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Secret Civil Rights Messages Discovered in Gospel Music

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Monday, February 7, 2011   

CHICAGO - A story of secret messages from a half-century ago that really were in plain sight is unfolding, and it's shedding new light on the role of the gospel community in the civil rights movement in Chicago and other cities around the nation.

Robert Darden is a Baylor University researcher overseeing the school's Black Gospel Music Restoration Project. He was about a year into cataloging vintage gospel music sent in from all over the country, when he started looking closely at the "B" sides of those records from the '50s and '60s.

"And here this stuff is, a wonderful spiritual hymn, let's all be good and go see Jesus, and on the flip side, it says, you know, people, we need to rally around Dr. King. This is important."

Darden has found lyrics that tell about civil rights marches and demonstrations, as well as graphic descriptions of violence in Chicago, Atlanta, and Birmingham. Many come from obscure recordings that have never been cataloged. He thinks there may still be more, and his project is offering to pay for shipping, returns and digitizing of any recordings that someone may have stashed away in the basement.

Darden says that while some radio stations played gospel music at the time, they would have only paid attention to the "A" sides of the disks.

"So, the B sides, they could really indulge what was passionate to them. Every day, I'm just surprised about how straightforward and frank some of the messages are."

The records were commonly sold in furniture and grocery stores in Black communities, where the messages reached their target audiences.

The project is being highlighted for February's Black History Month. Darden is still looking for vintage gospel recordings to add to the research. The school's project pays for all shipping, and returns recordings along with digitized copies.

Some full recordings of vintage gospel music, and samples of other songs, are available at
www.baylor.edu




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