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Michael row the boat ashore - meaning and date


Eagle

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I hope this is useful and gives you the answers you are after :D

"Michael Row the Boat Ashore" predates the Civil War. The history and origins of old Negro spirituals are generally obscure--the slaves didn't usually write things down, and their masters rarely thought slave songs were worth investigating. "Michael" is an exception, since we do have enough references to pinpoint the general origin of the song, if not its precise meaning.

"Michael Row the Boat Ashore" is a rowing song. That's not as obvious as it sounds. "Michael" is the only rowing song we know about that's actually about boats. It was first mentioned in 1863 as a song sung by black slaves in the Georgia Sea Islands. Pete Seeger, in The Incompleat Folksinger, mentions that slaves brought from Africa spent their lives on these small islands, out of touch with mainland life. "The only transportation was small boats and strong arms to row them," he writes. The boat crews from different plantations would have their own rowing songs, each song exclusive to the plantation. "Michael" is mentioned in the letters of some teachers who went to the islands in 1862-63.

Like many spirituals, "Michael Row the Boat Ashore" combines religious expression ("hallelujah") with quotidian detail ("row the boat ashore"). The boat is a musical boat -- the slaves often expressed themselves creatively by starting with their musical instrument ("Little David play on your harp") and the boat was the "instrument" of the rowers. Note other religious images (Jordan River, chills the body but not the soul, milk and honey). Historians of spirituals classify the song as both a spiritual and a work song, and some argue that it is more properly a sea chanty.

Who is Michael and why is he rowing? We've covered the rowing part--to get to the mainland. There are two main theories on who Michael is. The least likely (in my amateur opinion) is that Michael was the name of the oarsman from a particular plantation. The more popular theory is that Michael is the archangel Michael, who is being called on to help when the rowing was tough. Regardless of the origins of the song, I suspect the latter interpretation is why the song became widespread.

The song's popularity soared in the late 50s and early 60s, due partly to its having been sung by Harry Belafonte, and partly to being so easily singable in large groups.

?Michael, Row the Boat Ashore? is an old slave song that used to be sung by American blacks rowing their masters' goods across Virginia's rivers. The song form—a hymn—is apropos to the poet's funereal circumstance of general anesthesia, a state one remove from death. The occasion of the song is also apt in that the anesthetist will be ferrying the poet from the waking world into unconsciousness.

"Michael, Row the Boat Ashore" combines the forms of black spiritual and sea chantey and originated in the Sea Islands of Georgia. There, during the time of slavery, each plantation had its own crew of slaves and boats. The Sea Island slaves made up the work songs that they sang as they crewed the boats. It is hard to tell at this point whether the Michael of the song refers to the Archangel Michael or to an oarsmen who was leading the work crew. The Jordan River was of course a symbol of longed-for freedom for the slaves.
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Thank you so much for the info. One story I heard was that this song was written by some bored college boys who then formaed a group (The Highwaymen) and recorded it. It went to #1 on the pop charts in the late 50's or eary 60's??

Ever hear that story? :coolio:

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