An Introduction to Sacred Harp Singing | from DTD-01 | by
David Warren Steel
Sacred Harp singing is typically a community musical and social event, held
at all-day singings and conventions in the rural South. It is characterized
by mass participation, full-voiced singing, lack of instrumental accompaniment,
and rotation of song leaders. Growing out of the singingschool movement of the
18th century, and preserving the music of the first American composers, it came
to be associated in the deep South with church and community homecomings and
decoration days. It differs from shape-note gospel singing in that the repertory
is largely pre-Civil War, and is relatively fixed in one of the 20th-century
revisions of the original 1844 oblong tunebook by B. F. White and E. J. King.
Although the "Sacred Harp" was called "the book oftenest found
in the homes of rural Southerners other than the Holy Bible," the tradition
was ignored by the cultural elites of the nation and region until Vanderbilt
professor George Pullen Jackson described it in "White Spirituals of the
Southern Uplands" (1933) and established its connection with folk song.
But the "Sacred Harp" is not confined to these large community singings.
For those who sing the "Sacred Harp," there are many other opportunities
to sing, often from memory, during farm and housework, or as a family recreation
in the home. In such informal situations, singers may accompany themselves on
piano or other instruments, and may sing in a softer, more nuanced voice. Many
sacred harp singers also participated in newer traditions of gospel music, using
small paperback songbooks published by James D. Vaughn, Stamps-Baxter and others,
which combined community singings with traveling professional quartets who doubled
as salesmen. In the 1920s, when the success of "race" and "hillbilly"
recordings demonstrated a demand for traditional artists, it was hardly surprising
that sacred harp singers would aspire to make recordings, or that local talent
scouts would record them. Several factors may explain why these early recordings
tend to reproduce more closely these smaller, informal settings rather than
the mass community singing. Early recording methods, especially those employed
by portable studios, required that all musicians had to be in roughly the same
location, near a single microphone. Southern audiences were already familiar
with a cappella gospel quartets, and with family groups such as the Carters
and Stonemans, who sang in harmony and accompanied themselves on varied instruments.
As a result, there was no significant attempt to record a full "class"
of singers until 1942, when Alan Lomax and George Pullen Jackson recorded an
Alabama convention for the Library of Congress (see DTD-01, 3-6). Earlier recordings
of sacred harp music are almost always small groups of three to perhaps twelve
singers, and are often accompanied by instruments. Brief songs are often extended
by adding additional verses, to fit the optimum length of a ten-inch recording.
In one respect, however, they adhered to a traditional performance practice:
before singing the words, the singers nearly always sang the music using the
four singing syllables (fa, sol, la, and mi). These four syllables, and the
four shapes that represent them, distinguish the "fasola" system of
the "Sacred Harp" from the more usual "doremi" system employing
seven syllables and shapes. In the fasola system, the syllables fa, sol, and
la are used twice in an octave, while the syllable mi occurs only once.At singing
schools, singers sang the syllables as an aid to learning the tune without worrying
about the words; this "run-through" became part of the tradition,
and was rarely omitted even on commercial recordings of sacred harp music.
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