Rebel Sounds: Musical Resistance in Barbados

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  • JasonPalmer
    Full Member
    • Dec 2022
    • 826

    Rebel Sounds: Musical Resistance in Barbados

    Peter Brathwaite discovers the music of both his enslaved and slave-owning ancestors.


    Looks interesting, as just advertised on in tune..proof that adverts work.

    Opera singer Peter Brathwaite is fascinated with his Barbadian heritage and ancestry. It's a complicated story; he's descended from both black enslaved people and their enslaving white plantation owners. In this programme Peter travels to Barbados to discover the music made by enslaved people - the cultural glue that bound them to Africa - and the attempts made by the British enslavers to deny, deride or override this music. From plantation dances to Christian hymns and the discovery of some remarkable pro-enslavement propaganda songs, Peter talks to Barbadian historians and musicians to build up a picture of what the enslaved people's musical lives might have been.

    Visiting significant sites on the island, catching up with relatives, and drawing on his own significant research, Peter also uncovers the story of his great, great, great, great grandparents Addo and Margaret, both of whom began their lives in Barbados enslaved but who were eventually freed by the white Brathwaites who 'owned' them. Their lives offer a window into the layered social hierarchies that developed on the island in the early years of the 19th century, as the rising abolitionist movement in Britain gave birth to a new chapter in Barbados's complicated history.
    Annoyingly listening to and commenting on radio 3...
  • Bryn
    Banned
    • Mar 2007
    • 24688

    #2
    Originally posted by JasonPalmer View Post
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001hg3t

    Looks interesting, as just advertised on in tune..proof that adverts work.

    Opera singer Peter Brathwaite is fascinated with his Barbadian heritage and ancestry. It's a complicated story; he's descended from both black enslaved people and their enslaving white plantation owners. In this programme Peter travels to Barbados to discover the music made by enslaved people - the cultural glue that bound them to Africa - and the attempts made by the British enslavers to deny, deride or override this music. From plantation dances to Christian hymns and the discovery of some remarkable pro-enslavement propaganda songs, Peter talks to Barbadian historians and musicians to build up a picture of what the enslaved people's musical lives might have been.

    Visiting significant sites on the island, catching up with relatives, and drawing on his own significant research, Peter also uncovers the story of his great, great, great, great grandparents Addo and Margaret, both of whom began their lives in Barbados enslaved but who were eventually freed by the white Brathwaites who 'owned' them. Their lives offer a window into the layered social hierarchies that developed on the island in the early years of the 19th century, as the rising abolitionist movement in Britain gave birth to a new chapter in Barbados's complicated history.
    Thanks, I had quite overlooked that. I've copied the link to a friend married to a Bajan.

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    • JasonPalmer
      Full Member
      • Dec 2022
      • 826

      #3
      Oooo it is on now.
      Annoyingly listening to and commenting on radio 3...

      Comment

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