Current:Home > MarketsBernice Johnson Reagon, whose powerful voice helped propel the Civil Rights Movement, has died -AssetLink
Bernice Johnson Reagon, whose powerful voice helped propel the Civil Rights Movement, has died
View
Date:2025-04-14 10:45:54
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Bernice Johnson Reagon, a musician and scholar who used her rich, powerful contralto voice in the service of the American Civil Rights Movement and human rights struggles around the world, died on July 16, according to her daughter’s social media post. She was 81.
Reagon was probably best known as the founder of the internationally renowned African American female a cappella group Sweet Honey in the Rock, which she led from 1973 until her retirement in 2004. The Grammy-nominated group’s mission has been to educate and empower as well as entertain. They perform songs from a wide range of genres that include spirituals, children’s songs, blues and jazz. Some of their original compositions honor American civil rights leaders and international freedom movements like the struggle against apartheid in South Africa.
“She was incredible,” said Tammy Kernodle, a distinguished professor of music at Miami University who specializes in African American music. She described Reagon as someone “whose divine energy and intellect and talent all intersect in such a way to initiate change in the atmosphere.”
Reagon’s musical activism began in the early 1960s when she served as a field secretary for the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee and became an original member of its Freedom Singers, according to an obituary posted on social media by her daughter, musican Toshi Reagon. The group reunited and was joined by Toshi Reagon to perform for then-President Barack Obama in 2010 as part of a White House performance series that was also broadcast nationwide on public television.
Born in Dougherty County outside of Albany, Georgia, in 1942, Reagon attended music workshops in the early 1960s at Tennessee’s Highlander Folk School, a training ground for activists. At an anniversary gathering in 2007, Reagon explained how the school helped her see her musical heritage as something special.
“From the time I was born, we were always singing,” Reagon said. “When you’re inside a culture and, quote, ‘doing what comes naturally to you,’ you don’t pay attention to it. ... I think my work as a cultural scholar, singer and composer would be completely different if I had not had someone draw my attention to the people who use songs to stay alive, or to keep themselves together, or to lift up the energy in a movement.”
While a student at Albany State College, Reagon was jailed for attending a civil rights demonstration and expelled. She later graduated from Spellman College. She formed Sweet Honey in the Rock while a graduate student of history at Howard University and vocal director of the D.C. Black Repertory Company.
Reagon recorded her first solo album, “Folk Songs: The South,” with Folkways Records in 1965. In 1966 she became a founding member of the Atlanta-based Harambee Singers.
Reagon began working with the Smithsonian Institution in 1969, when she was invited to develop and curate a 1970 festival program, Black Music Through the Languages of the New World, according to the Smithsonian. She went on to curate the African Diaspora Program and to found and direct the Program in Black American Culture at the National Museum of American History, where she was later a curator emeritus. She produced and performed on numerous Smithsonian Folkways Recordings.
For a decade, beginning in 1993, Reagon served as distinguished professor in history at American University in Washington, later becoming a professor emerita.
We assume that music was always a part of civil rights activism, Kernodle said, but it was people like Reagon who made music “part of the strategy of nonviolent resistance. ...They took those songs, they took those practices from inside the church to the streets and the jail cells. And they universalized those songs.”
“What she also did that was very important was that she historicized how that music functioned in the civil rights movement,” Kernodle added. “Her dissertation was one of the first real studies of civil rights music.”
Reagon received two George F. Peabody Awards, including for her work as principal scholar, conceptual producer and host of the Smithsonian Institution and National Public Radio series “Wade in the Water: African American Sacred Music Traditions.”
She was also the recipient of the Charles E. Frankel Prize, Presidential Medal, for outstanding contributions to public understanding of the humanities, a MacArthur Fellows Program award, and the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change Trumpet of Conscience Award.
veryGood! (71134)
Related
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- Sorry, Chet Holmgren. Victor Wembanyama will be NBA Rookie of the Year, and it’s not close
- University of Washington football player arrested, charged with raping 2 women
- Tax tips for college students and their parents
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- Yet another MLB uniform issue: Tigers' Riley Greene rips pants open sliding into home
- Trump says Arizona’s abortion ban goes ‘too far’ and defends the overturning of Roe v. Wade
- New Jersey Transit approves a 15% fare hike, the first increase in nearly a decade
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Trump’s lawyers try for a third day to get NY appeals court to delay hush-money trial
Ranking
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Aaron Taylor-Johnson's Wife Sam Taylor-Johnson Addresses 23-Year Age Gap
- Third channel to open at Baltimore port as recovery from bridge collapse continues
- NFL Star Tevin Coleman's Daughter, 6, Placed on Ventilator Amid Sickle Cell Journey
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Pennsylvania makes a push to attract and approve carbon capture wells
- Opponents of smoking in casinos try to enlist shareholders of gambling companies in non-smoking push
- New 'Joker' movie trailer shows Joaquin Phoenix's return for 'Folie à Deux' sequel
Recommendation
Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
South Carolina-Iowa championship game draws in nearly 19 million viewers, breaking rating records
Kansas deputy fatally shoots woman holding a knife and scissors
Catholic Church blasts gender-affirming surgery and maternal surrogacy as affronts to human dignity
'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
Brittany Snow's directorial debut shows us to let go of our 'Parachute'
Democrats pounce on Arizona abortion ruling and say it could help them in November’s election
Jackson Holliday will be first Oriole to wear No. 7 since 1988; Ripken family responds