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TIMELINE
Spirituals, Hymns, and Anthems 2: Listening Guide: Pete Seeger "We Shall Overcome"
"We Shall Overcome" Pete Seeger and Group | ||
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A | Here is the contemporary version of the song. Here is the lining out or imitational call and response singing performance style. |
"We Shall Overcome" [00:00-00:46] 00:47 |
B | The lead singer (Pete Seeger) speaks the lyrics for the next passage, which is sung using the same melody as before. | "We Shall Overcome" [00:47-00:50] 00:03 |
C | During this verseIn poetry or song, a group of lines which constitutes a unit. Often there are several in a single text, and usually the rhyme scheme, rhythm, and number of poetic lines and feet are the same in a single text., the group begins to use more harmony during their responsorial passages. | "We Shall Overcome" [01:40-01:58] 00:18 |
D | The lead singer begins to harmonize as well as some do melodic interpretationThe artistic communication by the performer of the music to the audience. This term refers to how a performer will present the material to the listeners and how emotions are communicated through the performance. This term is particularly applicable to music that is ambiguous as to tempo, dynamics, etc. with the group during the response passage. | "We Shall Overcome" [02:00-02:25] 00:25 |
D | The singing of the lyrics, "We are not afraid" were created by young people as they faced opposition and a riot against them in 1963 in Birmingham, Alabama. | "We Shall Overcome" [02:52-03:36] 00:44 |
Martin Luther King, Jr.
I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.
We Shall Not Be Moved
Oh I, shall not
I shall not be moved I shall not
I shall not be moved
Just like a tree planted by the water
I shall not be moved