Fig. 3.1. Music on the Move: Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Voyages. Map by Eric Fosler-Lussier. This map depicts the transportation of enslaved people from Africa as listed in The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database in the decades between 1580 and 1860, grouped by regions where they arrived. White boxes and dashed lines indicate departures; black boxes and solid lines indicate arrivals. Voyages for which the major place of sale could not be imputed were removed from this visualization: the number of enslaved people who did not arrive at their destination (many died, but some possibly escaped) is represented by the difference in the number of persons leaving Africa and those arriving at destination ports. The excellent database at slavevoyages.org describes the research behind this map and more detailed visualizations. (See https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.9853855.cmp.31)
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Mississippi Matilda Powell, “Hard Working Woman”
From Chapter 3
Grinding song attributed to "a young Tikar woman"
From Chapter 3
Adamou Meigogue Garoua, solo song
From Chapter 3
Big Joe Williams, Stack O'Dollars
From Chapter 3
United Southern Prayer Band of Baltimore, “Give Me Jesus”
From Chapter 3
Fisk Jubilee Singers, “Deep River"
From Chapter 3
Music on the Move: The Fisk Jubilee Singers, 1871-1880
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Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child
From Chapter 3
Harry Burleigh, arr. “Wade in the Water”
From Chapter 3
Florence Price, "Fantasie nègre" (Black fantasy)
From Chapter 3
Margaret Bonds, "Troubled Water"
From Chapter 3