A Black History Month Playlist
(Disclaimer: By A White Girl)
by Maia Taub,
Case Manager, Monroe County Custody & Visitation Program
Black History Month began on February 1, 2023. In February, we honor not just the birthday of Abraham Lincoln, but of Frederick Douglass, our hometown hero -- there is a statue of him behind the Reynolds Arcade Building, where our main office is located. February 4 is also Rosa Parks Day in California and Missouri, honoring her on her birthday (in Ohio and Oregon, they celebrate on December 1, the day she was arrested. Thanks, excellentpresence.com!).
Many people join book clubs and discussion groups for the month, but I speak primarily the language of music, and so I have put together a short Black History Month playlist for you to listen to and learn from. Don't rely on me to make meaning out of these songs and speeches for you. Go out and make meaning of your own!
All songs and speeches available on YouTube. Here we go!
Letter from a Birmingham Jail - Martin Luther King, Jr.
https://youtu.be/ATPSht6318o
"I am in Birmingham because injustice is here. . . Moreover, I am cognizant of the interrelatedness of all communities and states. I cannot sit idly by in Atlanta and not be concerned about what happens in Birmingham. Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
Birmingham Sunday - cover by Rhiannon Giddens
https://youtu.be/4_T5KlTpvoM
https://genius.com/Rhiannon-giddens-birmingham-sunday-lyrics
"And the choirs kept singing of freedom..." Rhiannon Giddens' smooth bluegrass voice slides lovingly over the names of the children killed on Birmingham Sunday, September 15, 1963, in the bombing of the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church. Giddens sings the story with such heart that it's hard not to cry.
A Change Is Gonna Come - Sam Cooke
https://youtu.be/wEBlaMOmKV4
https://genius.com/Sam-cooke-a-change-is-gonna-come-lyrics
A classic from the civil rights movement, written in 1964, Sam Cooke's lyrics resound through the years. According to Genius, he was inspired by Bob Dylan's "Blowin' In The Wind" -- I think Cooke surpasses Dylan here, but maybe I'm biased.
White Privilege II - Macklemore and Ryan Lewis feat. Jamila Woods
https://youtu.be/Y_rl4ZGdy34
https://genius.com/8559323
"Is this about you, well, then, what's your intention?" Macklemore is not only interrogating himself, he's reflecting on his entire career, all the way back to the first "White Privilege" he released in 2005. Because there is no White supremacy without White people, one White voice gets to sneak in here -- and it's a voice that's joined by a Black voice in the end. "Your silence is a luxury, hip-hop is not a luxury . . . What I got for me, it is for me. What we made, we made to set us free." Preach it, Jamila.
Glory - from "Selma" - cover by Jacqui Lewis and Alex Bertrand
https://youtu.be/a4affZ3zImY
Has that promised change come yet? Not according to Jacqui Lewis of Middle Church in New York City, but she preaches a message of hope in her take on this iconic song.
Cory Booker getting emotional over Ketanji Brown Jackson's appointment
https://youtu.be/v8NiPzEJ4po
I slept on this speech, but when I finally listened to it, I understood something I had never really gotten, and maybe you will, too.
At The Purchaser's Option - Rhiannon Giddens
https://youtu.be/6vy9xTS0QxM
https://genius.com/Rhiannon-giddens-at-the-purchasers-option-lyrics
I'll let Giddens speak for herself: "Last year I came across an advertisement from the 1830s for a young woman; thinking about her, and how she had to maintain her humanity against horrific odds inspired this song named for the end of the ad: 'She has with her a 9-month old baby, who is at the purchaser’s option.'"
I Have a Dream - Martin Luther King, Jr.
https://youtu.be/smEqnnklfYs
"When we let freedom ring, when we let it ring from every village and every hamlet, from every state and every city, we will be able to speed up that day when all of God's children, black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands and sing in the words of the old Negro spiritual, 'Free at last! free at last! thank God Almighty, we are free at last!'"
|