Article clipped from New York Stars and Stripes

THF. STARS AND STRIPESFriday, Sept. 17, 1943Negro GIs Making Musical HistoryFirst Chorus of Race To Sing in Albert Hall in 72 YearsBy Richard WilburStars and Stripes Staff Writer— AVIATION ENGINEER^ BATTALION HQ, Sept. 16—Two hundred Negro soldiers, members of four aviation engineers battalions, sat on benches together and sang:‘Mister Tom Jefferson, a mighty fine man,He wrote it down in a mighty fine han And the rest all signed with a mighty fine han'And they crossed their T s and dotted their 1’s—A bran' new country did arise.In a bare Nissen hut here the aviation engineers were rehearsing “Ballad for Americans, one of the songs they will sing before Allied audiences in Royal Albert Hall, where they will give a concert w ith the London Symphony Orchestraand Roland Hayes, American Negro ] • machine age came with a great big tenor, on Sept. 28 and 29. . roarAn all-American program, including • As Americans grew in peace and warStars and Stripes Photo by Richard KoenigCpI. James C. McDaniel, of Kansas City, Mo., assistant conductor, calls for a soft and reverent passage in a Negro spiritual from his chorus of 200 aviation engineers practising for two performances with the London Symphony Orchestra and Roland Hayes, American Negro tenor, in Royal Albert Hall, London, on Sept. 28 and 29.'more, who led a symphony orchestra 1 one had missed the cue to come in with, playing one of his own compositions in “Yeah, Paul Revere had a horse race.” July at Royal Albert Hall, and Cpl. Marc | “Who’s Paul Revere? Weisgall de-Blitzstein, of New York, composer-author manded. Someone raised his handof “The Cradle Will Rock, a musical play produced several years ago by Orson Welles.“The cue, Blitzstein shouted to the soldier-chorus from the stage, “is ‘Government of the people, by the people, and for the people.’ Then—loud—‘Shall not perish from the earth.’ Some of the soldiers, restless from steady sitting, shifted around in their seats and murmured, “1 need complete silence, Blitzstein said. *Lets Hear ItAn airplane roared overhead. “I mean you, too. Blitzstein shouted, grinning up at the roof.good humor, the aviation engineers took up their cue again—“Let’s hear it, Blitzstein said. “Blast it out! and sang the stretch right. Then they startedten Negro spirituals, has been planned for the concert. The openingjjpight will mark the first appearance of a Negro chorus in the 72-year-oM history of Royal Albert Hall, officials of the hail believe.“That among these rights are life,Liberty,And the pursuit of happiness ” the chorus sang. A soloist put in his line: “That does sound mighty fine, said Sgt. Cecil Jefferson, of Kansas City, Mo. | The battalion men who built this G1 | chorus up from scratch— Chaplain William M. Perkins. Philadelphia; 1. Sgt. Alexander B. Jordan, St. Paul, Minn., and T 5 James McDaniel. Kansas City, Mo.—watched from the . sidelines. A [ professional rehearsal of “Ballad for Americans was under way, led by two GIs up from London—T/Sgt. Hugo Weisgall, composer-conductor from Balti-BREGERAnd a million wheels went around and 'round.The cities reached into the sky And dug down deep into the ground.'’A throat-cutting gesture by Blitzstein.“No! he shouted from the stage. “Too heavy, in that part, you’ve got to travellike an airplane. „ ^ _______... (M Hi“There are two hundred of us, and i chorus in the world, with the* right kind we’ve got to ’sound like one voice. of firm direction, he said.Sgt. Jordan, who used to sing with and /help direct the famed Tuskogee College Opening Performance Sept. 28 choir in Alabama, explained aside-how The chorus was on the spiritual, “Oversheepishly. “OK, pal, wake up, Weisgall said.They came to the words, “Let my people go. Weisgall wasn’t satisfied with the way they sang it. “I want that to be mysterious, he said. “I want it to be religious. It’s a plea. You’ve got to feel it deeply, but with restraint.Sgt. Jimmy Daniels, of New York, had the line, “Abraham Lincoln said that on Nov. 19, 1863, at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. The line was a lot different from lyrics that Daniels used to sing as an entertainer in New York and Harlem night clubs. Most of the other chorus members used to sing in Methodist choirs or amateur quartets back home.“Building a nation is awful tough,The people found the going rough.And thirteen states weren’t large enough—So they started to expandInto the western lands,the chorus sang. Weisgall was satisfied.“AH right, that’s damn good, he said. Chuckles at his frank opinion swept through the chorus. “You guys are doing very, very well, Weisgall added. “It sounds swell.As Sgt. Jordan and T/5 McDaniel took over the rehearsal and started the chorus on Negro spirituals, Weisgall, full of . enthusiasm, steered for the background. “I honestly think they could .be the bestver see SAILORS carryin’ packs ?the chorus idea started. A group of 18 in his battalion went around singing Christmas earols in nearby villages. After Christmas, the carolers broke up into quartets, then the quartets gradually grew to choir size.“We’re in a place where there’s not much amusement nearby. Sgt. Jordan said. “At nights some of the singers used to stop by in the huts and say, ‘Why don’t you come out to choir rehearsals?’\ and more came along each time.; One of the battalions formed singing j groups as far back as a U.S. staging area, where it stayed for three.months, accord-I ing to 1/Lt. William Work, of Pitts-! burgh. “The boys used to get together there and-harmonize to relieve the monotony of training films, he recalled.Rehearsals—Good FunThe 200 GIs have rehearsed as a chorus two nights weekly during the past month. On the other nights, the've rehearsed in two separate groups. Blitzstein, who has been living up here with one company recently, has alternated leading the two groups, and coordinated them at full chorus rehearsals.In a PX hut, Blitzstein has also been composing a symphonic poem, based on Negro spirituals, which will be played during the concert.“It’s been wonderful fun, he said, as Weisgall took over the rehearsal, “trying to compose this in the PX, with the guys singing several other songs at the same time, and some of them leaning over my shoulder, correcting me. One guy didn’t think some part I wrote fitted in with Negro spirituals—said it sounded Russian. So I had to throw it out.The chorus, still rehearsing “Ballad for Americans under Weisgall’s direction, sang about Abraham Lincoln:But he hated oppression, he hated wrong, And he went down to his grave to free the slave. . Man in white skin can never be free While his black brother is in slavery”Standing on a beer box for a conductor’s platform, Weisgall, who will conduct both chorus and orchestra at Royal Albert Hall, waved his arms, drawing music out of the 200 GIs. Army cement-mixers, bricklayers, and carpenters during the day, some of them were^etting sleepy during the four-hour night rehearsal. Weisgall’s arms flopped suddenly. Some-My Head. These aviation engineers, Blitzstein said, sing “Over My Head with full knowledge of its timeliness:“Over my head, there's trouble in the air, There must be a God somewhere High-ranking officials of the United Nations are expected to attend the opening-night performapce Sept. 28, from which the proceeds will go to British war charities. On the 29th, the performance will be given free for all service men and women.The 200 aviation engineers will leave this backwoods region for a week in London before the concert. They'll spend the week in intensive rehearsals with Roland Hayes, who is expected in England from the United States this week, and; with Pfc Ken Cantril, of Springfield, Mo., former member of the St. Louis Municipal Opera Co., who, as special soloist, has virtually the final say in “Ballad for Americans. At the end of the ballad,^ when Pfc Cantril asks, “Am I an American? he answers himself affirmatively: I’m just an Irish, Negro, Jewish. Italian French and English, Spanish, Russian Chinese,Polish, Scotch, Hungarian, Litvak, Swedish, Finnish, Canadian, Greek and T urk, ^and Czech and double Czech.” *So there isn't much left to be said after that, except, as the script directs: . |“CHORUS (Whistle, in amazement).’* jConflagrationBerlin is burning, the Ruhr is on fire, From flaming Orel the storm troops retire; | Sicilian straits seethed like hot lard,^ Hamburg lies smoking and Naples lies||Like Viking torches the Danish biasIn smoke near Vienna a factory’s t An old proverb proves Hitler’s disaSt Fire’s a good slave, but flame’sSgt. Stanly Fei
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New York Stars and Stripes

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Fri, Sep 17, 1943

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