Cry No More by Rhiannon Giddens
Last
night Tree of Life UU Congregation held
a Parking Lot Vigil in memory of George Floyd at the same time a public viewing was being held in his home town of Houston, Texas.
We were just one of several faith
communities holding similar vigils at the same time, organized by the Faith Leaders of McHenry County. Ours was a powerful and moving
experience. A high light of the event
was a performance by Cassandra Vohs-Demann and Billy Seger of Cry No More.
Cassandra Vohs-Demann and Billy Seger perform Cry No More at the Tree of Life UU Congregation George Floyd parking lot vigil while observing social distancing. |
They
could not have picked a more appropriate song. Rhiannon Giddens wrote Cry No More in 2015. She described the circumstances:
The massacre at
the Emanuel AME church in Charleston, South Carolina, in June is just the
latest in a string of racially charged events that have broken my heart. There
are a lot of things to fix in this world, but history says if we don't address
this canker, centuries in the making, these things will continue to happen. No
matter what level privilege you have, when the system is broken everybody
loses. We all have to speak up when injustice happens. No matter what. And
music is one of the best way I know to do so.
Cry No More was inspired by the 2015 murders by a white supremacist at Mother Bethel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina. But it is just as timely today. |
Giddens
is an extraordinary young artist. She is a major
star in what is now called American
Roots Music—a mix of traditional
folk, county, bluegrass, blues, and gospel that
is an alternative to Nashville based
and radio driven commercial country music. She got the attention of many people who do
not follow that musical niche when
she was featured extensively in Ken
Burns’ epic Country Music PBS series.
She defies expectations because she is a Black artist in a mostly white
genre.
The amazing Rhiannon Giddens. |
Giddens
was born February 21, 1977 in Greensboro,
North Carolina and is a founding
member of the country, blues and old-time
music band Carolina Chocolate Drops,
as the lead singer, fiddle and banjo player. In addition to her work with the Grammy-winning Chocolate Drops, Giddens has released two solo albums, Tomorrow Is My Turn I 2015
and Freedom
Highway in 2017. Her latest album, There Is No Other, is a collaboration with Italian multi-instrumentalist Francesco Turrisi was released in 2019.
She appears in the Smithsonian Folkways collection documenting Mike Seeger’s final trip through Appalachia
in 2009, Just Around The Bend: Survival and Revival in Southern Banjo Styles
and in 2014, she participated in the T
Bone Burnett-produced project The New
Basement Tapes along with several other musicians, which set a series of
recently discovered Bob Dylan lyrics
to newly composed music. That is an eclectic body of work by anyone’s
standards.
Today’s
video was shot at the United
Congregational Church in Greensboro and features its choir.
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