Throw Me Anywhere Lord

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  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2024
  • Georgia Sea Island Singers from the DVD- The Films of Bess Lomax Hawes- available from www.media-gener...

Komentáře • 94

  • @gafriendship
    @gafriendship Před měsícem +3

    This was my great grandmother. I lived with her until I was 10

    • @MargoDean1
      @MargoDean1 Před měsícem +2

      She is wonderful! How proud you must be. She played at the Freight & Salvage in Berkeley and I came across this clip. I'm going to use a bit of it in the documentary of the history of the Freight I'm producing.

    • @gafriendship
      @gafriendship Před 24 dny +1

      ​@@MargoDean1yes ma'am. In my 12 years of enjoying her she taught me a lot

  • @mediageneration
    @mediageneration  Před 14 lety +60

    The dance is called the Buzzard Lope, and John Davis is the buzzard circling the carrion and picking it up at the end of the song.

  • @tonimarie9985
    @tonimarie9985 Před 5 lety +38

    Our church and praying has changed so much. Miss my old ancestors that raised me right. Blessed to pass these hyms and dancing down to my girls.

  • @multicaruana
    @multicaruana Před 10 lety +53

    No words can describe the awesome legacy of seeing footage like this...Thanks to all of you who made this possible!

  • @galaxystardust2402
    @galaxystardust2402 Před 9 měsíci +4

    Ashe to our ancestors ❤

  • @ryannicholas554
    @ryannicholas554 Před 6 měsíci +5

    it's crazy to see that there isn't much difference in the way we praise the lord in church today.

  • @vonnedavienwilson8150
    @vonnedavienwilson8150 Před 5 lety +54

    I love the Buzzard Lope and wish it were practiced more widely. The message, theologically and culturally, is so unique and powerful. Imagine embodying the role of a Divine Rescuer to reclaim meaning over death! Thas a wave.

    • @kikikareema5912
      @kikikareema5912 Před 5 lety +2

      Did you do this dance as a child?

    • @vonnedavienwilson8150
      @vonnedavienwilson8150 Před 5 lety

      @@kikikareema5912 No. But i wish i did. I do try to incorporate my own version of it into my prayer life now, tho

    • @Ronaldo-rt7hl
      @Ronaldo-rt7hl Před 4 lety

      What is a Buzzard Lope?

    • @Ronaldo-rt7hl
      @Ronaldo-rt7hl Před 4 lety

      Nevermind a comment below said it’s the name of the dance

    • @bean4423
      @bean4423 Před 2 lety +2

      fr !!! i hope one day we can start (re)incorporating this into BA death traditions across all regions :))

  • @fitzbaby11
    @fitzbaby11 Před 13 lety +46

    i can feel and here my african roots in this music. they could not destroy it,no matter how hard they tried

    • @jobdylan5782
      @jobdylan5782 Před 3 lety +1

      no one ever tried

    • @TomorrowWeLive
      @TomorrowWeLive Před 2 lety

      Who tried to destroy it?

    • @truth1046
      @truth1046 Před 2 lety +3

      No one tried to destroy it because it cannot be destroyed. However, european slave owners forced white christianity on our black people and it became temporarily “lost” to us. It is always in our DNA you just have to meditate to find it.

    • @jobdylan5782
      @jobdylan5782 Před rokem

      @@truth1046 enslaved peoples loved christianity

    • @intelligencehaswon5714
      @intelligencehaswon5714 Před 8 měsíci

      These are Gullah/ Geechee people. They have retained more of their African roots than other Black Americans. I'm Black American by the way.

  • @Power_Verse_
    @Power_Verse_ Před 4 lety +21

    Look like he crip walking for the Lord. 🙌🏾

    • @dimensionsdance
      @dimensionsdance Před 3 lety +9

      Yes! Footwork from the continent to the plantation fields to the streets. I saw the Roger Rabbit, Indian Step, Charleston. Rich!

    • @sankofanyame
      @sankofanyame Před 2 lety +3

      🤣🤣🤣 I love my people! 😂😭😭

  • @DanWilsonguitar
    @DanWilsonguitar Před 13 lety +14

    it really resembles Rumba Columbia

  • @donk9132
    @donk9132 Před 10 lety +10

    Wow, what a beautiful story behind this song and dance. The meaning is precious....for all....!!

  • @user-hf6ds3lf6t
    @user-hf6ds3lf6t Před 6 měsíci

    I love to see the progression of this in history!

  • @user-hf6ds3lf6t
    @user-hf6ds3lf6t Před 6 měsíci

    I love to see the progression of this in history as regards to how it has turned into different genres of music.

  • @spoonful1018
    @spoonful1018 Před 2 lety +2

    What a special video - such a spirit for life is so hard to find these days

  • @mitcheleneking7390
    @mitcheleneking7390 Před 3 lety +5

    Bessie Jones had a strong voice

  • @ASIAHARRIS-ij8sy
    @ASIAHARRIS-ij8sy Před 6 měsíci

    love to see them together!

  • @TJNorton
    @TJNorton Před 3 lety +5

    This is pure gold ... Thank you for making this available.

  • @user-yl7ux5in1d
    @user-yl7ux5in1d Před 6 měsíci

    the intricate clapping makes it so much more interesting

  • @jaymclearen9216
    @jaymclearen9216 Před rokem +1

    Thank you Tyler Childers

  • @cxcmb
    @cxcmb Před 11 lety +11

    amazing stuff! i just discovered the georgia sea island singers... def want to check that dvd out!
    thanks for posting this!

  • @ajaneeason9373
    @ajaneeason9373 Před 4 lety +2

    Praise the Lord 🙏🏾‼️

  • @majidakthalji
    @majidakthalji Před rokem

    Beautiful

  • @cel1945
    @cel1945 Před rokem +2

    Call and Response

  • @nephiilim
    @nephiilim Před 11 měsíci +1

    afrikans be afrikaning no matter where we were held captive

  • @cynthiaanderson2160
    @cynthiaanderson2160 Před 2 lety +1

    Amen

  • @mediageneration
    @mediageneration  Před 12 lety +6

    Notes for the footage written in 1964 when the film was made are available as a PDf at (3Ws)(.)media-generation(.)(c o m)/DVD%20PAGES/Bess/master.pdf Sorry for the parentheses, YT doesn't let you put websites in a comment.

    • @warpnin3
      @warpnin3 Před 7 lety +1

      Who is YT....Oooh, you mean youtube! ;-)

    • @yourturn777
      @yourturn777 Před 5 lety +1

      Certain they do now? Could you post the link again?✌

    • @IdealDanl
      @IdealDanl Před 5 lety

      www.media-generation.com/DVD%20PAGES/Bess/master.pdf

    • @IdealDanl
      @IdealDanl Před 5 lety

      @@yourturn777 done

    • @IdealDanl
      @IdealDanl Před 5 lety +4

      BUZZARD LOPE
      Bessie Jones: In those days, they put this something down on the floor
      and they'd dance around it like a buzzard dancing around a cow --
      a dead cow or mule or something.
      Peter Davis: Well, that's the way they feel, you see -according to how
      they were treated, you understand me. They said they were
      nothing but the old dead carrion that they would throw away in
      woods someplace; and then the buzzard would come around, you
      know, and pick off the carrion. The angel was the buzzard that
      come pick up the soul out of the old dead carrion...
      The "Buzzard Lope", one of the most remarkable items in the Sea Islanders'
      repertoire, is not a "shout". "Shouts" invariably involve whole congregations; the
      Buzzard Lope stands unique, the only solo dance in the Singers' religious repertoire.
      Its roots are plainly African. Melville Herskovits, the pioneer investigator into
      Afro-American anthropology, has provided hints as to its ultimate origin among the
      Ashanti-Fanti peoples of the Gold Coast, among whom the vulture was a sacred
      messenger who bore sacrifices to the gods. During the 1930's, in Surinam, Herskovits
      saw "Opete" (a Twi word for Vulture) dancers among the Bush Negroes; under
      possession, Opete cult members go out to find dead animals for food. "Those who
      danced for the buzzard... went about in a circle, moving with bodies bent forward from
      their waists and with arms thrown back in imitation of the bird from which their spirit took
      its name." (Herskovits, Rebel Destiny, p. 330.)
      On St. Simon's, this ancient African cult dance has been translated into
      theological terms which reflect tragic memories of slavery in the "Christian" nineteenth
      century. The handkerchief around which the buzzard dancer circles is the body of a
      slave, denied burial and thrown out in the woods like a dead animal. The Buzzard tiptoes
      around the body, advancing and retreating to make sure it is truly dead, and finally fulfills
      the ancient African role of messenger by carrying the sacrifice back to the Lord.
      Meanwhile the watching singers give their testimony of faith:
      Throw me anywhere, Lord, in that old field
      Throw me anywhere, Lord, in that old field
      Don't care where you throw me in that old field
      Since King Jesus own me, in that old field
      Don't care how you do me in that old field
      Since King Jesus choose me, in that old field
      You may beat and bang me in that old field
      Since King Jesus saved me, in that old field
      Don't care how you treat me in that old field
      Since King Jesus meet me, in that old field
      Throw me anywhere, Lord, in that old field
      Throw me anywhere, Lord in that old field
      When we began to shoot the Buzzard Lope, John Davis put on his suit jacket. I
      reminded him that he had not been wearing it in the earlier shots and suggested that he
      remove it. Later on, when he saw the footage, he remarked that if I had "let him" wear it,
      he could have made "the wings flap better". I hadn't understood that part of the
      aesthetic, and John had been too courtly and kind to embarrass me publicly by pointing
      it out.
      In his younger days, John used to pick up the handkerchief in his teeth and whirl
      around and around with it before finally carrying it away, but he said he was too old to do
      that anymore. John told me; too, that none of the younger St. Simon's Island men had
      wanted to learn the Buzzard Lope. Now that he is gone, we may never see it again, with
      or without the flapping wings.

  • @boutaye5737
    @boutaye5737 Před 6 měsíci

    nice

  • @analogthought
    @analogthought Před 14 lety +2

    thank you so so so much for posting this. i love them and haven't found much by way of filmed performances of theirs...

  • @ozzdubar
    @ozzdubar Před 13 lety

    Thank you!!!!

  • @gracecole1
    @gracecole1 Před 4 lety +1

    Praise God for music and dance

  • @crissymtnz924
    @crissymtnz924 Před 2 lety +1

    Adam in the garden

  • @sleepyboyhawkins
    @sleepyboyhawkins Před 11 lety +7

    Mitchell Hearns, a Dee Jay from Saint Louis who went by the moniker of "Gabriel" over the air waves (and as far as I know, still does) recorded a song called "The Buzzard Lope" back in the late 1950s or the early 1960s. It has absolutely no relation to this performance whatsoever, except for the title. It's an odd little fact, to be sure, but it does make you wonder about the origination of the term "Buzzard Lope"

    • @PLFMM
      @PLFMM Před 6 lety +1

      Irish and Africans in early NY created tap dance by combining their dance forms....yes!

  • @adeart7
    @adeart7 Před 14 lety +13

    what is the name of the game he is playing with the rag. This is like the brazilian art of capoeira.

    • @donnab.333
      @donnab.333 Před 5 lety +10

      It shows how connected we are in the diaspora.

    • @PeggyRabbit32
      @PeggyRabbit32 Před 4 lety +7

      This isn't a game. This is The Buzzard Lope

  • @blacktom0001
    @blacktom0001 Před 3 lety +1

    looks older than 1964

  • @allbetsRoff60
    @allbetsRoff60 Před 9 lety +6

    I loved it without a doubt, but what were they saying and what was the entire scenario all about?

    • @AfiScruggsplaysbass
      @AfiScruggsplaysbass Před 9 lety +13

      Jennifer Bynum They're saying "Throw me anywhere, Lord, in that old field."
      Don't care how you treat me. If King Jesus meet me"
      "

    • @AfiScruggsplaysbass
      @AfiScruggsplaysbass Před 9 lety +10

      Jennifer Bynum The dance is called "The Buzzard Lope."

    • @infomercialdaddy9200
      @infomercialdaddy9200 Před 7 lety +31

      It's a spiritual dance with African Origins. When slaves died their bodies were thrown into a field and eaten by buzzards. So the people gather in a circle, using the piece of cloth to represent a body and each person would go into the middle and imitate a circling buzzard. I learned about this in class as well as from the textbook :)

    • @lesterwilliams4491
      @lesterwilliams4491 Před 6 lety +16

      the slaves worked the fields and it was their area of expertise. it didnt matter if they died out there they were going to go home with the lord. so, throw me anywhere lord in that old field, it doesnt matter because im coming to be with you. it's victory over the field

  • @YassminV
    @YassminV Před 11 lety +4

    This is excellent! Thank you for uploading, I am currently working on a production that asks the question is dance inherent?

  • @Ronaldo-rt7hl
    @Ronaldo-rt7hl Před 4 lety +3

    I recently created an Instagram account to showcase African American culture would it be alright if used this video?

  • @spudthrower
    @spudthrower Před 11 lety +17

    Is it possible for somebody from Ireland and no apparent ethnic connection to Africa to 'feel his african roots'? after all cant we all trace our lineage back to Africa. Maybe we both are experiencing this music in a similar way but conceptualize our experiences differently. Historically the narrative of this music is immediately connected to africa, more importantly however than expressing something 'african' they are expressing something uniquely Human.

    • @Uchube-24
      @Uchube-24 Před 7 lety +2

      I felt it watching this for sure :)

    • @cars812
      @cars812 Před 7 lety +7

      actually, we can't all trace our lineage back to africa.
      look into out of africa debunked and sub saharan neanderthal dna rates

    • @Ronaldo-rt7hl
      @Ronaldo-rt7hl Před 4 lety +10

      You just enjoy the music that doesn’t mean you feel “your African roots”. To put it into perspective imagine how you feel with no connection imagine how we as African Americans, who are direct descendants of this specific dance and culture, feel. You can’t begin to feel even an ounce of power as I felt watching it.

    • @kriskronkle5203
      @kriskronkle5203 Před 2 lety +3

      As a half american half chinese boy from the suburbs, i have a strange connection to this music as well. You're right, it is something human. It's suffering, joy, life and death, community and loneliness, despair and hope all in the songs and dances of past times.

    • @treasurewallace6568
      @treasurewallace6568 Před rokem +5

      Yeah but it’s definitely significant to black people and connecting to the roots that were ripped away from us. glad u enjoy the video tho!

  • @imfromhereiaintcomehere6921

    🪶🪶🪶🪶🪶🪶🪶🏹

  • @WolfenDay
    @WolfenDay Před 6 lety +1

    When is this from?

    • @Ronaldo-rt7hl
      @Ronaldo-rt7hl Před rokem +2

      The description says this footage is from 1964 but its documented that our ancestors danced this during slavery if I'm not mistaken.