South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

New museum traces history of Black music across genres

- By Kristin M. Hall

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — A new museum two decades in the making is telling the interconne­cted story of Black musical genres through the lens of American history.

The National Museum of African American Music, which recently opened, is seated in the heart of Nashville’s musical tourism district, blocks from the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum.

Even as Nashville has long celebrated its role in the history of music, the new museum fills a gap by telling an important and often overlooked story about the roots of American popular music, including gospel, blues, jazz, R&B and hip-hop.

“When we think of the history of African American music and the important part it has played in our country, it was long overdue to honor it in this type of way,” said gospel great CeCe Winans, who serves as a national chair for the museum.

The idea for the museum came from two Nashville business and civic leaders, Francis Guess and T.B. Boyd, in 1998, who wanted a museum dedicated to Black arts and culture. While there are museums around the U.S. that focus on certain aspects of Black music, this museum bills itself as the first of its kind to be all encompassi­ng.

“Most music museums deal with a label, a genre or an artist,” said H. Beecher Hicks III, the museum’s president and CEO. “So it’s one thing to say that I’m a hip-hop fan or I’m a blues fan, but why? What was going on in our country and our lived experience and our political environmen­t that made that music so moving, so inspiratio­nal, such the soundtrack for that part of our lives?”

The museum tells a chronologi­cal story of Black music starting in the 1600s through present day and framed around major cultural movements including the music and instrument­s brought by African slaves, the emergence of blues through the Great Migration, the Harlem Renaissanc­e and the civil rights movement.

When Winans took a tour of the museum, she saw her own family of gospel singers, The Winans, represente­d in the museum’s exhibit on spiritual music alongside the artists that influenced her own musical career.

“You never start out doing what you’re doing to be a part of history or even be a part of a museum,” said the 12-time Grammywinn­ing singer.

She noted that the museum put gospel music in context with how it inspired social change.

“When you look at all the different movements that have happened down through the years, and Martin Luther King Jr., it was always with the church behind them,” said Winans. “It was the gospel music that inspired us to love one another, to build bridges.”

The museum has 1,600 artifacts in its collection, including clothes and a Grammy Award belonging to Ella Fitzgerald, a guitar owned by B.B. King and a trumpet played by Louis Armstrong. To make the best use out of the space, the exhibits are layered with interactiv­e features, including 25 stations that allow visitors to virtually explore the music.

After a year of racial reckoning through the movement of Black Lives Matter, Hicks said the timing couldn’t be more perfect to highlight the contributi­ons of Black music to our shared American experience.

“(It) is not an accident that we are able to finish and get the museum open in this moment … where we need to be reminded, perhaps more than others or more than in the recent past, that we are brothers and we share more together than we do our difference­s,” said Hicks.

 ?? MARK HUMPHREY/AP ?? People walk toward the entrance of the National Museum of African American Music on Jan. 30.
MARK HUMPHREY/AP People walk toward the entrance of the National Museum of African American Music on Jan. 30.

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