{"title":"Indivisible: The Nation and Its Anthem in Black Musical Performance","authors":"S. Redmond","doi":"10.5406/BLACMUSIRESEJ.35.1.0097","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Oh! how shall I speak of my proud country's shame Of the strains on her glory, how give them their name? How say that her banner in mockery waves-Her star-spangled banner--o'er millions of slaves? --Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, \"Eliza Harris\" (1853) I wish I knew how it would feel to be free I wish I could break all the chains holdin' me I wish I could say all the things that I should say Say 'em loud say 'em clear for the whole wide world to hear. --Nina Simone, \"I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to be Free\" (1967) On July 1, 2008, Denver, Colorado, hosted its annual State of the City address. This typically pro forma occasion was, in this year, a high profile event for the city and the nation at large; in addition to celebrating the nation's independence, that year's address served as a prelude to the city hosting the Democratic National Convention at which the Democratic Party would announce its presidential nominee. Wavering, as it was in this moment, between two viable candidates--an African American male and a white American female--the party's decision was eagerly anticipated. Denver's heightened function in ushering in the nation's future made the performances staged that day all the more significant, and it was in recognition of that profile that the mayor's office chose jazz musician and performance artist Rene Marie to sing the national anthem. After an introduction by City Council President Michael Hancock in which he mistakenly identified her as \"Rene Martin,\" Marie approached the microphone. As she sang the B flat note to announce \"The Star Spangled Banner,\" her text deviated, as she sung not \"Oh, say can you see\" but, instead, \"Lift ev'ry voice and sing.\" In this deconstructed and hybrid performance, which combined the melody of \"The Star Spangled Banner\" with the lyrics of the Negro National Anthem \"Lift Ev'ry Voice and Sing,\" Marie set a new tone for discussions of race and patriotism at the dawning of a \"postracial\" America. Marie's performance, which left city representatives \"as surprised as anyone,\" is a dynamic example of how our racial present continues to be informed by considerations of past political struggle (Osher 2008). Her use of the lyrics of \"Lift Ev'ry Voice and Sing\" signals a reconfigured citizenship that grapples with the lived experience of race through a national anthem emblematic of liberty built by settler colonialism and chattel slavery. One generation after the end of slavery in the United States, W. E. B. Du Bois famously articulated the plight of the nation's Negroes as \"double consciousness,\" an identity tug-of-war between race and nation that is never fully reconciled in spite of its constant negotiation. Marie's performance signals Du Bois, yet it moves through and beyond it by way of a sonic praxis in which she constructs an alternative national genealogy of political engagement and allegiance. As Hazel Carby rightly argues, Du Bois's judgments in The Souls of Black Folk ([1903] 1996) \"reveal highly gendered structures of intellectual and political thought and feeling\" (1998,12). Patriarchy, sexism, and misogyny are reproduced and informed by these structures of gendered difference that are installed and exposed in quotidian scenes of intellectual and art making as well as more spectacular displays by the state. Marie's composition negotiates these gendered structures and highlights the complicated roles that black women play in popular culture and the (black) public sphere, two locations of impact that find intersection within the bodies of black performing artists. While I am concerned here with the music of and performances by the African descended in the United States, I resist the impulse to critique or evaluate the technical success of Marie's performance; musical taste and preference is not of concern so much as the vision and impact of the music produced that day. The importance of her performance is first recognizable by its ability to create a public debate that unearthed the tensions that underlie national symbols. …","PeriodicalId":354930,"journal":{"name":"Black Music Research Journal","volume":"22 24 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2015-03-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Black Music Research Journal","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5406/BLACMUSIRESEJ.35.1.0097","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
Oh! how shall I speak of my proud country's shame Of the strains on her glory, how give them their name? How say that her banner in mockery waves-Her star-spangled banner--o'er millions of slaves? --Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, "Eliza Harris" (1853) I wish I knew how it would feel to be free I wish I could break all the chains holdin' me I wish I could say all the things that I should say Say 'em loud say 'em clear for the whole wide world to hear. --Nina Simone, "I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to be Free" (1967) On July 1, 2008, Denver, Colorado, hosted its annual State of the City address. This typically pro forma occasion was, in this year, a high profile event for the city and the nation at large; in addition to celebrating the nation's independence, that year's address served as a prelude to the city hosting the Democratic National Convention at which the Democratic Party would announce its presidential nominee. Wavering, as it was in this moment, between two viable candidates--an African American male and a white American female--the party's decision was eagerly anticipated. Denver's heightened function in ushering in the nation's future made the performances staged that day all the more significant, and it was in recognition of that profile that the mayor's office chose jazz musician and performance artist Rene Marie to sing the national anthem. After an introduction by City Council President Michael Hancock in which he mistakenly identified her as "Rene Martin," Marie approached the microphone. As she sang the B flat note to announce "The Star Spangled Banner," her text deviated, as she sung not "Oh, say can you see" but, instead, "Lift ev'ry voice and sing." In this deconstructed and hybrid performance, which combined the melody of "The Star Spangled Banner" with the lyrics of the Negro National Anthem "Lift Ev'ry Voice and Sing," Marie set a new tone for discussions of race and patriotism at the dawning of a "postracial" America. Marie's performance, which left city representatives "as surprised as anyone," is a dynamic example of how our racial present continues to be informed by considerations of past political struggle (Osher 2008). Her use of the lyrics of "Lift Ev'ry Voice and Sing" signals a reconfigured citizenship that grapples with the lived experience of race through a national anthem emblematic of liberty built by settler colonialism and chattel slavery. One generation after the end of slavery in the United States, W. E. B. Du Bois famously articulated the plight of the nation's Negroes as "double consciousness," an identity tug-of-war between race and nation that is never fully reconciled in spite of its constant negotiation. Marie's performance signals Du Bois, yet it moves through and beyond it by way of a sonic praxis in which she constructs an alternative national genealogy of political engagement and allegiance. As Hazel Carby rightly argues, Du Bois's judgments in The Souls of Black Folk ([1903] 1996) "reveal highly gendered structures of intellectual and political thought and feeling" (1998,12). Patriarchy, sexism, and misogyny are reproduced and informed by these structures of gendered difference that are installed and exposed in quotidian scenes of intellectual and art making as well as more spectacular displays by the state. Marie's composition negotiates these gendered structures and highlights the complicated roles that black women play in popular culture and the (black) public sphere, two locations of impact that find intersection within the bodies of black performing artists. While I am concerned here with the music of and performances by the African descended in the United States, I resist the impulse to critique or evaluate the technical success of Marie's performance; musical taste and preference is not of concern so much as the vision and impact of the music produced that day. The importance of her performance is first recognizable by its ability to create a public debate that unearthed the tensions that underlie national symbols. …
哦!我怎能说出我骄傲的祖国的耻辱?我怎能说出她荣耀的苦楚?她的旗帜——她的星条旗——嘲弄地飘扬在千百万奴隶之上,怎么说呢?——弗朗西丝·艾伦·沃特金斯·哈珀,《伊丽莎·哈里斯》(1853)我希望我能知道自由是什么感觉我希望我能挣断束缚我的枷锁我希望我能说出所有该说的话大声说清楚说给全世界听。——妮娜·西蒙,《我希望我知道自由的感觉》(1967)2008年7月1日,科罗拉多州丹佛市举行了一年一度的城市国情咨文演讲。今年,这一典型的形式盛会成为了纽约乃至整个国家备受瞩目的盛事;除了庆祝美国的独立之外,那一年的演讲也是民主党全国代表大会的前奏,民主党将在大会上宣布其总统候选人。此时此刻,共和党在两名可行的候选人——一名非裔美国男性和一名美国白人女性——之间摇摆不定,人们热切地期待着该党的决定。丹佛在引领国家未来方面的重要作用使那天的演出更加重要,正是出于对这一形象的认可,市长办公室选择了爵士音乐家和表演艺术家勒内·玛丽来演唱国歌。市议会主席迈克尔·汉考克(Michael Hancock)在介绍她时误把她认作“勒内·马丁”,玛丽走到麦克风前。当她唱降B调来宣布《星条旗永不落》时,她的歌词偏离了方向,因为她唱的不是“哦,说你能看见吗”,而是“举起每一个声音来唱”。在这场解构和混合的表演中,玛丽将《星条旗永不飘扬》(the Star Spangled Banner)的旋律与黑人国歌《举起你的声音,歌唱》(Lift Ev'ry Voice and Sing)的歌词结合在一起,为“后种族”美国的黎明时分关于种族和爱国主义的讨论奠定了新的基调。玛丽的表现让城市代表们“和任何人一样惊讶”,这是一个充满活力的例子,说明我们的种族现状如何继续受到过去政治斗争的影响(Osher 2008)。她使用的歌词《扬声歌唱》(Lift Ev'ry Voice and Sing)标志着一种重新配置的公民身份,通过一首象征着移民殖民主义和动产奴隶制建立起来的自由的国歌,与种族的生活经历作斗争。在美国废除奴隶制的一代人之后,w·e·b·杜波依斯(W. E. B. Du Bois)将美国黑人的困境表述为“双重意识”,这是一种种族与国家之间的身份拉锯战,尽管不断进行谈判,但从未完全和解。玛丽的表演是杜波依斯的标志,但它通过一种声音实践的方式贯穿并超越了杜波依斯,在这种实践中,她构建了另一种政治参与和忠诚的国家谱系。正如黑兹尔·卡比正确地指出的那样,杜波依斯在《黑人的灵魂》([1903]1996)中的判断“揭示智力和政治思想和情感的高度性别结构”(1998,12)。父权制、性别歧视和厌女症通过这些性别差异的结构被复制和传播,这些结构被安装和暴露在日常的智力和艺术创作场景中,以及国家更壮观的展示中。玛丽的作品与这些性别结构进行了协商,并突出了黑人女性在流行文化和(黑人)公共领域中扮演的复杂角色,这两个影响地点在黑人表演艺术家的身体中找到了交集。虽然我在这里关心的是美国非洲人后裔的音乐和表演,但我忍住了批评或评价玛丽表演在技术上的成功的冲动;比起音乐品味和偏好,人们更关心的是当天制作的音乐的视觉效果和影响。她的表演的重要性首先体现在它能够引发一场公开辩论,揭示国家象征背后的紧张关系。…