The Sacred Harp is a 19th
century shape-note songbook which contains many of America's
earliest songs. Published in Hamilton, Georgia in 1844, The Sacred Harp was one of
the last of the old fashioned "four shaped" oblong songbooks
compiled in America. The term also refers to the type of a
cappella, four part, participatory singing associated with
this and other similar songbooks. No instruments are used.
Only the one given by God, the human voice: That is, the
"sacred harp."
One might say that The Sacred Harp was the crowning
achievement of a trajectory of American music which began
during the American Revolution, when itinerant, and largely
self-taught, singing masters began offering singing schools
to communities across New England. These singing school
teachers, such as William Billings, filled a real need in
early American communities. The congregational singing in
the churches, according to contemporary accounts, left much
to be desired. The congregations were, by and large,
musically illiterate and the number of tunes that they knew
by heart was small. The singing masters both taught people
to sing and they provided new songs which they themselves
composed. These songs were compiled in tune-books often
alongside songs written by others. Thus, a vast body of
music emerged in the late 1700's and into the 1800's.
The teaching methods employed by these early singing
masters seem to have been similar to those of their English
counterparts: students learned musical scales through the
use of solfege, the practice of associating each musical
tone with a different syllable. The early American singing
masters taught the version of solfege which was in current
use in England: Fa, Sol, La, and Mi. This differed from the
continental seven syllable version which is in modern use to
this day and which will be familiar to anyone who has seen
the "Sound of Music:" Doh, Re, Mi, Fa, Sol, La, Ti,
and back to Doh. Soon the American teaching methods began to
distinguish themselves from all others with the advent of
"shaped notes." During the turn of the 19th Century, the
first of many shape-note songbooks was published.
These new songbooks associated four
distinct shapes (triangle, circle, square, and diamond) with
the four syllables then in common use. The written music
looked like conventional musical notation apart from the
fact that the note-heads each had different shapes rather
than the usual oval notes. This innovation allowed students
to sing the notes of an unfamiliar tune without being
burdened by concentrating on the words at the same moment.
Therefore, the practice of "singing the notes" -in order to
fix the tune in one's memory- before singing the words,
began. This is a practice which has survived to the present
day in the Sacred Harp tradition and is one of the real
distinguishing marks of this music.
Over time, the "homespun" music associated with the
singing schools fell out of favour in the North-eastern
region of America and it began to travel to the frontier-
South and West. Many of the northern elites who were
influenced by the cultural and musical norms of Europe,
found this music to be unsophisticated, old fashioned, and
even unscientific. Many of the musical elements which make
the music so distinctive, so "ancient-sounding," and yet so
compelling to modern ears, were the very elements which the
"better music" leaders, as they were called, found so
objectionable. And indeed, the music clearly disregards many
of the rules of musical composition which have ruled the day
since the time of Bach. However, this strange music found a
home in the south, in particular, and this movement south
introduced new (and old) songs to the shape-note songbooks
which were becoming increasingly popular in these areas.
The camp-meeting songs, and so-called
"folk hymns" (which were often related to tunes which had
been passed down for generations and which originated in the
Old World) became an important part of the shape-note
songbooks which were published in the first half of the 19th
century. "The Sacred Harp," like the popular "Southern
Harmony" before it, is typical of this blend of New England
hymnody with the southern-tinged and often ancient, modal
melodies which were being added to these books.
For a variety of reasons, but
especially because of the tenacity of it's compiler, B.F.
White, and those who followed in his footsteps, "The Sacred
Harp" has survived the various attempts in the past 150+
years to render it obsolete by the introduction of newer,
more "progressive" types of hymns. However, for most of the
time since it's publication, it has remained "under the
radar:" Always in some danger of extinction, but never in
any real danger of being co-opted by those who would attempt
to tame it and make it more musically "correct" and
"pretty."
In many ways, the story of "The Sacred
Harp" is a story of the stubborn refusal to give up its old
ways and a story of the subversion of the cultural and
musical norms of the society that does not understand it. It
has been sung in annual all day "singings" and conventions,
complete with the traditional "dinner on the grounds," every
year since its publication, usually in old country churches.
While its traditional home has been in the south,
(especially Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and Texas) there
has been, for the past 30 years, a remarkable revival of
interest in this old music throughout the rest of the
country. More and more, people are coming under the spell of
this haunting, powerful, and deeply spiritual music which is
as old as America itself.
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