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Sacred Harp music or shape-note singing is as old as America
itself. The term sacred harp refers to the human voice. Brought to
this continent by the settlers of Jamestown, this style of singing
is also known as "fasola." In "Legacy of the Sacred Harp," author
Chloe Webb follows the history of this musical form back four
hundred years, and in the process uncovers the harrowing legacy of
her Dumas family line. The journey begins in contemporary Texas
with an overlooked but historically rich family heirloom, a
tattered 1869 edition of The Sacred Harp songbook.
Traveling across the South and sifting through undiscovered family
history, Webb sets out on a personal quest to reconnect with her
ancestors who composed, sang, and lived by the words of Sacred Harp
music. Her research irreversibly transforms her rose-colored view
of her heritage and brings endearing characters to life as the
reality of the effects of slavery on Southern plantation life, the
thriving tobacco industry, and the Civil War are revisited through
the lens of the Dumas family. Most notably, Webb's original
research unearths the person of Ralph Freeman, freed slave and
pastor of a pre-Civil War white Southern church.
Wringing history from boxes of keepsakes, lively interviews, dusty
archival libraries, and church records, Webb keeps Sacred Harp
lyrics ringing in readers' ears, allowing the poetry to illuminate
the lessons and trials of the past. The choral shape-note music of
the Sacred Harp whispers to us of the past, of the religious
persecution that brought this music to our shores, and how the
voices of contemporary Sacred Harp singers still ring out the
unchanged lyrics across the South, the music pulling the past into
our present.
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