At the recent State of the City Address in Denver, jazz singer Rene Marie got up to sing the national anthem, and did -- kinda. She actually sang James Weldon Johnson's Lift Ev'ry Voice and Sing, the black national anthem to the tune of Francis Scott Key's The Star-Spangled Banner. I guess she felt she was being creative, but I didn't really dig it and neither did some other people who she later said "oops, my bad" to. ...
I really, really like Lift Ev'ry Voice because when I hear it, I can visualize the dignity of my parents, my grandparents, my great-grandparents and every black person who stood up and built a life for themselves in America despite the adversity they faced. It is a true nationalistic sentiment. And there's some amazing versions of the so-called Black National Anthem, like the one NPR News & Notes found from the 70s (video below).
To me there's no need to mix it with Key's tale of the British shelling of Fort McHenry, which only discusses one obscure incident in American history. Besides, I've always felt Katharine Lee Bates' America the Beautiful would make a better national anthem -- especially when sung by Ray Charles.
I remember having to memorize Weldon's lyrics when I was a kid, and it was a standard at any community function I went to. Funny thing is there's lots of people who have never heard of the song until now.
Pictures of the Week
A local man throws rocks at South African police in the Reiger Park informal settlement outside Johannesburg Monday May 19, 2008. Mobs rampaged through poor suburbs of Johannesburg in a frenzy of anti-foreigner violence over the weekend, killing at least 12 people, injuring dozens and forcing hundreds to seek refuge at police stations. The attacks capped a week of mounting violence that started in the sprawling township of Alexandra. Angry residents there accused foreigners, many of them Zimbabweans who fled their own country's economic collapse, of taking scarce jobs and housing. . (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)
An unidentified woman looks through the shattered rear window of the car after it was hit by bricks outside a church in Johannesburg, South Africa, Sunday May 18, 2008. Mobs killed at least five people and injured 50 in anti-foreigner violence Sunday that has spread through poor suburbs of Johannesburg, police said. Foreigners, mainly Zimbabweans, were targeted, police spokeswoman Cheryl Engelbrecht said. More than 300 had sought refuge at the local police station, she said. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)
Women from the Pro-independence Polisario Front rebel soldiers are seen during a military parade in the Western Sahara village of Tifariti, Tuesday May 19, 2008 to celebrate the 35th anniversary of the Polisario Army. After Spanish colonizers left Western Sahara in 1975, Morocco and Mauritania went to war over it. By 1979, Mauritania had pulled out and Morocco had taken over. But fighting continued between 15,000 Saharaui's Polisario guerrillas and Morocco's U.S. equipped army. A U.N. negotiated truce in 1991 called for a referendum on the region's future, but that vote never happened. (AP Photo/Daniel Ochoa de Olza)
An unidentified man buys cooking oil on the streets of Highfileds in Harare, Zimbabwe Tuesday, May, 20, 2008. The cooking oil is made affordable by repackaging into smaller bottles and containers. A third of the population has fled Zimbabwe in recent years as the country confronts chronic shortages of food, medicine, fuel and cash precipitated by the government's seizure of white-owned farms that once produced enough to feed the country and export to neighbors. The government this month introduced a half-billion Zimbabwe dollar note in efforts to deal with runaway inflation that unofficial estimates put at 700,000 percent a year. (AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi)
Sen. Barack Takes a break on the campaign trail before giving a speech. (AP)
Actor Shia LaBeouf and a fan take a self portrait at the premiere of his new movie "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull",Tuesday, May 20, 2008, in New York. (AP Photo/Louis Lanzano)
GRESHAM, OR - MAY 18: Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) is hugged by his wife Michelle Obama before he speaks during a campaign event at the Huntington Terrace Senior Center May 18, 2008 in Gresham, Oregon. Obama is campaigning through Oregon and Kentucky ahead of Tuesday's primaries. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
San Antonio Spurs forward Tim Duncan holds the ball near the start of the Game 7 of the NBA Western Conference semifinal basketball series against the New Orleans Hornets, Monday, May 19, 2008, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)


Comments: (15)
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By: Amrcn on 7/11/2008 11:08PM
Bad judgement!
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By: karo on 7/13/2008 8:29PM
now i bet you this women will get blacklisted she stepped on the wrong peoples toes she was asked to sing the national anthem and her ignorant tail sung the black version. blackballed baby thats what you are. hey also while these a.k.a. sories are running around the country having conventions every other week they need to be tutoring kids in the south on picking up their reading levels these are non productive pretend colored folks perpetrating a fraud. now meow to that and these frat so-called bros who go around barking all the time please give me a break these groups are nothing but party w/ a purpose shams. why are blacks continously going backwards woof woof.
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By: lynn on 7/14/2008 7:31PM
Not cool. I learned the Black Anthem at church. We sing it every black history month. But this was not the place or time to break out with something new. Right now Obama is a Presidental Race. We do not need anything messing it up. Get him in office then we can talk about "Painting the White House Black" and changing the Nat. Anthem.
Doing stupid stuff like this will scare away voters. We are about to create the biggest change in UNITED STATES HISTORY come November..Please People lets remain calm until November 9th, then act up!!!
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By: Danette Chavis on 7/15/2008 9:46AM
In response to comments submitted by "Adlyn" #4...
When is the "right time"?
You say she should have saved the song for "Juneteenth" or some other African
American event but how would that effect
a change - Us telling "Us" all our woes
and all our sorrows "past" and "present"?
Indeed "interrupt" their celebrations!
Celebrations of all their conquest, all
their successes and of all their "glorifying"
themselves - for we have not been "included"
in their glorying and no "homage" do they
pay to any of our efforts in any their successes.
They need to be "reminded" of the peril we
were undergoing and witness the result of
that on our part. For they forge "full steam
ahead" without any knowledge or remembrance
of the part which we played.
We "glory" in their successes and indeed
"celebrate" their celebrations - yet no
part of which African Americans played is
ever mentioned or considered. That is "rude"
and indeed "dis-respectful".
To have removed a people from off their
land and use in "free labor" because you
yourselves had none to work the land, and
the land is built by that labor to such
a degree that wars break out between the
"North" and "South", and you promise those
people that if they enlist in your war,
you will free every man and grant "40 acres
and a mule", and they enlist in that war and
indeed obtain the victory and you acknowledge
that they are "free" - but give them no means
in which to sustain themselves, and they are
left to their own devices because now that
they are "free" - no man sustains them, And
because you have not provided the 40 acres
and a mule, their left with nothing. They
perservered as best they could but - where could
they go under such circumstances? Many indeed
"remained" under bondage and in slavery.
Therefore know of a certainty, that just because a laws been changed or a "proclamation" made, does not mean the situation and circumstances to whom
it pertains have changed.
Therefore contrary to what you may think, her song
and the "time and place" she gave it, was indeed "appropiate" and indeed "timely".
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By: marley on 7/15/2008 10:51PM
i loved it...it was like she was the rosa parks of singers...whether it was intentional or not...she sang what she felt...and an anthem it was, it just wasn't the popular anthem....and it is so messed up to see some of these comments and from black people indeed...i already expect that from the caucasians...but my people, my people, we are so brainwashed...that's why I don't even know if barak in the white house is really an accomplishment. sad times we live in.
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