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  1. Gospel music was used throughout the civil rights movement to attract the masses, encourage youth participation, invigorate meetings, and instill confidence. The “freedom songs” were based on familiar

    • Michael Castellini
    • 2013
  2. Jan 13, 2022 · Black Americans, Barron said, have leveraged the power of music to point enslaved people toward freedom, to unite coalitions of protesters in the Civil Rights Era, and most recently, to persuade millions to fight against anti-Black racism and police violence.

  3. Story by Patrice Clark. • 2d. Sponsored Content. The music provided courage and a voice to fight for equality, justice and so much more.

  4. Black gospel music has roots in the Black oral tradition—the passing down of history via the spoken word rather than in writing. In colonial America, where enslaved Africans were prevented from being formally educated, oral and otherwise non-written communication became the method not only for cultural patrimony, but for virtually all ...

  5. Oct 13, 2023 · The influence of Black gospel music on other genres makes it ripe for study, understanding and appreciation, according to those who are collecting and preserving it for future generations at Baylor University’s Black Gospel Music Preservation Program.

  6. Jun 19, 2020 · WACO, Texas (June 19, 2020) – As the protests following the death of George Floyd began to roil the country, it was only a few days before the demonstrators began to sing an array of freedom songs and protest spirituals, as well as a few new adaptations, including Bill Withers’ “Lean on Me.”.

  7. In music, slavery gave rise to spirituals and work songs, which in turn led to gospel music and the blues. Slavery influenced the adoption and some of the language of our Constitution. It affected our foreign policy, sometimes in ways that were contrary to our national interests.