Jazz24
Listen Live!
  • Listen Live!
    • Launch our player
    • Player of your choice
  • Playlist
  • Jazz
    • The Blues Time Machine
    • Studio Sessions
    • Video Podcast: Studio Sessions
    • Features from Jazz24
    • 50 Great Jazz Vocals
    • The Jazz 100
    • From NPR Music
    • Groove Notes Blog
  • Calendar
  • Mobile
  • About
    • Contact us
    • FAQ/Technical assistance
  • Donate
Home» Jazz » NPR Music » Five Jazz Songs Which Speak Of The Freedom Struggle

Five Jazz Songs Which Speak Of The Freedom Struggle

Posted on June 19, 2012 by NPR Music in NPR Music - 1 Comment
Five Jazz Songs Which Speak Of The Freedom Struggle

Written by Angelika Beener from National Public Radio

Today, June 19, is a holiday known as Juneteenth — the oldest commemoration of slavery’s end. Though the Emancipation Proclamation declared the freedom of slaves in Confederate states on Jan. 1, 1863, it was only on June 19, 1865 (months after Confederate forces had surrendered) that Union soldiers landed at Galveston, Texas, to spread news of the war’s end, and to enforce the proclamation in Texas. The date has since been noted in Texas and across the country as a celebration of African-American freedom and history, especially since the Civil Rights movement.

Jazz has always been one of the most important musical narratives of the African-American journey toward freedom in America. Emancipation did not mean equality for ex-slaves, and jazz, whose call to improvisation models the principles of freedom, has often documented the ongoing pursuit. Indeed, this year jazz musicians and educators Dr. Ronald Myers and Dr. Larry Ridley are illuminating African-American history within jazz by organizing a national Juneteenth jazz concert series.

Earlier this year, I spoke with pianist Jason Moran and bassist Christian McBride about how the “message in the music” charged social movements across the country. Artists such as Nina Simone, Sonny Rollins and Charles Mingus anchored our discussions of what it meant to use one’s craft as a means to evoke change, and what it means to be part of a continuum toward total emancipation. See what they and their fellow jazz luminaries have to impart: Here are five recordings, picked by five musicians, which represent the triumphs and tribulations within the freedom struggle.

Angelika Beener is a freelance journalist and blogs at Alternate Takes.

Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.
  • Guest

    so what are they?

Jazz24 Hosts

Abe Beeson

Ruby Brown

Dick Stein

Mary McCann

Nick Morrison

© 2012 Jazz24 is a division of Pacific Public Media, and a service of Pacific Lutheran University