The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

McIntosh County Shouters bring slave songs to life

Historical traditions on stage this weekend at free performanc­e.

- By Bo Emerson bemerson@ajc.com

The ring-shout songs that will resound in Atlanta this weekend are older than Georgia.

They come from an AfricanAme­rican ritual of music and movement, maintained by a McIntosh County community mythologic­ally descended from seven sisters.

The McIntosh County Shouters will perform the free show Saturday, Feb. 28, at the Hillside Internatio­nal Truth Center in southwest Atlanta.

In honor of Black History Month, the Shouters, from southeast Georgia, will offer a glimpse of a tradition that has survived from the days of slav- ery to the present.

A “shout” is a call-andrespons­e song, set to the syncopated beat of handclaps and the pounding of a wooden stick on the floor by a “stick-man.” Participan­ts move in a counter-clockwise shuffle around the center of the room, and it is this movement to which the word “shout” refers. (There is boisterous singing, but no shouting.)

Folklorist­s believed the ring-shout had died off until they discovered in 1980 that the Mt. Calvary Baptist Church, in the McIntosh

Shouters

community called Bolden (or Briar Patch), kept the tradition alive. Every New Year’s Eve church members would hold a “Watch Night,” and sing shout songs all night long. Morning would be heralded with “Yonder Come Day.”

Members of that group later began performing in other contexts, at the Sea Island festival and at the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C.

“We’ve been shouting as long as I can remember,” said Carletha Sullivan, 73, the senior member of the group. Her grandson, stick-man Brenton Jordan, 28, is one of the youngest members, and he is the emblem of the possible future of the ring-shout.

When he was a toddler, Jordan frequently stayed at home with his greatgrand­mother, Oneitha Ellison, while his mother and grandmothe­r were working. Along with the Itsy Bitsy Spider and Little Sally Walker, Ellison would teach Jordan and his cousins shout songs. The kids would copy the footwork of their “aunties,” and shuffle around the pot-bellied stove in the middle of the living room.

Jordan is a fan of Afropop and a student of the connection­s between African and American musical traditions. He has tracked the rhythms of the shout to Jamaica, Haiti, Panama and Cuba. Elders worry that the ringshout will die out with the passing of such forefather­s as Lawrence McKiver, who died two years ago at age 97. But Jordan sees an American audience hungry for such primary evidence of African culture in the new world.

“I led my very first shout song I was nine years old, ‘John on the Island,’ one of the songs I lead now,” said Jordan. “I sound like Lawrence when I sing it.”

Folklorist Art Rosenbaum documented the shouters in the 1998 book “Shout Because You’re Free,” and recorded their songs for Folkways records.

He said the Mt. Calvary community would sometimes hold allnight shouts in private homes in the area, and the rhythm of the stomping feet would occasional­ly knock the small cabins off their stone footings. “The next day the people would come back and help put the house back on the stones.”

 ?? TRIBUTED BY SAVANNAH MUSIC FESTIVAL
CON- ?? The McIntosh County Shouters, seen here performing at the Savannah Music Festival, will perform ring-shout songs on Saturday.
TRIBUTED BY SAVANNAH MUSIC FESTIVAL CON- The McIntosh County Shouters, seen here performing at the Savannah Music Festival, will perform ring-shout songs on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States