FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Mark Logsdon
Phone: (615) 327-0100
Email: mark.logsdon@plamedia.com
I Have a Voice: Tennessee’s African American Musical Heritage
Opens at West Tennessee Delta Heritage Center
The West Tennessee Delta Heritage Center kicks off its 20th Anniversary by presenting the exhibition, I Have a Voice: Tennessee’s African American Musical Heritage, opening January 12. The exhibition, organized by the Tennessee State Museum, gives a snapshot of Tennessee’s rich African American musical heritage and its influence on worldwide musical genres.
“I am excited to kick off our year-long 20th Anniversary celebration with an exhibition that will mean so much to our community here in Haywood Country,” says Sonia Outlaw-Clark, Executive Director of the West Tennessee Delta Heritage Center. “Some of the most influential African Americans that would impact music and culture around the globe resided here in Haywood Country. From an international, record-setting icon Tina Turner to the blues pioneer Sleepy John Estes and many others, we’ve been preserving and exhibiting the African American heritage for 20 years and are honored that we are the first museum to host the ‘I Have a Voice’ exhibition.”
The Volunteer State has been the birthplace of some of the most influential music in the world, from the Beale Street blues clubs in Memphis, to the R&B scene on Nashville’s Jefferson Street and Knoxville’s Gem Theatre. The history of African American music follows the hardship of slavery in America. American slaves adapted their African ancestors’ music to hand clapping, singing, the fiddle and the African–derived banjo. Expressing their sorrows from bondage, and joy for their ultimate deliverance, these enslaved persons found an original, musical voice sung in their spirituals and folk music. This voice has left a monumental cultural stamp on American music, including blues, ragtime, jazz, gospel, rhythm and blues, rock and roll, and soul music. In turn, this music has influenced and enriched music around the world.
The exhibit introduces viewers to many famous Tennessee music legends — Bessie Smith, who was nicknamed the “Empress of the Blues;” B.B. King, often referred to as the “King of the Blues;” Grand Ole Opry star DeFord Bailey; and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee Tina Turner. The exhibit gives visitors a chance to hear the voices of the many Tennessee African American men and women who made their mark on American music from ragtime to Motown. Visitors can view YouTube videos of various performers and musicians featured in the exhibition on their smart phones or tablets through the use of QR-coded links. Educators who are interested in teaching about Tennessee’s African American musical heritage will be provided with curriculum-based educational lesson activities.
I Have a Voice: Tennessee’s African American Musical Heritage will be on view throughout Black History Month and close on March 3, 2018.