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Guy Carawan Dies at 87; Taught a Generation to Overcome, in Song – NYTimes.com






Guy Carawan Dies at 87; Taught a Generation to Overcome, in Song – NYTimes.com


 

 

 

Guy Carawan Dies at 87; Taught a Generation to Overcome, in Song

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Guy Carawan singing “We Shall Overcome” with protesters at Virginia State University in 1960.Credit Eve Arnold/Magnum Photos 

On an April night in 1960, Guy Carawan stood before a group of black students in Raleigh, N.C., and sang a little-known folk song. With that single stroke, he created an anthem that would echo into history, sung at the Selma-to-Montgomery marches of 1965, in apartheid-era South Africa, in international demonstrations in support of the Tiananmen Square protesters, at the dismantled Berlin Wall and beyond.

The song was “We Shall Overcome.”

Mr. Carawan, a white folk singer and folklorist who died on Saturday at 87, did not write “We Shall Overcome,” nor did he claim to. The song, variously a religious piece, a labor anthem and a hymn of protest, had woven in and out of American oral tradition for centuries, embodying the country’s twinned history of faith and struggle. Over time, it was further polished by professional songwriters.

But in teaching it to hundreds of delegates at the inaugural meeting of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee — held in Raleigh on April 15, 1960 — Mr. Carawan fathered the musical manifesto that, more than any other, became “the ‘Marseillaise’ of the integration movement,” as The New York Times described it in 1963.

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The version of the song that became an anthem of the oppressed all over the world.

The now-familiar version of “We Shall Overcome” was forged by Mr. Carawan, Pete Seeger and others in the late 1950s, but its antecedents date to at least the 18th century.

The melody recalls the opening bars of the hymn “O Sanctissima,” first published in the 1790s. (Beethoven would write a setting of the hymn in the early 1800s.) A version of the melody — recognizable by modern ears as “We Shall Overcome” — was published in the United States in 1794 in The Gentleman’s Amusement magazine, which titled it “Prayer of the Sicilian Mariners.”

The song’s present-day lyrics appear to have originated with “I’ll Overcome Some Day,” a hymn by a black Methodist minister, Charles Albert Tindley, that was published at the turn of the 20th century, though apparently to a different tune. It includes the lines “If in my heart I do not yield,/I’ll overcome some day.”

By the mid-1940s, Tindley’s words and the now-familiar melody had merged. In 1945, the resulting song, known as “We Will Overcome,” was taken to the picket lines by striking tobacco workers in Charleston, S.C., who sang: “We will overcome,/And we will win our rights someday.”

Afterward, several of the strikers carried “We Will Overcome” to Highlander Folk School, then in Monteagle, Tenn. It quickly became a favorite of the school’s music director, Zilphia Horton, who had founded Highlander with her husband, Myles, in 1932 to train social justice leaders in a racially mixed setting.

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Guy Carawan – "We Shall Overcome" Video by Nico Fournier

It was at Highlander, in the 1950s, that Mr. Carawan first encountered the song.

The son of Southern parents, Guy Hughes Carawan Jr. was born on July 28, 1927, in Santa Monica, Calif. His mother was a poet, his father an asbestos contractor who later died of asbestosis. After Navy service stateside at the end of World War II, the younger Mr. Carawan earned a bachelor’s degree in mathematics from Occidental College in Los Angeles, followed by a master’s in sociology from the University of California, Los Angeles.

Around this time, Mr. Carawan, who sang and played the guitar, banjo and hammered dulcimer, became deeply interested in the use of folk music to foster social progress. But Wayland Hand, a distinguished folklorist with whom he studied at U.C.L.A., warned him against mixing folk music with activism — they had been combined to devastating effect, Professor Hand pointed out, in Nazi Germany.

Mr. Carawan disregarded the warning. Moving to New York, he became active in the folk revival percolating in Greenwich Village. In 1953, he and two friends, Frank Hamilton (later a member of the Weavers, the musical group closely associated with Mr. Seeger) and Jack Elliott (soon to be known as the folk singer Ramblin’ Jack Elliott), took to the road, collecting folk songs and singing for their supper throughout the South.

At Mr. Seeger’s suggestion, the three men stopped at Highlander, one of the wellsprings of the civil rights movement. The reworked version of the anthem — titled “We Shall Overcome” — would be born there later in the decade, its words and musical arrangement credited jointly to Mr. Carawan, Ms. Horton, Mr. Seeger and Mr. Hamilton.

Ms. Horton died in 1956, and in 1959, Mr. Carawan succeeded her as Highlander’s music director. The next year, at S.N.C.C.’s founding convention, he was invited to lead the delegates in song.

“We shall overcome,” he sang, accompanying himself on the guitar. “We shall overcome. We shall overcome someday. …” Before he finished, as was recounted afterward, the delegates, some 200 strong, had risen from their seats, linked arms and were singing as one.

“That song caught on that weekend,” Mr. Carawan told the NPR program “All Things Considered” in 2013. “And then, at a certain point, those young singers, who knew a lot of a cappella styles, they said: ‘Lay that guitar down, boy. We can do this song better.’ And they put that sort of triplet to it and sang it a cappella with all those harmonies. It had a way of rendering it in a style that some very powerful young singers got behind and spread.”

Mr. Carawan remained with Highlander until his retirement in the late 1980s. During that period, and long afterward, he traversed the country with his wife, Candie, singing, marching, joining strikes and recording traditional songs. The couple did extensive fieldwork on the Sea Islands of South Carolina and Georgia, where they organized festivals of traditional music.

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Mr. Carawan in 1958 in New York. Credit David Gahr/Getty Images 

The songs Mr. Carawan gathered continued to seed the civil rights movement. Once, on Johns Island, off the South Carolina coast, a local woman heard him sing a traditional song, “Keep Your Hands on the Plow.”

“Young man,” he recalled her telling him, “we have another way of singing that song. We sing, ‘Keep Your Eyes on the Prize’ ” — a version Mr. Carawan soon helped disseminate.

Mr. Carawan’s first marriage, to Noel Oliver, ended in divorce; he married Candie Anderson in 1961. She survives him, along with their two children, Evan and Heather Carawan, and a granddaughter.

In recent years, Mr. Carawan had suffered from dementia. His death, at his home in New Market, Tenn., next door to Highlander’s present-day home, was confirmed by his family.

His books, compiled with his wife, include “We Shall Overcome! Songs of the Southern Freedom Movement” (1963); “Ain’t You Got a Right to the Tree of Life? The People of Johns Island, South Carolina” (1966); and “Voices From the Mountains: Life and Struggle in the Appalachian South” (1975).

He was a producer or co-producer of many recordings, including “Birmingham, Alabama, 1963: Mass Meeting,” which features the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the Rev. Ralph Abernathy and the Birmingham Movement Choir; “The Story of Greenwood, Mississippi,” featuring Fannie Lou Hamer, Medgar Evers and Dick Gregory; and “Freedom in the Air: Albany Georgia, 1961-62,” produced with Alan Lomax. As a singer, Mr. Carawan can be heard on several albums, among them “Songs With Guy Carawan.”

To this day, royalties from the commercial use of “We Shall Overcome” are donated to a fund that supports social and cultural programs in the South. The fund is administered by the Highlander Research and Education Center, as the folk school is now known.

An unmistakable measure of the song’s reach came barely five years after Mr. Carawan first sang it in Raleigh. On March 15, 1965, in a televised address seen by 70 million Americans, President Lyndon B. Johnson announced his intention to submit a voting rights bill to Congress.

Describing the legislation — which he would sign into law that August as the Voting Rights Act of 1965 — President Johnson said: “Even if we pass this bill, the battle will not be over. What happened in Selma is part of a far larger movement which reaches into every section and state of America. It is the effort of American Negroes to secure for themselves the full blessings of American life.” He continued:

“Their cause must be our cause, too. Because it is not just Negroes, but really it is all of us, who must overcome the crippling legacy of bigotry and injustice.”

President Johnson added: “And we shall overcome.”

 

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