• Music
    • Artists
    • Albums
    • Archives
  • Events
  • Sooriya Blog
  • Contact Us
  • About Us

priya

Cowboy Ranch

Plantation Songs

August 17, 2017 by admin
Black American slave songs, Plantation Songs, Priya, Priya Peiris

‘Plantation songs’ as referred in common parlance are Black American slave songs that emerged during the 18th and 19th centuries during the times when predominantly cotton, corn along with, sugar cane, tobacco and potato plantation in America prospered and thrived.

History  

Cotton was the predominant cash crop in America until the end of the 19th century. The south west region extending from Texas to Virginia encompassing Arkansas, Louisiana, Georgia, North and South Carolina, Mississippi and Florida was regarded as the plantation belt or the ‘cotton belt’. As at date the vast cotton lands have diminished, though still in existence.

The land owners of such a plantation were rich white – skinned aristocrat masters known as their ‘masa’ – meaning ‘master’ to the work force that comprised of – slaves imported from west Africa due to want of cheap and manageable labor, so that the ‘masses’ could always have a domineering iron hand over them.

The American masters engineered the ‘slave trade’ for this purpose and many thousands of hapless slaves were made to work in these plantations for a meager earning under extreme conditions. Very often the masters punished the slaves, including women by tying them to trees and whipping them mercilessly, even to the point of death.

Most of these Christian slaves brought with them their cultural and native lifestyles which included music, church singing, drums, dancing etc.

As time passed by in the plantations, many chants and songs evolved.  These were all work related, mainly to keep their flagging spirits high, to lessen the agony and monotony of work.  Songs of their lamentations – longing for freedom from slavery were born as a result.  They asked for spiritual deliverance in prayer and chanting – thus giving birth to many   gospel songs and songs for freedom. Some of them are called Negro spirituals. But most of them with a plantation related background came to be referred to as plantation songs.

Plantation Songs  

Many are the songs that emerged during these times.  What we mostly know now, are songs composed during that period portraying the plantations and signifying the lives of the slaves. Perhaps the best known composer of such songs was Steven Collins Foster (1826 to 1864) responsible for evergreen plantation hits such as Old Folks at Home (also known as Swanne River), Carry Me Back to Old Virginny, Massa’s in the Cold, Cold Ground,  Old Black Joe,  Beautiful Dreamer, My Old Kentucky Home and many more. He also composed other black based songs such as Campton Ladies Sing this Song’, Oh Susanna, etc.

Due to the passage of time, these songs became traditionally American folk music. Apart from being an integral part of American culture, they became international all-time hits.  In Sri Lanka, these songs are venerated by old favorite lovers and they are a virtual ‘must’ at all vintage singsong get together and sing-along gatherings.

Note: Since the abolishing of the slave trade in the 1860s, the latter day plantation workers got more freedom with some of them eventually becoming stakeholders in these lands.

***********************

On a personal note, I am indebted to my parents for nurturing me music wise in a background of such songs rich in artistic value and meaning. I know for certain (though never an academic wizard!) that these songs rich with culture and meaning has molded me and given inspiration to the little bit of music I had done and in my day to day life.

 

Priya Peiris

American Plantation House

Cowboys and Cowboy Songs

August 17, 2017 by admin
American Plantation and Cowboy Songs, Cowboy Songs, Cowboys, Plantation Songs, Priya, Priya Peiris

American Plantation and Cowboy Songs

There are many different categories and genres of popular songs coming from the bygone era having endured the test of time as all time favorites. These ever popular songs are referred to by us as ‘vintage songs ‘, ‘standards’, ‘evergreens’, ‘golden oldies’, ‘old favorites’, etc.

In Sri Lanka, the folk cultured in a western environment love these old songs. They could be further classified to different segments – such as cowboy favorites, plantation songs, Dixieland hits, Negro spirituals, calypsos, songs from the British isles, war time hits, barber shop songs, international standards etc. All such songs basically fit into the common idiom of old favorites or golden oldies.

At this moment I am sharing a few facts about two of the above-mentioned categories of songs – namely cowboy songs and plantation songs – two of the popular genres of music and song.

Cowboys and Cowboy Songs

Most of us have heard about cowboys. I recall as a young schoolboy how excited and fascinated we were to hear about cowboys or see them in the movies. Both cowboy songs and movies were very popular then, and its charm has certainly never dwindled but gained immense popularity and acclaim all around the world ever since. In Sri Lanka, these songs are loved, adored and venerated especially by the older folk, who grew up in the midst of these songs and movies.

Cowboys in Reality   

It is important to bear in mind that the cowboy story is two-fold. There are

(a) the real cowboys, and
(b) the fantasy cowboys in the movies.

The real American cowboy is an animal herder who tends cattle in the ranches of the prairie grasslands of North America – traditionally on horseback. The cowboy culture still exists in Texas (known to be the cowboy capital of the world), Kansas, Utah, Iowa, Colorado, Montana, Wyoming, Florida and Louisiana. These cowboys are physically able-bodied adolescents with a knack for smart colorful clothes, girlfriends, and gun culture etc. just as the movies depict!

The golden era of cowboys is considered as the period between 1866 to 1886 which is regarded as the era of the ‘open ranch’ or the ‘cattle drive’ era, when cattle had to be moved in great numbers as one herd to distant railheads to be taken for shipment, by the cowboys on horseback, due to the turbulence of the civil war.

Cowboys in the Movies  

The real life cowboy story is agricultural in nature and of American heritage. Therefore, cowboys that we are talking about now are the film idols who portrayed the life style of the real ones – of course, with fiction and a lot of drama thrown in, to keep the movie goer in suspense…. and how well they succeeded in doing this!

Inspiration for Filmmaking  

The cowboy culture was so appealing and magnetic that it is amazing how it inspired moviemakers to use it to their liking.  Outlaws, bandits, drunkards, ambushes, vendettas, rattle-snakes, cattle, robbery, horse-riding, gun culture, love and women, storms, lonely nights, campfires, music and song of real cowboy life projected and provided an ideal setting and background for successful and exciting movie scripts. As a result, movie legends and many hundreds of cowboy songs were gifted to the world.

Cowboy Singers and Songs

Cowboy movies and songs became one of the most popular genres of music and arts   around the world. They were the rage during the 1950/60 period.

The best-known cowboy film idol and singer (among a galaxy of other legendary stars) was Roy Rogers known as the ‘King of the Cowboys’. He was the idol and hero to every youngster all around the world (more about him at a later date).

Don’t Fence Me In, Home on the Range, Cattle Call, Red River Valley, My Rifle, My Pony and Me, Rose of San Antone, Roll Along Blue Shadows, Happy Trails, Lonely River are a few of the all time cowboy favorites.

Apart from Roy Rogers, perhaps the other best known cowboy film idol and singer was Gene Autry. We have also heard of other cowboy singers such as Jimmy Rogers, Tex Ritter and latterly Hank Snow, Eddie Arnold, and Marty Robbins among others.

In conclusion

Due to the wide coverage and treatment the cowboy culture received in fiction and in films, the cowboy has become the iconic image of the American west.

 

Priya Peiris

Read Plantation Songs

Search blog posts

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content

Recent Posts

  • Punya Heendeniya and the cinema of femininity

    Punya Heendeniya and the cinema of femininity

    August 7, 2022
  • සරත් දසනායක ගී මධු කුසලානය – 02

    සරත් දසනායක ගී මධු කුසලානය – 02

    July 24, 2022
  • Tribute to Wally Bastiansz

    Tribute to Wally Bastiansz

    July 10, 2022
  • පී එල් ඒ සෝමපාල සිනමා ගී ඔවිල්ල

    පී එල් ඒ සෝමපාල සිනමා ගී ඔවිල්ල

    July 3, 2022
  • From Actor to Director

    From Actor to Director

    June 26, 2022

Categories

  • Feature
  • Memories
  • Sinhala
  • Trivia
  • මතකයන්
  • විශේෂාංග

Newsletter

Grab our Monthly Newsletter and stay tuned

Follow Us

 
 
 
 
 

Copyright © 2021 Sooriya Records –  All Rights Reserved