Down to the River to Pray by Tiffany Goodrick and Virtual Choir.
It’s
a beautiful Sunday hereabouts,
perfect for the old-timey folk gospel song Down to the River to Pray. The
exact origins of the song are obscure
but undoubtedly from enslaved people in
the ante-bellum American South.
The
earliest printed version of the song, titled The Good Old Way, was published in Slave Songs of the United States in
1867 contributed by George H. Allan
of Nashville, Tennessee. Another version, Come,
Let Us All Go Down, was published in 1880 in The Story of the Jubilee Singers;
With Their Songs, a book about the Fisk
Jubilee Singers.
Fugitive slaves following the North Star to freedom. Black spirituals like Down to the River to Pray and Follow the Drinking Gourd contained coded instructions.
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Like
many slave spirituals, this one has dual meanings—overtly Christian referencing
baptism and salvation, and coded symbolism for the escape to freedom and
the underground railroad. The River may be the Ohio which separated slave
states from free. The starry
crown may be the Big Dipper and North Star which showed the way for the fugitives.
The
earliest recording by the Price Family
Singers in Atlanta in 1927 on
the Okeh label used the title I
Went Down to the Garden. In 1940
Leadbelly recorded it for Alan Lomax and the Library of Congress.
Down to the River has been associated with full emersion baptism.
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Despite
the Black origins by the early to mid-20th Century the song had diffused
to the Appalachian South where
it was sung in primitive Baptist and
Pentecostal churches where White worshipers understood the lyrics literally
and were sure that the River was the Biblical
Jordan. Doc Watson recorded it for Vanguard in 1960. As a Country folk hymn it became known to
wider audiences when Allison Krause recorded
it for the O Brother, Where Art Thou? Soundtrack in 2000. Today it is more commonly associated with
white country gospel than black.
But
not matter which tradition, it was perfect for unaccompanied close harmony singing in impoverished congregations
and was often used for full emersion baptism services. But it is also a favorite of my Tree of Life a capella choir.
Tiffany Goodrick.
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This
version has become a Cornavirus
isolation and YouTube sensation. Organizer Tiffany Goodrick, a Christian music artist and song leader, described how her Virtual Choir worked: “The 36 voices
you hear were all recorded separately at different times and in different
locations. Each woman had only the melody playing in her ear and then sang the
part that she wanted, no music was written out. All videos were recorded using
cell phones.
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