The Soul of Music: Rhiannon Giddens excavates the past

Episode Summary

Title: The Soul of Music - Rhiannon Giddens excavates the past Rhiannon Giddens is a Grammy-winning singer, songwriter, and banjo player. She researches the history of the banjo and how it originated from gourd instruments brought by enslaved Africans to the Americas. The banjo was considered a "black instrument" until the 1800s when white musicians like Joel Sweeney started playing it. Later, it became associated with white Appalachian music and the contribution of black musicians was erased. Rhiannon excavates forgotten history and gives voice to enslaved people by writing songs using slave narratives, advertisements, and other historical documents. Her music explores complex themes like the trauma of slavery and the erasure of black history. She collaborated with cellist Yo-Yo Ma on the song "Build a House" which tells the history of slavery in America through metaphor. It became a children's book with powerful illustrations. Rhiannon wrote the opera "Omar" about an enslaved West African scholar, imagining his inner emotional world. As an artist she finds joy and beauty despite the painful history. Her music is like cultural archaeology, piecing together fragments to reveal forgotten stories.

Episode Show Notes

This episode is part one of The Soul of Music—Overheard’s four-part series focusing on music, exploration, and Black history. Our guest this week is two-time Grammy award winner Rhiannon Giddens, a singer, songwriter, and banjo and fiddle player. A self-described “armchair historian,” Rhiannon chats with Nat Geo Explorer and spoken-word poet Alyea Pierce about the origins of the banjo, her new opera Omar, and how she finds inspiration through history.  For more information on this episode, visit natgeo.com/overheard. Want more? Learn more about Rhiannon and her music, opera, and children’s book at her website, rhiannongiddens.com. And you can follow her on Twitter @RhiannonGiddens.  You can follow National Geographic Explorer Alyea Pierce at her instagram @alyeaspierce.  Also explore:  Listen to the National Geographic podcast Into the Depths to hear more of Alyea’s poetry and follow Explorer Tara Roberts on a journey to document sunken slave ships in the Atlantic.  Learn about how music is used to heal the sick in Appalachia in this Nat Geo article. If you like what you hear and want to support more content like this, please consider a National Geographic subscription. Go to natgeo.com/exploremore to subscribe today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Episode Transcript

SPEAKER_00: Hey there, I'm Kyrie Douglas. I'm a producer here at Overheard, and today we've got something special for you. Part one of our four-part series focusing on music, exploration, and Black history. It's called The Soul of Music. And National Geographic Explorers will be sitting down with some of our favorite musicians to discuss how history and the natural world inspires their art and adventures. Today, singer and songwriter Rhiannon Giddens chats with explorer Aaliyah Pierce. Rhiannon is a co-founder of the old-time string band, The Carolina Chocolate Drops. She's a two-time Grammy Award winner. In 2022, she won Best Folk Album for They're Calling Me Home. And she's also a banjo and fiddle player. SPEAKER_03: My name is Rhiannon Giddens and I am a musician and kind of a performing historian, sort of armchair historian, I suppose. Nowadays, Rhiannon lives in Ireland, but she SPEAKER_00: was born and raised in North Carolina. And growing up, she was surrounded by the sounds of bluegrass, folk, and country music. Genres that all prominently feature the banjo and their sound. It sounds like this, that backing track you're hearing right now, and it sort of looks like a guitar but with a circular, drum-like body. For a host of reasons that we'll get into, these genres, and subsequently the banjo, have stereotypically been considered white people music. Rhiannon is biracial. Her dad is white and her mom is black, so she says she sometimes felt like an outsider in folk and bluegrass music. But when she started researching the history of the banjo, she found herself more firmly connected with her roots. Being a musician from North Carolina that was investigating the music of North SPEAKER_03: Carolina gave me a place as a mixed person that I hadn't really felt like I had. SPEAKER_00: See, the banjo has a complicated history. It's descended from gourd-based instruments that were brought over to the Americas by enslaved Africans. SPEAKER_03: It's created in the Caribbean and it travels up to the United States with enslaved people and becomes a staple of life. This week, Rhiannon sits down with National SPEAKER_00: Geographic explorer and spoken word poet Aaliyah Pierce to discuss the origins of the banjo and how history inspires Rhiannon's music. Aaliyah was a contributor to the award-winning National Geographic podcast, Into the Depths, which followed explorer Tara Roberts and other black scuba divers across the world as they searched for buried shipwrecks from the transatlantic slave trade. When they sat down to talk, Aaliyah told Rhiannon she had written a poem inspired by her music and the banjo. I'm a poet. Music is a big key influence for SPEAKER_04: my writing. And so I actually wrote a piece inspired by the banjo. And I dedicate this poem to the work that you do because I was actually listening to a lot of your music as I was writing this. So this is called They're Calling Me Home. They're calling me home to sawmill tune history, conjure ancestral spirits to strum soul sounds to help folks remember this body of music, how our bodies are music, how our hearts cultivated the rich soil of country, how the centuries of blues were also a blessing, how the picking of the five strings reaches hallelujah high vibrations. They're calling me home to bridge the truth and transform the tone of what black revolution and global connection means to banjo. SPEAKER_03: Oh, love it. So good. Oh my God. That's so good. So I hope I got some of that language right. SPEAKER_03: Hallelujah. SPEAKER_00: This is Overheard at National Geographic, a show where we eavesdrop on the wild conversations we have here at Nat Geo and follow them to the edges of our big, weird, beautiful world. More with Rhiannon and Aliyah after the break. But first, fuel your curiosity with a free one month trial subscription to Nat Geo Digital. You'll have unlimited access on any device, anywhere, ad free with our app that lets you download stories to read offline. Explore every page ever published with a century of digital archives at your fingertips. Check it all out for free at Nat Geo dot com slash explore more. Wait, are you gaming on a Chromebook? Yeah, it's got a high res 120 hertz display plus this killer RGB keyboard and I can access thousands of games anytime, anywhere. Stop SPEAKER_04: playing. What? Get out of here. Huh? Yeah, I want you to stop playing and get out of SPEAKER_00: here so I can game on that Chromebook. Got it. Discover the ultimate cloud gaming machine, SPEAKER_00: a new kind of Chromebook. SPEAKER_05: All right, Rhiannon, I want to kind of get into the conversation of the banjo a bit. SPEAKER_04: The banjo has such an interesting history. Could you tell me just a little bit about that? SPEAKER_03: So the banjo's true origins are, you know, recently becoming more and more sort of center stage when you talk about the history of American music. And that's great because for a very long time, there was this assumption that the banjo was about the widest instrument that you could possibly imagine, you know, that it was invented in the hauler and, and played by hillbillies, you know, which in and of itself is a stereotype. And in actuality, it is actually an instrument created by the African diaspora. It's important to say that it's not African. It is actually an instrument, the African diaspora, if you want to say African American in terms of the broadness of South America, all the way up to North America and the Caribbean in between. But it is created by people from Africa in the New World. And so it really is an American, a Caribbean, an Afro Caribbean, you know, diasporic African diasporic instrument. And there are ancestors to the banjo that exists all over Africa, particularly West Africa. And there's not one that can say it is the one ancestor. It's like there's loads of instruments and they're all in the DNA of all the different banjos that were sort of, you know, invented in the Caribbean and then like, what, 1500s, 1600s. And so it was known as a black instrument solely for a long time. And it wasn't until the 1800s, the early 1800s that it really starts to cross over in a way that we know about. Like obviously there's a million different interactions of people over hundreds of years. And there could be a white person that picked up a banjo at some point that we never knew in, you know, in 1701. We don't know. But we do know in the early 1800s, that's when it really starts to migrate. And Joel Sweeney is the first white guy that we know of to really be a banjo player, a white banjo player. But before this, it was really mostly known as a black instrument. SPEAKER_04: Where did this associating with whiteness come in? Because as a black artist, as a black woman artist, I feel like this disservice, like I haven't known the truth. So where did this associating with whiteness happen? SPEAKER_03: Yeah, I mean, this is the same feeling I had when I found out I was like, what? And then immediately on the heels of that, it was like, Oh, what else don't I know? What else haven't they told me, you know, and it really kind of opened my eyes to the idea of history as a reflection of the time that it's written in. And not necessarily a reflection of what actually happened. It's a long history, like the idea of history and who's writing it and SPEAKER_03: what angle are they writing it from. And so the history of the banjo really becomes part of this mythical white cultural identity that was really heavily rooted in Anglo Anglo-Saxon ballads, and also some Celtic stuff too. I mean, that becomes part of the picture particularly later. But in the beginning, it was really this idea of pushing back against what was seen as like the jungle music of like blues and jazz. People like Cecil Sharp come over, who's like an ethnomusicologist from England to collect these ballads that they had found still surviving in the mountains. And these ballads, you know, were versions of ballads that had been sung in England hundreds of years before. So they're all like freaking out like, Oh my gosh, this is, this culture has been unadulterated, isolated in the mountains for hundreds. Yeah, right. You know, there's no isolation, right? There's no isolation. There are black people living in the Appalachian Mountains, right? Particularly up until the Great Migration. There's just all this mixing going on. But the narrative is that it's this like pure white identity and the banjo becomes part of that. The story of it being in black hands is basically erased. Black string bands are not recorded during the beginning of the recording industry. There was also this concerted effort in the early folk festivals and like fiddle conventions. This is considering that like, black people were playing fiddle and banjo for a long time and were really, really good at it. And we're well known to be like some of the best musicians in the area, but they weren't allowed to enter. They weren't, they weren't highlighted in these festivals. And so when you go back to the beginning of the folk festival movement, where are the black people? You know, they weren't invited. So I want to jump to kind of the mechanics of the banjo for a second. I understand that SPEAKER_04: a five string banjo has what's called like a drone string. What is a drone string? If you could kind of tell us. So the idea of a drone and it's in lots of different kinds SPEAKER_03: of music systems all over the world, like right now. This idea that if you sing a melody and there's a drone that's going on, it stays in the same key and it's a real linear melody. It's not necessarily thinking of stacking notes and creating chords. It's like there's this underlying. You can just hear that, right? So like just in general, that's what a drone SPEAKER_03: is. And so the banjo has this short string that you cannot fret. So when you make a note on a string instrument, you hold your finger down on it and it changes the pitch, right? And that's how you make all the different sounds. But a drone string on the banjo doesn't, you can't do that. It just stays the same note. So if you want to change it, you actually have to tune it, which means you have to stop playing to do that. So you can't do that in the middle of a song. So that means you really, you have to play in one key, which is very, very much as you want in a lot of different, particularly like Middle Eastern music, African music. European music is very much based on chords, you know, where you stack two or three, four notes and then you move the motion is very top to bottom rather than left to right. And so the banjo doesn't really fit in that chordal system. It's very much connected to that other, those other styles in Middle East and West Africa, because it's like it itself is like connected to this vast line of instruments to go all the way back to China, you know, through the Middle East, through Africa, through, you know. The other thing that the fifth string does is that it creates syncopation. Because you have five strings, right? So to, especially in the very old style, which is called stroke styles, clawhammer, freling or whatever, it goes all the way back to like some playing styles in West Africa. You know, it's very much the thumb is on the fifth string and you're striking single strings with your index finger and it just creates syncopation. Like you can't, it's very hard to not play with some kind of syncopation with that fifth string. So it is really inherent in what the banjo is and what the banjo has contributed to American music. SPEAKER_04: So I have a song of yours that I want to play a clip from and then ask you about. The song is called At The Purchaser's Option. I've got a babe, but shall I keep him? SPEAKER_01: Twill come the day when I'll be weeping. SPEAKER_02: But how can I love him in he lets? This little babe upon my breast. SPEAKER_04: So break this song down for me. What is it about? SPEAKER_03: It's part of a larger collection of pieces written from the world of slavery. I wrote songs from slave narratives and this one in particular was from the ephemera that surrounds slavery, the everyday evil. The quotidian nature of a system that was completely hand in glove with how we made money. SPEAKER_01: You can take my body, you can take my bones, you can take my blood but not my soul. You can take my body, you can take my bones, you can take my blood but not my soul. SPEAKER_03: And so I was looking through advertisements for people. They were, you know, you put a ad in the paper for somebody to sell them. And this is the thing that I always want to try to impress upon people is that they don't understand, because I didn't understand, that people were cash. Black people were cash. You know, it's like you can have affection SPEAKER_03: for that car and you can love that car, but if you need to pay a bill you're going to sell that car. And that's what happened with people. It was like, oh Jill, love you, but gotta go. You know, and it's complicated and it's not to say that people were complete automatons, but like that was deeply rooted in the culture. And that's what you see in the signs that say, you know, slave auction or this, you know, runaway ads or this kind of thing. Ads for dogs that are really good at catching slaves. This is the stuff that I started getting into and I found this one ad about this young woman who was for sale. She's 22 years old and it was the end of the ad. It said she has with her a nine month old baby who is at the purchasers option. It's like, what do you do with that? What do you do with that? It's like, it's so epically horrific, you know, that it just, just the very banal nature of those words, you know what I mean? At the purchasers option. So I wrote a song just to do something with that. I wrote a song about her just trying to think of the world that she lives in. How did she, how did she survive? You know, how did she get up? How do you open your eyes and decide to get up and feed your nine month old knowing that tomorrow they will be gone? How do you do it? This song came out of me exploring that and trying to hold her up and to think about her. I don't know her name. I'll never know her name, but I know that it took an amazing act of courage to face the day every day. And so just tried to crawl into that, into that space. SPEAKER_04: I think that's the difficult thing about black history in itself is that there are so many names that are lost. So many names that have been forgotten, intentionally erased. Like just the, even the idea of just names. So you'll never know that name. And so I'm wondering, how did you even find that ad? SPEAKER_03: On the, on the web? You know, I do a lot of my research on the computer because so many things are digitized now. It's a really amazing era for as, as horrific as social media is and these other things. It also has allowed people like me to do the kind of research that previously would have been, you have to be at a university with a degree and the time to go sit through the stacks, you know, whereas I can visit, I can visit universities virtually and, and see what they have online. And so there's a lot of these advertisements. There's a lot of, there's like a whole collection of runaway slave ads, Freedom on the Move, which is been, they've been taken and made poem, made into poems and lyrics. And now that's going to be a concert of music. You know, people are creating things from, from this and it's important because we have so little, you know, when you look at African American history, we have so little and so every little bit we have is big. And we're finding these things like these, like these runaway ads, it's like there's an incredible amount of detail in these ads. You find, that's how we found that a load of people played the fiddle and the banjo that ran away because they had a way to make money. It was one of the few ways that wasn't like toting and fetching that you could actually make a living. And so it's important to not discard these things and to look at them through the lens of we know that these are white people putting this stuff in the paper for reasons that are not great, but we need to take it and turn it around and go, this is information. And SPEAKER_03: the idea of the names, you know, I've tried to address that where I can. So the, my song that's from a slave narrative from the book called The Slave's War by Andrew Ward, I wrote a song called Julie and in that it's a conversation between a black woman and the woman who thinks that she owns her. And so Julie has a name and the mistress does not. And that was important for me and I do it wherever I can. I even tried it in my opera Omar. I tried to give all the white people like non-names and they said, you can't do that because some of these people are historical and they actually existed. I was like, dang it. You know, so everybody got a name, you got a name and you got a name and you get a name. But you know, I tried, I tried to think about that where I, where I can because it's just such a massive, such a massive thing. SPEAKER_04: I have another song that I want to play a clip from. This song is called Build a House. SPEAKER_02: Again, break this song down for me. What is it about? SPEAKER_03: This song is one that I wrote in, during the lockdown or during the kind of height of the pandemic and the height of the protests after George Floyd's murder. And I was here in Ireland, kind of feeling very stuck. You know, I couldn't get home. I mean, this is a home, but it's obviously not my birth home. And I was just feeling the strife that was happening in the United States and wanting to be, I don't know, of use. I found a place to build my house, build my house, build my house. I found a place, build my house SPEAKER_02: since I couldn't go back home. You said I couldn't build a house, build a house, build a house. SPEAKER_02: You said I couldn't build a house, so you burnt it down. SPEAKER_03: Just watching all this stuff in the commentary and trying to explain to my children why I was crying. And I just like, I got really mad. I was like, what do you all want? You brought us here, you know, to build this sh**. Pardon my French. You brought us here to build this stuff. And now you're mad that we're still here, you know, and that became the first line. You brought me here to build your house. And it's in very, very simple, valid language. But I this this kind of 300, 400 year history in three minutes. And the big point of it was to just. I don't know, do something with all this emotion again, you know, and all the history of the stuff that I've read. And, you know, it's kind of like a 15 years of frustration in one song. And Yo Yo Ma reached out to me, the cellist reached out to me. It was really close to Juneteenth and said, you want to do something for Juneteenth? And I said, I just wrote the song. And he said, sounds great. Let's do it. And we did it and we put it out there and, you know, it made me feel a little bit better. I don't know. You know, and it's now a children's book. Which is really exciting. SPEAKER_03: And with the beautiful artwork by Monica Mackay, fabulous artist, and I've done some readings and stuff, and it's really interesting how kids get it, you know, because you might think this is a song about slavery, like, how do you do that? And it's like people get it. Kids get it. They see what's happening. That's not fair. I'm like, yes, that's exactly right. That's not fair. And like, that's not right. And that's not cool. And so that's been really an amazing example to me of how things can live in different areas. And like so many ballads and history songs and whatnot are like teaching songs. They're like a moral or something that you can remember because it's set to music and it rhymes and it's really easy to remember. And to take a song and and to break it down and put images with it. And then you go, yeah, that's what these songs are for. It's like creating a new ballad, creating new, new historical songs or something, you know. It ends with I shall not be moved. I will not be moved, which I learned from a mentor of mine. The guy who really is the reason why I'm sitting or talking to you, Joe Thompson, who is one of the old one of the last black fiddlers of the old tradition. You know, he was 86 when I met him and he is the elder of what I do. He's dead now. But I got a good handful of years with him and he taught he taught us a song. I shall not be moved, which is a very common song that's been used for the civil rights movement. But I always think of him. He just like had lived his life, played his fiddle. Was in his community. And, you know, this doesn't people, you know, so when I sing that and I get to that last part, I think of him, I was like he created a life. SPEAKER_03: He lived a good life and he thrived in in in a soil that, you know, that he was trying he was planted into his, you know, his his line. And why? Why should we go anywhere? You know, absolutely. The roots go deep. It's been it's been a few hundred years. The roots are deep. SPEAKER_03: So we're not ripping them up now. SPEAKER_04: You recently wrote and composed the opera Omar about a West African man who was brought to America as a slave. Tell me a little bit about Omar. What inspired you to write an opera about him? I was commissioned to write Omar by the folks at the Spoleto Festival in Charleston. I'd never heard of him. SPEAKER_03: I was a North Carolinian born and raised. Never heard of Omar. Like one like legit. One of our most famous enslaved people. And I never heard of him. I was just livid. And these folks asked me to write an opera about Omar Ibn Said. And I was like, go ahead. I, you know, Omar was a Quranic scholar. I was 37 when he was sold. And he has to start completely over in this new world that's full of violence. And nobody speaks his language. Nobody worships the way that he worships the God that he worships. And, you know, again, how do you how do you get through that? How do you claim a life within that? And how did he stay true to his religion? You know, and write his autobiography in Arabic 20 years after he landed. I felt a lot of responsibility. I still do very, very much wanting to figure out what is my lens here? What is my journey as a I'm not Muslim, I'm not West African, I'm not a man. I don't study the Quran. There's so many things that I'm not. And I kept having to go back to I have to tell the story that I can tell. With respect and knowledge, as much knowledge as I can gain and to also really kind of let the spirit guide me. Yeah, I think that's the delicious thing about being an artist is that you can imagine with a cultural piece, right? SPEAKER_04: I think when you're a part of in some aspects, a part of the African diaspora, it allows us to imagine with this cultural foundation. It's joyous work. It's heavy work. It's again, we're going to keep using this word complex. I think it's complex work. But I think it's beautiful that we're in a time where we're seeing black people in the US actually being involved in their own excavation. Yes. Yes. This is it. It's like, it's cultural archaeology. That's what we're doing. SPEAKER_03: And it is just like you've got a field with like some circles in it. And that's how you know it was a castle. Right. And you have to dig and you find these shards. And from the shard, you extrapolate a frickin' vase. Right. Which is what they do because of the curvature of the thing and this and whatnot and what they know what was in the soil. And then they find this like blue piece of glass that obviously had to come from like three thousand miles away. And, you know, it tells you a lot about what was happening. It's the exact same thing with this music, except for we have to find the negative space around because, of course, music is here and gone. So it's like finding the imprint that the music left, the imprint that these lives left in these sort of bits and pieces. And it is great to see us in there. And it's the only way forward. The only way forward is that we all have to be at the table. It's like it's not like just black people should do this now. It's like all of us should do this. And that there's a team effort because it is all of our legacy, you know, and it's not just black and white. It's also red. You know, talking about native people, talking about other immigrant populations, talking to them. You know, it's just like, you know, the music that was made by Armenian refugees in California and and and Jewish folks in New York and and Chinese people in Texas or whatever. I mean, it's like it's super it's super beautiful when it comes to that kind of thing. Obviously, the reason why people left isn't beautiful ever. But but, you know, we we as musicians, as artists, as writers, we find the joy. SPEAKER_03: And in the despair, and that's how that's how we keep going. Do you see musicians as being translators in some sense, either in terms of translating history or translating emotion? Are they translators? SPEAKER_03: I think artists create a shortcut. I think they create an emotional bridge for the listener into an emotion, a thought, a feeling. And I think that it's an important job. But I I am very sad for the fact that we need we need that, because what it means is that people don't create those emotional bridges for themselves because we have de-arted everyday life. We've separated, we've commodified it. The amount of people that have come to singing workshops that I've given who were like, yeah, I was told I couldn't sing. I was told I couldn't play. I shouldn't make music because I wasn't very good at it. Leave it to the professionals. And that stuff like kills my heart. It kills my heart because. We don't you don't need to go to the movies and the concerts and to watch TV all the time if you're in the act of making art in your own life more. You know, it's not to say that there are some people who are really good at making art. And yes, pay them to do something that you are never going to be able to do. And you go enjoy that. And that's awesome. But like the everyday magic of singing a song or playing a tune or writing a poem or, you know, writing a story just to do it, not to make money at it, but just to do it. That's what we're missing, I feel. And I think that we need more of that in, you know, put the music back in the schools, turn the TV off and go learn how to play a really simple tune really crappily on the piano. It doesn't have to be awesome, but it just needs to bring people joy. You know, so anyway, I'm a real proponent of like make us less necessary. SPEAKER_03: You know, that's a mic drop moment there. SPEAKER_00: And her children's book, Build a House, at her website, RhiannonGiddens.com. That's spelled R-H-I-A-N-N-O-N-G-I-D-D-E-N-S. And you can follow her on Twitter at RhiannonGiddens. You can follow National Geographic Explorer Aliyah Pierce at her Instagram at Aliyah S. Pierce. That's spelled A-L-Y-E-A-S-P-I-E-R-C-E. That's all in your show notes right there in your podcast app. SPEAKER_00: This week's overheard episode is produced by me, Kyrie Douglas. Our senior producers are Brian Gutierrez and Jacob Pinter. Our senior editor is Eli Chin. Our manager of audio is Carla Wills, who edited this episode. Our executive producer of audio is Devar Ardalan. Our photo editor is Julie Hao. Ted Wood's sound is on this episode and Hans Dale Su composed our theme music. The Soul of Music series is produced in collaboration with National Geographic Music. Special thanks to Hannah Grace Van Cleave, Jennifer Stilson, and Brittany Greer. This podcast is a production of National Geographic Partners. The National Geographic Society, committed to illuminating and protecting the wonders of our world, fund the work of National Geographic Explorer Aliyah Pierce. Michael Tribble is the vice president of integrated storytelling. Nathan Lump is National Geographic's editor-in-chief. Thanks for listening and see you next time. SPEAKER_05: