was on recordings. We had an old scratchy — I
think it was a 78 recording, and it was a choir called the Wings Over
Jordan Choir, and they were an African-American radio choir in the early
days. And it was something we didn’t hear very often. They were
spirituals.
Whenever we played this record it was almost a total hush in the
room, in the family, because it was the story of Mary McLeod Bethune,
who was a relative of ours, and it tells the story of how this little
girl was the first one born free in her family, how she wanted to learn
to read and write, and in the background you’d hear the Wings Over
Jordan Choir singing spirituals.
[music: “I Will Trust In The Lord” performed by the Wings Over Jordan Choir]
And somehow it was during those experiences I realized there was
something very special about this music that was different than jazz,
blues, and rock and roll that we played on the record player, or even
some of the gospel songs. This was something that was even more
powerful. And I think I had developed a real desire to learn about it.
Ms. Tippett: So tell me what years are we talking about — when were you born, when were you growing up?
Mr. Carter: I was born in 1949. So I was a child of
the ’50s and the ’60s. And then the civil rights movement came along,
and everyone was singing spirituals. And in Cambridge we had all the
folk singers. And when I was 15 years old I got into a folk singing duo
with my best friend at the time, with David Levithan who’s Jewish, and
David told me, "Joe, your people have wonderful music." And this was the
first time I'd ever heard someone say that. So he wanted to come to my
church to hear the music. So he came to Union Baptist Church on a Sunday
morning and heard Bach. He said, "Joe, that ain't it." [laughs]
And so I began to search for places that I could share this music
with David and hear it myself. So we would go into the ghetto in Boston
and we’d go around little store-front churches and we’d go, “This is it!
This is it! You hear the tambourines beating and the people? Oh, yeah.”
[laughs]
Ms. Tippett: Oh gosh, there’s so much I want to
pursue here. First of all, it’s very intriguing to me that you started
on that journey with a Jewish friend because I think so many of the
stories that the spirituals captured came from the Hebrew Bible, the
story of the exodus.
Mr. Carter: Absolutely, that's true. We had a
folk-singing duo, David and I, called the Dithy Ramble Duo. And we sang
“This Train Don’t Carry No Gamblers” and those songs that were popular
in the ’60s. And that was kind of a beginning.
Ms. Tippett: Tell me what your family’s connection
was with the world in which the spirituals were created, which was the
world of black slavery.
Mr. Carter: I think it’s only as an adult I really
began to understand that because my parents were very careful not to
talk about their pains and the things that the ancestors went through
because they didn’t want us to grow up with, so-called, a chip on our
shoulders. They want us to be free and to realize that prejudice was an
evil thing and we must not let it be found in us. But later I realized
my grandparents were born right after slavery. So all of my
great-grandparents were born slaves, my grandparents grew up on the
plantation, my parents as children were on the plantation as share
croppers and moved to the North mainly to flee the persecution of racism
and brought us to a place that was an international community. And
every once and a while I would hear my mother or my father singing a
little song very quietly, they wouldn’t sing openly — or my
grandparents. And I'd say, “What’s that song?” “Oh nothing, nothing,
nothing.”
Ms. Tippett: Do you think that these were songs that they really carried around inside them. They weren’t consciously humming them.
Mr. Carter: Yeah they did. I think they heard them
from their parents and their grandparents and they were just songs that
they sang for comfort.
Ms. Tippett: So I think — and it was only as I
prepared to speak with you — that we celebrate this music now, right?
American culture as a whole celebrates this music. We don’t think very
hard or very often about where they came from and how that is speaking
to us also through this music. And it was also — this question that
James Weldon Johnson raises in the book that you gave me from 1925, the
book of spirituals, about who wrote this music — that there must have
been bards, that there were great artists at work. Is there folklore
around that that came down to you through your family? Is there a memory
of that? What do you think, or what have you learned?
Mr. Carter: Well, I discovered a few things as a
teenager. I met a woman by the name of Jessie Anthony who was — I think
she was over 80 when I met her. And somehow, she was coming to our
church. And we young people would go to her house to collect her, to
bring her to church and so on. Well, here was an African-American woman
whose parents were slaves in Virginia. And she sang the spirituals. And
she'd heard me sing in church, so she just sort of took me under her
wing. And she was going to teach me these songs. And she had a suitcase
full of stories that she'd collected over the years of the spirituals.
And she would tell me, she'd say, “Child, when they sang this song, this
is what they were talking about, you know? A lot of people don't know
this.” And she had stories for every song.
Ms. Tippett: OK, tell me a story.
Mr. Carter: One of the stories I seem to remember
that she told, it was about — Emancipation Day had come. There was a
group of former slaves, now, on an island off the coast of South
Carolina. My parents were from South Carolina, all my family. And they
were waiting for the emissary of the government to arrive in his little
boat to tell them that they had received the deeds to their land,
because the government had promised them not only freedom, but 40 acres
and a mule. This was going to be a great, wonderful day.
And the former slaves had gathered together on the island waiting
with bated breath. And finally, they saw the boat of the officer
approaching. And they could tell, even from the distance, that his face
was not happy and his countenance was somewhat sad. And they said there
was a groan that just came from the crowd. And one of the older women
from the crowd just stood up and began to make up a song on the spot. Do
you want me to show you what that song is?
Ms. Tippett: Yeah, I do.
Mr. Carter: I’ll go to the piano. She sang,
[singing] Nobody knows the trouble I’ve seen
Nobody knows but Jesus
Nobody knows the trouble I’ve seen
Glory, hallelujah
And then she spoke, looking to the people around her, she said,
Sometimes I’m up, sometimes I’m down
Oh, yes, Lord
Sometimes I’m almost level to the ground
Oh, yes, Lord
Oh, nobody knows the trouble I’ve seen
Nobody knows but Jesus
Nobody knows the trouble I’ve seen
Glory, hallelujah
Ms. Tippett: And sorrow songs, is that what the spirituals were called routinely?
Mr. Carter: Yeah, that's what I'm told.
Ms. Tippett: And it does connote — it connotes what's in the music, but it connotes something different from the title "spiritual."
Mr. Carter: Mm-hmm. Because they were the expression
of the great pain and the sorrow. But at the same time, they were
always looking upward. They were always reaching. There was always some
level of hope, as opposed to the concept of the blues. The blues was
just singing about your troubles, and there was no hope. But there's
always the glory hallelujah someplace saying, "Oh, and on that glory
hallelujah, then we fly." So in the midst of the night, we can fly away
to freedom while we're singing these songs. And this is another.
[singing] I am a poor pilgrim of sorrow
Down in this wide world alone
No hope have I for tomorrow
I've started to make heaven my home.
Sometimes I'm tossed and driven, Lord
Sometimes I don't know where to roam
I've heard of a city called heaven
I've started to make heaven my home
Ms. Tippett: I’m Krista Tippett and this is On Being.
Today experiencing the hidden stories, meanings, and hope of the
spiritual. This is one of our earliest and most beloved shows, with the
late, singular musician and humanitarian, Joe Carter.
Ms. Tippett: It seems to be grounded in the
experience of sorrow, but making a connection with that, between that
and the larger human spirit, and the larger experience of God, which is
not just about the sorrow.
Mr. Carter: Yeah. I think that the sorrow became the
entrance, the open door, into a whole new world of experience. The
slaves could not experience the normal world. They couldn't go out and
go shopping. They couldn't buy a house. They couldn't do all the things
that the normal white person did. They were slaves, you know? They were
whipped, and they had chains. And they found a secret door to take them
into that world where the tears are wiped away.
Ms. Tippett: But the tears are cried first, aren't they?
Mr. Carter: Yeah.
Ms. Tippett: You talked about the secret power of
these songs. And I think so much of what we're learning now in our
advanced day is how important it is to embrace suffering in life in
order to move forward.
Mr. Carter: Yeah.
Ms. Tippett: And maybe they did not have a choice.
Mr. Carter: No, they didn't.
Ms. Tippett: But it's almost like there's healing in that moment, even though it doesn't take the pain away.
Mr. Carter: And that's one reason, I think, that
African-American religion and culture has become so powerful in the
world. One of the things that I think about when I think about this body
of music. I realize that it was the foundation for most other American
music. And this music has changed the face of music in the 20th century.
And the story behind the creation of the spirituals, it's a miraculous
story. Normally, when you hear the story of African-American music in a
documentary or something, you go back to Ella Fitzgerald or Louis
Armstrong. And I say, “well, that's great. But if you really want to
know the story behind the story, find out who Louis' grandmother was and
what she was singing. What were the songs he learned when he was a
baby? And what were the messages of those songs?”
And the thing that we find is that in the midst of all of the most
horrible pain, some of these powerful individuals lived transcendent,
shining lives. They were able to rise up above. They were able to be
loving and forgiving in the midst of it all.
Mammy was taking care of master's baby. It was mammy, not master's
wife, that was nursing that little baby. Mammy could have poisoned the
child. She could have smothered the child. But she loved that child like
it was her own child. Because there was something in her faith that
said, "You're supposed to be loving. You're supposed to be kind. You're
supposed to be forgiving. And there's no excuse if you are not." We have
songs like — the interesting thing — you don't find mean-spirited
sentiments in the spirituals. They're the most noble sentiments.
Now, you find a song like this: [singing] “It's me, it's me,
it's me, oh, Lord, standing in the need of prayer…” Not my brother, not
not my sister, not the preacher, not the deacon, not the doctor, not
the lawyer, not the master? Wait a minute. These are people who were
victims. They were in the midst of the most horrible situation, but they
said, “I'm taking responsibility for who I am today, and it's me
standing in the need of — I'm the one that has the proud heart today.
Come and fix me.”
Ms. Tippett: And again, I mean this is not only sound theology and psychology, it's extremely mature spirituality, right?
Mr. Carter: Yeah.
Ms. Tippett: What was it that came together in the
lives and the spiritual sensibility of those slaves that connected them
so powerfully to — really those are the best attributes of Christianity
that you're talking about. They're not often practiced.
James Weldon Johnson talked about this as the verging of the spirit
of Christianity with the vestiges of African music or an African
sensibility. Do you have any ideas about what made that such a special
fusion?
Mr. Carter: Well, I've thought about it a lot, and
one thing that occurs to me, if we go back to the cultures of the slaves
that came from many different African nations and languages, one thing
they had in common was they believed in a supreme deity. But they
believed he was very busy and very, very holy, and in order to get to
him, you had to go through the ancestors. It wasn't very dissimilar to
the way Europeans felt with the saints, and so on. When slavery took
place — and there was also this concept that you commune with deity with
magic, shining songs. If your songs come forth with great fervor, you
not only reach deity, but deity comes and possesses you, becomes part of
you, and gives you the strength to do whatever you've got to do to win
your battles, to harvest your crop.
And when people were taken suddenly as slaves, when they were
literally kidnapped from their normal lives, whatever those lives were,
they were taken away from the land of their ancestors. The spirit of the
ancestors couldn't cross the water. And so, when they were taken on
these boats away from their homes, they experienced the most deep
desolation possible, because not only were they being removed from their
friends and kindred, but they were being removed from their God. And
they had no way to get to God, because the ancestors were way back in
Africa on the land.
And I imagine when the slaves heard about this Jesus — now, the
master's religion, first of all, you've got to realize this: They were
not impressed by the master's Christianity, may I say.
Ms. Tippett: Well, right. This is why it's even surprising to me that they adopted Christianity.
Mr. Carter: Exactly, because they saw all of the
brutality, they saw all the hypocrisy, and were the brunt of it. But
they heard about this Jesus, this man of sorrow who suffered, and they
identified. And then they were told that Jesus is the Son of the High
God. “No. Wait, the Son of the High God? We can get to the High God
through this guy? And his story sounds like our story? He's born in
terrible circumstances, he's mistreated. He's finally abused and killed.
My goodness. Maybe He will carry us to the High God.”
[music: “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot” performed by Tom West]
Ms. Tippett: After a short break, more conversation and song with Joe Carter. Subscribe to On Being
on Apple Podcasts to listen again any time and discover everything we
create. Watch your feed in coming days. We’re going to be releasing the
songs Joe was singing this hour for you to download. They were never
made available as an album in his lifetime.
I'm Krista Tippett and this is On Being. Today, for the
anniversary of Joe Carter’s death, we’re returning to my 2003
conversation with him — one of our very first shows and one of our most
beloved. Joe embodied the beauty, sorrow, and hidden meanings within the
spirituals, songs composed by nameless bards in slavery, and yet a
tradition that gave us gospel, blues, jazz, and hip-hop.
Ms. Tippett: Were there songs reaching back to the
ancestors? Do you think they felt that, also, that old belief that was
planted in them of their songs reaching to God?
Mr. Carter: I think in the early days of slavery,
yes. Because for a long time there were a lot of ancestors from Africa
who were still there on the plantations. So they got that sense.
For example, with Mary McLeod Bethune — her grandmother came over
from Africa with two sisters, and she remembered the songs and stories
and sang those songs to the children. Now nobody in my family now
remembers any of the songs, but we have the stories of her singing the
songs to the children and so on. And it was through the songs that the
faith was transmitted.
Ms. Tippett: Really, it’s taking the story whole and passing it on. It’s pretty good bible study.
Mr. Carter: And then the story of slavery.
Ms. Tippett: The exodus. Being captive in a foreign land.
Mr. Carter: Yes. The Jews in Egypt. “Go down, Moses,
way down to Egypt land and tell old Pharaoh, ‘Let my people go!’” And
sometimes I imagine how some of those songs were used and I imagine
someone on the plantation, the master, who is always very happy when he
hears the slaves singing because he knows where they are, he knows
they’re not escaping, as long as he can hear them. An old master comes
out one day. He says, “Hey, Joe. Big Joe. I don't hear nobody singing
down there. You guys strike me up one of them good, old spiritual songs.
You know how I like them. Give me one of them good, old songs.” And
often when I go to the schoolchildren, I have them sing with me. I say,
“OK. Now pretend you're going to be — you're all slaves, OK? And master
wants us to sing a song, but we don't really want to sing for master, do
we?” “No. No, we don't.” I say, “Well, I'll tell you something. Master
loves our singing, but he doesn't listen to the words we say. He doesn't
have a clue. So we can say anything we want. So, let's give the master a
good old song.”
Ms. Tippett: What do you sing with the kids?
Mr. Carter: [singing] When Israel was in Egypt land,
Let my people go!
Oppressed so hard they could not stand,
Let my people go!
Go down, Moses, way down in Egypt’s land
And tell old Pharaoh, Let my people go!
And after we go through the song, they go, “Hey, old master, how was that one?” [laughs]
One of the connections also that I learned about that period of time
from my grandparents was, my grandfather was a storyteller. And he would
regale the family, every time we were together, with slavery stories.
That's what he always talked about. And there was a slave by the name of
John who was the star of all of these stories. And you never knew
whether the story was true or not, but it was always funny, and it got
your attention, and Grandpa was a good storyteller. There was also
always a moral at the end of the story.
But the one theme that went through all of these stories was that
John had outsmarted the master. He was always ahead of the master.
So there was this concept — the master doesn't really understand us.
We play a role for him and he sees us in a certain way, and we’ll play
that role as much as we can so that we won't get whooped. So we’ve got
to understand his thinking, but he can never understand our thinking.
And so, the spirituals were — all of the spirituals, all of the songs
were masks. As well as these transcendent, wonderful moments. They were
also signals for escape.
For example, we’re gonna do another song now, which goes right along
with what I was just… This was one of my grandmother's favorite songs.
[singing] Steal away, steal away, steal away to Jesus
I've got to steal away, steal away home
I ain't got long to stay here
My Lord He calls me, He calls me by the thunder
The trumpet sounds within my soul
And I ain't got long to stay here
Green trees are bending, poor sinner stands a tremblin’
The trumpet sounds within my soul
And I ain't, I ain't got long to stay, to stay here
It's like you get into the stream of that living water. And there's
no past, present, and future. It's just right now, and right now
everything is all right.
You know, there's a story about Elijah and a woman whose son died.
She had received this son as a miracle, actually. And the prophet told
her that she was going to have this son at a certain time and she did,
and the son dies. And she says, “Send for the man of God. Send for that
prophet.” And Elijah sends a servant. She says, “No, no, no. I want to
see the man. Now, you gave me the promise, I have a child, and my child
has died. I'm having a tragedy right now.” And when Elijah rode, coming
close to her, he said, “Woman, how is it with thee?” She said, “It is
well with my soul.”
And there was something that you can find even today in those,
especially the older people who really have faith, you say, “How are you
doing?” And you just see that smile. And it doesn't say that I'm doing
OK. It doesn't say that everything's OK in my life. Sometimes they'll
say, “I'm blessed.” Sometimes they'll say, “It is well.”
So the sense of well-being does not depend on whether things are good
or bad or up or down because, if we had to live that way as slaves, we
would constantly be buried underneath the ground, because the
circumstances were so horrible and so bad we had to find, as I say, that
secret door.
Ms. Tippett: We talked about how there was this
subversive power of the words of the spirituals, saying things which
really contradicted the interests of the masters, for example. But also
there were more overt codes and real practical references in some of the
spirituals. And give me an example of that, where there was almost a
secret language.
Mr. Carter: “Steal Away To Jesus.” And when someone said, [singing] “I ain't got long to stay,” everybody knew, hey, I'm going to be escaping tonight, and I want you to be supporting me.
Someone is going to meet us on the other side of the river. “Green
trees are bending, poor sinner stands a-tremblin’.” And maybe they had a
signal where someone would shake a leaf in a branch of a tree across
the river and you'd go on to safety to the Underground Railroad,
hopefully.
“Swing low, sweet chariot, coming for to carry me home. I looked over Jordan, what did I see?”
Ms. Tippett: Wait, wait wait. “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot” — what's going on there that's not overt?
Mr. Carter: Well, first, "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot"
was a death song, as most of them were in some way. And it was often
sung when a child died. It was a way to evoke one's dignity, to say,
even though I'm a slave, God has to send a golden chariot down from the
sky. I'm going to have dignity. My child's going to have dignity. “I
looked over Jordan and what did I see? A band of angels coming after me,
coming for to carry me home.”
But then later you get, “If you get there before I do, tell all my
friends I'm coming up there too.” So the master never knew what they
were singing about. You see?
Ms. Tippett: I did not know that.
Mr. Carter: So I think at some point someone
realized, "Maybe I don't have to die in order to have a little heaven."
Freedom. And, of course, they thought that if they got to the
Mason-Dixon line and crossed, they would have true freedom. And then,
unfortunately, they got across the Mason-Dixon line and still found
there was oppression, and found that somehow they had to revert back to
the original spiritual meanings of the songs because the political
meanings never delivered them.
[singing] Swing low, sweet chariot, comin' for to carry me home.
Swing low, sweet chariot, I said it's comin' for to carry me home.
Well, I looked over Jordan and what did I see comin' for to carry me home.
Well it was a band of angels comin' after me, comin' for to carry me home.
If you get there before I do, comin' for to carry me home.
Tell all my friends I'm comin' up there too, comin' for to carry me home.
Why don't you swing low, sweet chariot, comin' for to carry me home.
Oh, swing low, sweet chariot, oh, it's comin' for to carry me home.
It's comin' for to carry me home.
Oh, it’s comin’ for to carry me home.
Ms. Tippett: I can do a much more whimsical listen knowing what you just told me about some of the practicalities and codes behind that.
Mr. Carter: And I think there were so many of the
songs, even “Wade in the Water”: “God's going to trouble the water,”
another image of people going to the river to be baptized and also going
to the river to escape to freedom. And the story was that a certain
season, the angels would come and trouble the water, as they say, which,
I don't know, they put their wings in or their toenails or whatever.
But whatever happened, once they touched the waters, if you got in the
water, and you were sick, you'd be healed.
So here's this guy, 38 years he's been going. And Jesus comes by and
says, “What's your problem?” He says, “Can't you see? I'm a lame man.
And every time the angels come to trouble the water, somebody gets in
before me.” And Jesus said, “Do you want to be healed?” “Well, yes. Of
course, I do.” “Then take up your bed and walk.” They loved this story,
because this was about self-sufficiency. We are not victims. We're
powerful individuals, and we are people of faith. And so they sang — let
me just do a little bit of that song.
[singing] Wade in the water, wade in the water, children
Wade in the water, God's gonna trouble the water
Who's that yonder dressed in white, God's gonna trouble the water
Well, it must be the people called the Israelites, God's gonna trouble the water
Children, wade in the water, wade in the water, children
Wade in the water, God's gonna trouble the water.
Well who's that yonder dressed in red, God's gonna trouble the water
It must be the people that Moses led, God's gonna trouble the water
Children, wade in the water, wade in the water, children
Wade in the water, God's gonna trouble, gonna trouble the water
Ms. Tippett: What this makes me think of is how the
politics of freedom can actually distract from this inner freedom and
dignity, which the slaves possessed and which we find so expressed in
this music even today.
Mr. Carter: And maybe in the same sense that
sometimes religion can distract from spirituality. You get a structure, a
form. You get a program, and somehow, after a while, the real thing is
as elusive as the Holy Grail.
Ms. Tippett: Right. And you can lose this sense that
these slaves who created this music obviously had that — at every
moment, they were full of grace. All was well with their souls no matter
what was going on around them, no matter what rights they had or what
their legal status was.
Mr. Carter: No, it must be said that there were
certainly slaves who were trying to escape, slaves who were willing to
get involved in revolution and insurrection and so on. But I think the
larger community had a spiritual identity that guided them.
Ms. Tippett: And we have to be so careful not to be glorifying slavery, right? So what are we talking about here? What are we getting at?
Mr. Carter: I think what we're talking about human
suffering, and how do we survive when the worst happens? What are the
mechanisms? And I think that African Americans have shown the world, and
other peoples have done it, too. Other peoples are doing it all the
time, and it's the same process. It doesn't matter who the people are.
It doesn't matter whether the song is an actual song of notes and music
or whether it's the spirit of a people expressed in some other way, but
you'll find — for example, when I sing these songs, I can sing
"Motherless Child" in Siberia; they know what it means. They've been
through hell. I can go to Scotland and Ireland and Wales and sing these.
They understand the sentiment.
As a matter of fact, you go to Wales right now, you'll find
African-American spirituals in Welsh in the Welsh hymnbook, part of
their worship. So the songs have become symbolic, I think, of that
universal quest for freedom, that yearning for freedom and that part of
us that says, "I will not be defeated."
Let me do a little bit of “Motherless Child.”
Ms. Tippett: That’s the one I was humming at my computer this morning as I was making notes for this. I’m not sure why. [laughs]
Mr. Carter: [singing] Sometimes I feel like a motherless child
Sometimes I feel like a motherless child
Oh, Lord, sometimes I feel like a motherless child
A long ways from home
A long ways from my home
Ms. Tippett: I’m Krista Tippett and this is On Being.
Today, experiencing the hidden stories, meanings, and hope of the
spiritual. This is one of our earliest and most beloved shows, with the
late, singular musician and humanitarian Joe Carter.
[music: “Motherless Child” performed by Joe Carter]
Ms. Tippett: The paradox of the spirituals in their
context of slavery was that they gave themselves over, in some sense to
suffering and to the hardness of life and really to an essential
powerlessness. This is where we are; this is where we live. But there
was an "and." "And, I am beloved, I'm graced, I am blessed, I have
dignity, I'm alive, and what I experience now is not all there is."
There's a surrender and there's an incredible power at the same time in
the spirituals, and when life is halfway better, maybe the surrender
goes away and the power is diminished, too. Am I making any sense?
Mr. Carter: Yeah, that's one of the horrible
problems that we have to deal with, with the whole issue of progress,
you know? Because in the process, we may lose something. But you know
something? Because I have been living with these songs, these songs have
become the strength of my life. Because I realize even though I am not
in slavery, as my grandparents or great-grandparents were, I deal with
all of the difficulties of life that nobody escapes.
Ms. Tippett: No. And even somebody who's perfectly
free and perfectly rich and perfectly powerful in the world's terms
doesn't escape from suffering, right?
Mr. Carter: That's right. And the worst kind of
bondage is that which takes place in the inside. When we look back to
the slavery days, we were bound, but it was the master who was really
the slave. And I think some of us understand that now. But I experience
in my own life great strength from telling the stories and looking back,
because I see what they went through, and I haven't experienced
anything like what my ancestors did. And I complain about everything.
Ms. Tippett: I wonder if it is at all disturbing to
you that this music with its sensibility has, is considered now to be a
defining part of American culture as a whole? You could say maybe that
it's been co-opted, embraced. Does that bother you? Because that
necessarily takes it out of its context, doesn't it? I mean, is it OK
for a white person to celebrate this as much as…
Mr. Carter: I think it's a good question. And my
answer is this: When any music or art becomes this transcendent thing
that helps people through, it then becomes a property of the universe.
It becomes a property of the world. And to tell the story of the
spiritual, it's not an African story. It is an African-American story.
It's the blending of the two cultures.
And the fact that George Gershwin was influenced greatly by the
spirituals, I think it's a wonderful thing that this man could reach out
of his neighborhood, go down to South Carolina and listen to the elders
sing and come back and say, "This is a treasure." And then translate
that through his genius and give to the world as so many others have.
There are many European composers like Dvořák who were influenced by
this music. And today — it's true with any kind of art — there has to be
the sensitivity of the person who is observing and participating. And
some people don't get it no matter what you do. And there are other
people, you don't have to say anything, and they get it from the get-go.
And one of the things I would say about the development of
African-American music and culture — the powers that be found it much
more attractive to promote the blues and to promote the image of the
black man singing the blues with a bottle of wine in his back pocket
singing about less-than-noble sentiments, while we had this whole
treasure. And the Paul Robesons and the Marian Andersons and others who
came and brought this music forth, they didn't make the big commercial
successes. Well, Robeson, and Anderson did for a while, but they're
among the few. In order to make a commercial success, you've got to sing
soul, you've got to get away from anything that is spiritual and change
the message.
Ms. Tippett: Soul as opposed to spiritual. That's interesting.
Mr. Carter: I just have a certain personal feeling
about it because we still have a problem, because there are still people
who don't want to tell the truth about who we are. And if the truth is
really told, then you've got to go back and tell the story of the love
and the forgiveness and the power of many of the ancestors. They weren't
all loving and forgiving. Some of them were mean-spirited. Some of them
did whatever they had to do, I'm sure. But as a national identity, this
music became the embodiment of a spirit of goodwill, a spirit of
forgiveness, a spirit of "I'm going to survive no matter what."
Ms. Tippett: Dignity. That's the word that keeps coming up.
Mr. Carter: And by the way, this woman that I told
you about, Jessie Anthony, she was the most dignified soul I'd ever met.
The last time I saw her, she was, I think, 88 years old. Her parents
were born slaves. And she began to sing the spirituals. She sang at the
Boston Public Library, she sang at Harvard, demonstrating the music. And
she said, "Joe?" I said, "Yes, Ms. Anthony?" She said, "I want you to
go into my bedroom and look under my bed and tell me what you see
there." And so I went into her bedroom. I said, "You got a suitcase."
She said, "Yes, I do, child." I said, "What's in the suitcase?" And she
smiled. She beamed at me.
She said, "In that suitcase, I've got my going-home clothes. Ooh,
I've got a beautiful dress in there. Jesus is coming for me any day,
don't you know, child?" And she just started laughing. I'll never forget
that image. Here was someone who'd gone through all of the changes in
culture and society, and now was living in an elder apartment complex in
Boston, all of her children in Washington, D.C., and everything. And
she was still singing her songs. And she was holding her head up high
every place she went. She was the kind of person who just commanded your
respect. And when the young people — whenever we'd go to her house, she
would tell us the stories of these songs and everything. And then, she
would always end singing one little song. Give me a C, Tom.
And she'd sing, "Children, if you don't remember anything I've told
you, if you don't remember any songs that I've sung for you, I want you
to remember this one."
[singing] Be ready when he comes
Be ready when he comes
Be ready when he comes
Oh, Lord, he's coming again so soon
Now, Joe, you be ready. [laughs]
Ms. Tippett: Thank you so much, Joe Carter.
Mr. Carter: It is my pleasure to be here. Thank you.
[music: “Let The Work That I’ve Done Speak For Me” performed by Joe Carter]
Ms. Tippett: Joe Carter was a teacher, performer, and traveling humanitarian. He died at the age of 57 of leukemia on June 26th, 2006.
Staff: On Being is Chris Heagle, Lily
Percy, Mariah Helgeson, Maia Tarrell, Marie Sambilay, Erinn Farrell,
Laurén Dørdal, Tony Liu, Bethany Iverson, Erin Colasacco, Kristin Lin,
Profit Idowu, Casper ter Kuile, Angie Thurston, Sue Phillips, Eddie
Gonzalez, Lilian Vo, Damon Lee, and Jeffrey Bissoy.
Ms. Tippett: Special thanks this week to Tom West and Tom Mudge.
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