Date: Fri 14-Mar-1997
Date: Fri 14-Mar-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: DOTTIE
Quick Words:
schools-blues-middle
Full Text:
Sixth Graders Sing The Blues
Singing a blues song written by Sherry Williamson's social studies class are,
from left, Melissa Heil, Rachel Stern, Christina Klanica and Ashley Welch.
They are accompanied by Sandy Hook musician, Jordan Jancz, center, and class
percussionists, Bob Olah and David Kean (far right). Mark Boland (sitting)
claps on the offbeat.
-Bee Photo, Evans
B Y D OROTHY E VANS
Exactly what, you might ask, could middle school students living in Newtown at
the end of the 20th century possibly know about the struggle for a better life
among southern African-American sharecroppers during the 1940s?
Not very much, it would seem.
But the sixth graders in Sherry Williamson's social studies classes recently
learned they weren't too young to understand the plight of those long-ago
people and not too young to empathize with them.
As part of Black History Month, Mrs Williamson and her students viewed a
documentary video about southern plantation life that portrayed rural blacks
laboring in the cotton fields.
In the film, many of the blacks decided to leave for Chicago in search of the
"Promised Land" where there would be jobs and a better life for their
families. The train ride north was a journey filled with hope, but the reality
in Chicago was far from what they'd been led to expect.
Chicago during the 1940s was anything but the Promised Land for an immigrating
African-American. The streets weren't paved with gold, and the jobs weren't
waiting.
"They had nothing, so they went searching for a better life," but they found
despair at the end of their journey, Mrs Williamson said.
"Singing the blues," she said, was one way for African-Americans to express
their "unvoiced longings" and tell the story of their people, passing it on to
the next generation.
After Mrs Williamson's students had seen the video and read more about that
era in history, they decided to write their own blues songs as though they
were living in that time.
They also invited a Sandy Hook musician, Jordan Jancz, to visit the classes
Tuesday, March 4, to give them a brief demonstration of what he called "blues
basics."
Mr Jancz strummed his bass fiddle while singing the trademark 1-4-5 blues
chord progression. Then he helped the students put their original blues songs
to music.
"Call and response... and clap on the offbeat," Mr Jancz said, getting them
warmed up.
.
The sun's on my back,
we live in a shack.
The fields are all muddy,
and my hands are all bloody.
I'm feelin' mad,
'cause my life is so bad.
When I get to Chicago,
I'll feel real glad.
Goin' to miss my honey,
But gonna make some money.
I hopped on the train,
Gonna leave this shame.
"I like this piece you wrote. A lot of feelings are embodied in this!" Mr
Jancz said as he invited several students up to lead the singing.
"Don't be shy. You never are!" Mrs Williamson urged them forward.
They got into the rhythm, clapped their hands and sang all 14 verses just as
though they meant every word.
