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Georgia Sea Island Singers

Georgia Sea Island Singers

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Tony Merrell drums during a performance of the Georgia Sea Island Singers, as fellow member Frankie Sullivan Quimby looks on. The singers maintain a tradition, begun around 1900, of sharing the Gullah culture through performances and educational programs.

Courtesy of Georgia Sea Island Singers

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https://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Paralanguage_T1.mp4

Betty Ann Wylie: Paralanguage

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Betty Ann Wylie explains that stories are told not only through words but also through "the paralanguage."

Video by Darby Carl Sanders, New Georgia Encyclopedia

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https://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Voices_T1.mp4

B. J. Abraham: Character Voices

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B. J. Abraham demonstrates how she assumes different characters by using different voices when she's telling a story.

Video by Darby Carl Sanders, New Georgia Encyclopdedia

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https://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Low_Tech_T1.mp4

B. J. Abraham: Storytelling and Technology

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B. J. Abraham says she feels that storytelling is a "low-tech art in a high-tech world."

Video by Darby Carl Sanders, New Georgia Encyclopedia

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Joel Chandler Harris

Joel Chandler Harris

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Joel Chandler Harris took his work as a fiction writer seriously, and he honed his craft considerably in the course of publishing seven volumes of short stories (in addition to the Uncle Remus tales) and three more novels.

Courtesy of Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library, University of Georgia Libraries.

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woman leading a Sacred Harp singing

The Sacred Harp

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First published in 1844, The Sacred Harp songbook has helped to promote the style of singing known as "Sacred Harp," "shape-note," or "fasola" singing.

Courtesy of Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division

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Windham sheet music

Windham

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The shape-note system in The Sacred Harp uses a different shape to represent each of the four syllables in the musical scale: a triangle (fa), a circle (sol), a rectangle (la), and a diamond (mi).

The tune "Windham" as it appears in The Sacred Harp, 1911 edition. Image from Wikimedia.

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Singing from The Sacred Harp

Singing from The Sacred Harp

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Gapped scales (having less than the usual seven notes) and unusual harmonies help account for this traditional music's characteristic sound. Also unique is the doubling of two parts, both men and women singing tenor and treble. Untrained voices prevail, so the singing sounds loud and exhilarating.

Courtesy of Georgia Council for the Arts, Georgia Traditional Arts Research Collection, Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College Libraries.

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Singing from The Sacred Harp

Singing from The Sacred Harp

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The sound of Sacred Harp may vary a bit from region to region, and white singers have different styles from African American singers. But regardless of location or race, Sacred Harp sounds unlike academic choral singing or gospel singing, in which melody dominates and harmony embellishes and supports it.

Courtesy of Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division

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McIntosh County Shouters

McIntosh County Shouters

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The McIntosh County Shouters, seen here performing at National Folk Festival, Wolf Trap Farm, Virginia, have helped preserve the southeastern ring shout, one of the oldest African American performance traditions in the country. 

Courtesy of Margo Rosenbaum

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Georgia Sea Island Singers
Joel Chandler Harris woman leading a Sacred Harp singing Windham sheet music Singing from The Sacred Harp Singing from The Sacred Harp McIntosh County Shouters