This Nashville Museum Shows the Vital Role of Black Music in American History

Nashville’s “Music City” nickname has always been broader and more inclusive than the national impression, which largely has been built on two things: the city’s impressive country music legacy and its equal importance as a hub for the general music business, with major emphasis on recording and publishing. But what hasn’t been as well recognized and celebrated, at least by those outside particular communities in Nashville, is its contribution to numerous other idioms and its role in their evolution and development.

Hopefully that’s going to change with the new National Museum of African American Music (NMAAM), now open across the street from the historic Ryman Auditorium in downtown Nashville. The Fifth and Broadway entrance to NMAAM and its proximity to one of the nation’s music shrines couldn’t be more appropriate, and it is notable that the museum isn’t located in one of the sites better known as a Black music hotbed such as Detroit, New York, Los Angeles or even Memphis. Nashville has always been a major player in the African American music world, from the days of the Fisk Jubilee Singers to radio station WLAC breaking R&B, soul and blues hits, and the Jefferson Street nightclub scene providing both valuable training for emerging artists and a vital showcase for established ones.

However, the museum isn’t focused mainly or wholly on Nashville, nor any single city or musical style. The 56,000-square-foot entity aims to spotlight the entirety of the music made in this nation by Blacks, to demonstrate its impact on the totality of American sounds, and to celebrate its history and multiple influences. As CEO/president Henry Hicks repeatedly told media members who attended tours in January, “We’re showing how music through the prism of the Black experience has played a vital role in the growth of this country and how it’s affected every fabric of the culture.”

The sleek, architecturally striking building has the same visual splendor and attractiveness as the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington D.C. Upon entrance, visitors to NMAAM will be immediately drawn to the central corridor that’s billed as the Rivers of Rhythm. It features touch panel interactive exhibits, something that’s a recurring sight throughout the halls housing exhibits and other items designed to showcase 50 genres and sub-genres of Black music.

The corridor leads into The Roots Theater, which is actually where the museum tour formally begins. There’s an introductory film presentation that provides the African background and heritage of the various exhibits. It also offers a cinematic shorthand of what visitors later see presented in more exacting, visually striking manner: the multiple sounds and styles of notable Black music creators and performers. The theater seats approximately 190, and in later weeks and months will serve as the location for various screenings, lectures, music performances, and concerts.

The different genre exhibitions feature everything from more interactive exhibits with timelines to cases containing such items as one of Louis Armstrong’s trumpets, one of B.B. King’s “Lucille” guitars, or costumes worn on key nights by performers like Billie Holiday, Nat “King” Cole, Ella Fitzgerald, Ray Charles, or Aretha Franklin. The museum doesn’t neglect any area of Black music, going from the earliest spirituals to pre-jazz, traditional and modern jazz, blues, R&B/soul, funk, disco, and into contemporary hip-hop and EDM. There’s also a detailed storyboard for every idiom.

The greatest examples of Black music influencing other idioms that are sometimes mistakenly assumed not to have any links with African Americans can be seen in the Crossroads section. It includes an essay that traces how country founding fathers like Jimmie Rodgers and Hank Williams were influenced by the blues, and how the acoustic guitar playing of people like Sister Rosetta Tharpe and the gospel-tinged shouting of Odetta in turn influenced white folkies like Joan Baez and Bob Dylan.

One of Chuck Berry’s biggest hits, “Maybellene,” was a reworked version of Bob Wills’ “Ida Red” with new lyrics, while certainly Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins, Jerry Lee Lewis and other white rock ‘n’ roll and rockabilly types were performing a hybrid of country, blues, and R&B. In both cases, as well as early string band music played by white and Black performers, these artists were hearing and creating a fresh sound based on their love of multiple genres, which the Crossroads section reflects in text and exhibits.

Along the way, depending on your musical preferences, you’re able to become an active part of the experience. There’s a disco dance room that inserts a neon silhouette onto the wall. You can construct your own blues song, improvise within a personal jazz composition, become part of a gospel choir, or craft your own freestyle raps. Any or all of this activity is recorded on a personal RFID wristband and automatically uploaded so that it can be shared online with friends, assuming you really want those efforts heard by others.

But most importantly, the mission, one frequently cited by tour guides and reinforced through the various exhibits, displays, and films, is Black music’s cross-generational links and the way it’s been both a voice of protest and a force for unity across diverse backgrounds. The role music played both in rallying Blacks into the World War II effort and helping inspire and fortify the Civil Rights Movement are just two parts of that underlying joint theme.

Whether it’s “One Nation Under a Groove” or “A Love Supreme,” regardless of spiritual or secular content, Black music has been at the core and forefront of American culture. No single building better exemplifies and reveals that than the National Museum of African American Music. No matter what kind of music you love, or even if you’re tone deaf, this museum will have something of value for you to see, hear and enjoy, as well as valuable lessons to learn and history to remember.


Photo Credit: NMAAM/353 Media Group

BGS Wraps: Carolina Story, “New Year’s Eve”

Artist: Carolina Story
Song: “New Year’s Eve”
Release Date: October 23, 2020

In Their Words: “All of our favorite Christmas songs are those of Nat King Cole, Bing Crosby, Sinatra and Judy Garland lamenting the mistakes, hardships and trials of that given year and looking ahead to a fresh start. ‘New Year’s Eve’ has always been one of our favorite holidays, and I would say that we consider it an extension of Christmas. We came at it from that angle and wanted to write more of a broader ‘holiday’ song that people could grasp onto and find some hope and joy in during these uncertain times. We’ve all been through a lot with a global pandemic, social and racial justice issues and all of the uncertainty being confronted. We imagined the countdown from ten just before the stroke of midnight on this upcoming New Year’s Eve as 2020 fades away and all of the thoughts that will be running wildly through the minds of people all over the world. We wanted to write the song envisioning all of us standing by the fire in one big living room at that moment, choosing to move forward together.” — Ben Roberts, Carolina Story


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BGS Wraps: Colin & Caroline, “It Isn’t Even Christmas Yet”

Artist: Colin & Caroline
Single: “It Isn’t Even Christmas Yet”
Release Date: December 4, 2020

In Their Words: “For the two of us, the holidays have always carried with them fond memories of childhood, and growing up within our families. For me [Caroline], this meant sitting on the steps with my two brothers as Nat King Cole and Sinatra’s holiday songs filled our house, and waiting patiently to run downstairs on Christmas morning. For Colin, it meant reading ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas on Christmas Eve with his family (a tradition that still stands today)… There’s a certain nostalgia that we feel around Christmas time that is reflective of our own relationship as well as our individual upbringings. We recognize that this isn’t the case for everyone surrounding the holidays, and that we’re lucky to feel this way. 2020 has been one of the most uncertain and difficult years our world has seen in a long time, and through our Christmas music, we want to spread a message of hope, and bring our listeners a sense of comfort, joy, and some extra love during perhaps the most important holiday season yet.” — Colin & Caroline


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BGS 5+5: Cricket Blue

Artist name: Cricket Blue (Laura Heaberlin and Taylor Smith)
Hometown: Burlington, Vermont
Latest album: Serotinalia
Personal nicknames (or rejected band names): What a good question! We call each other a lot of nicknames. Taylor: Scarecrow Wilson, Friday (pronounced Fri-dee), Jack (only when Laura is implying we need to hit the road); Laura: Old Toast, Dusty. We each have ancestor Wilsons who have roots in Kentucky, so we used to joke that we were related and that our band name should be “The Blue-Eyed Kentucky Wilsons.”

What other art forms — literature, film, dance, painting, etc — inform your music?

Laura and Taylor: Fiction is definitely the art form that informs us the most. Particularly short stories. A short story seems to be allowed to leave dangling questions the reader is left to digest after it’s over, and that’s ideally what we would like to do with our songs too.

Laura: Two writers that come to mind for me are Alice Munro and George Saunders. Alice Munro creates characters who you discover are at the mercy of forces acting upon their lives, and in the course of the story you feel in your belly how these forces create non-ideal patterns of behavior. You could call them feminist stories. They’re not didactic in any way and they don’t propose any solutions, but they give you a snapshot of why things need to change. That feels like the most powerful thing art can do, to me. And then you have George Saunders who is totally wacky and writes these super flawed characters. As he is defining his characters in a way that is supposed to feel totally different from you, he is also making you love them; you’re pulled in all sorts of directions and you’re surprised by your own radical empathy that he’s created. While I don’t think we pull off that flavor of feeling, we definitely like to expose our characters’ flaws while hoping our listeners will find something emotionally resonant in spite of or because of those flaws.

Taylor: I think my lyric-writing has also been influenced a lot by some poets. Dylan Thomas, for example, has this sort of dreamlike use of adjectives, and nouns-as-adjectives, that manages to create really specific moods and tableaus often without being literally descriptive of much. When I try to paint a mood rather than narrate a literal sequence of events I sometimes think about emulating that. There is also a children’s show that we like called Over the Garden Wall that has a simply amazing soundtrack, and we are inspired by the aesthetic and attitude of the whole thing. When we were writing the arrangements for Serotinalia, we were steeped in that soundtrack quite a bit.

What rituals do you have, either in the studio or before a show?

Laura: I sort of wish we had more rituals to treat those experiences with some sort of reverence, but what we actually have are jokes that will never cease to be funny for us. When we’re warming up one of us will invariably suggest that we “run a couple Leisls” which means we sing that descending melodic run that comes right after “The hills are alive” in The Sound of Music. Sometimes in the studio, we will trade glasses to get into the other person’s spirit. We both have terrible eyesight, and it’s roughly the same amount of bad, so when we need to inhabit the other person’s vocal approach to sing harmonies, that feels symbolically helpful and silly.

One useful thing we do when we’re recording vocals is we do two extra takes, one called the “humble take” and one called the “robust take.” That way if we realize when we’re editing that we have a habit of delivering a line in like a weird indie-folk accent, or we always scoop too much on a certain word, we’ve got one take that’s un-ornamented so we don’t cringe every time we hear the recording. I will admit that the robust take is mostly entirely useless because it’s so over the top, but it’s fun to do.

Since food and music go so well together, what is your dream pairing of a meal and a musician?

Laura: I mean, there are just so many directions that one could go. For intensity of experience, I’m going to go with Harbison cheese and Nat King Cole. There is something about Nat King Cole that makes me nostalgic for a time I’ve never known. His understated, wistful vocal performance a la “You Should Have Told Me,” the soupy string arrangements on some of his love songs, etc. His music is entirely different from anything that we are trying to make, but it’s still an important part of my musical diet, and I admire its emotional impact.

To go with the music, there is this local cheesery called Jasper Hill Farm that makes this indescribable cheese called Harbison; it’s won all sorts of awards so you can sometimes find it outside of Vermont now. I eat mostly vegan these days, but this cheese is still my favorite food. It’s a soft cheese that’s wrapped in spruce bark, and when you pick yours out, make sure you give all the wheels a sniff and pick one that’s a bit squishy in the middle and smells a little funky. When I skip dinner and eat three-quarters of a wheel of Harbison on baguette while listening to Nat King Cole, there is some chemical reaction that takes place. I feel joyful and appreciative. It is the closest thing I have ever experienced to a love potion, truly. I cannot more highly recommend this simple date night idea.

How often do you hide behind a character in a song or use “you” when it’s actually “me”?

Laura: That is an interesting question. The answer is all the time because all of our songs are basically fictional, but it doesn’t quite feel like hiding. I think the core of all of our songs are flaws in ourselves and in the world that we’re looking to investigate, and characters provide the greatest flexibility in terms of how to confront those flaws. Writing character sketch songs allows us to use irony in a way we wouldn’t be able to if we were writing from a confessional perspective. We are able to play with narrative distance to let the audience in on logical contradictions the characters themselves aren’t aware they’re making.

For example, the song “June” starts out with the titular character saying she’s reaching out to her ex-boyfriend but not because she wants to see him, and the last line of the song is her asking him to come and see her. Similarly the narrator of “Psalm” defiantly thinks she’s thriving after her breakup, claiming, “lay my head on some new pillow; I don’t cry” but in the very next line she is crying. While these are patterns we are investigating in our own psyches, we are allowed to poke a little more fun at our characters than confessional songwriters can poke at themselves.

Taylor: We also sometimes talk about truth vs. Truth. For instance, in “Burdens Down” I was writing about friendship, and how to love your friend who has gone through trauma. My personal experience with this had mostly been in friendships with women, but in the revision process, we were getting stuck trying to keep the song from slipping into implying there was romantic baggage in the relationship. Then I had the idea to change the story of the song to explicitly be about a friendship between myself and a guy friend, and it was like, bingo! That automatic implication or reading went away. So while the song now was fictionalized in that detail, it was Truer in that it was better able to express what I was trying to say in an uncluttered way.

Sometimes I use “I” characters that are “me” but in some exaggerated and incomplete way, like a caricature. “Straw Boy,” for example, is narrated by a version of me that exemplifies some personality traits that I really do have, but maybe don’t like very much about myself. So the narrator of the song is somewhere between my true self and a character. I think I write songs like that as a form of self-examination, and as a sort of exorcism of those versions of myself — once I’ve crystallized some way-of-going-wrong into a character, later in my real life I can be like “you’re Straw Boy-ing, stop being the guy from Straw Boy.” Maybe that’s a weird reason to write a song, I don’t know.

Which elements of nature do you spend the most time with and how do those impact your work?

Laura: This feels sort of controversial to say or something, but my favorite version of nature is greenhouses and gardens. It’s like marrying nature and art. I travel to Pittsburgh a lot, and something I really appreciate about that city is that all of the houses, no matter how small their lawns are, have some sort of elaborate tiny Victorian garden. Hedges and ivy and stone benches everywhere. I have a dream of one day having an ornate walled garden filled with climbing roses, and commissioning a fountain of Niobe constantly weeping in the center. It’s a very dramatic dream. Taylor and I both have a love of the botanical, and ornamental flowers and plants are constantly showing up in our songs.

I think we’re also both interested in the liminal space between wildness and domesticity, and how humans march around thinking they’re firmly planted in the domestic sphere, but they’re not so different from plants — decorating themselves when they’re feeling romantic, for instance. A lot of our songs showcase liminal objects/spaces between man and nature: roads, parking lots, domesticated dogs, windows, doorways, produce. And a lot of our characters are trying to reckon with their own internal sense of wildness. I don’t know if my love of gardens caused that interest in liminality exactly, or if they just both stem from the same place. I will say that the intro and outro of the song “Alicia From the Store” was originally in my mind about a bird stuck in a greenhouse, which is why it hangs on that descending minor third in the word “worry” since birds are always going around singing descending minor thirds. Once you start listening for them you can’t stop hearing them.


Photo credit: Monika Rivard

MIXTAPE: Allison Pierce’s Sweet Home Alabama

I love being from Alabama. I love that, no matter where I am in the world, people light up when I say that’s where I’m from. Apart from being a beautiful word, its history is rich and full and deeply tragic. Whether it is the power in the earth itself or what happened upon the earth there, it has given birth to many wonderful musicians, and I am very grateful to have shared the same air with these greats. — Allison Pierce 

Hank Williams — “Move It on Over”

Hank has written so many good songs, it was hard to pick my favorite, but I have really great memories of dancing around the house with my sisters to this one. So “Move It on Over” wins the top spot.

Nat King Cole — “Stardust”

Nat King Cole, born in Montgomery, same birthplace as my mother, is one of my favorite singers of all time. His voice is smooth and effortless and full of quiet emotion, and what feels to me like love. “Stardust” is one of my favorite songs ever written, and Nat’s version falls into the top 10 favorite recordings in history for me. I consider it a great gift to humankind.

The Commodores — “Sail On”

I was a big Lionel Richie fan as a kid, and I was very aware that he was from Tuskegee, a town about 15 minutes from Auburn where I spent a large part of my childhood. Lionel, and other members of the Commodores, were frequent visitors to the health food store where my dad worked, and being within two degrees of separation from them was very exciting to my 7-year-old self. “Sail On” remains heartbreakingly hopeful to me to this day. It just doesn’t get old. Turn that shit up.

Emmylou Harris — “Easy from Now On”

Of all the wonderful artists from Alabama, I am most proud to share the same state and city of birth (Birmingham) with this magical woman. “Easy from Now On” is hands down my favorite and rips my heart open every time I hear it. 

Allison Pierce — “Fool Him”

I hope no one minds that I include some of my own music in this playlist (one more to follow), but I am from Alabama so I consider it fair play (wink wink). 

Drive-By Truckers — “Goddamn Lonely Love”

Well, this is just a great song, y’all. And nobody can deny it.

The Pierces — “It Will Not Be Forgotten”

I was in this band with my sister for 18 years, though we have been singing together for longer than that. I remember the first time we harmonized together in our living room in Birmingham when I was six and Catherine was four. From the very beginning, it became an important part of our lives. Singing with my sister has guided and shaped my life in countless ways and, as challenging as it sometimes was working that closely with a sibling, I am eternally grateful for the experience.

Candi Staton — “Young Hearts Run Free”

What a voice and what a song. Thank you, Miss Staton.

Dinah Washington — “What a Diff’rence a Day Made”

I have enjoyed Dinah’s voice and songs for years, but I’ve gotta be honest, I only just discovered she was from Alabama and I’m very happy to add her to the list!

Jimmy Buffett — “Why Don’t We Get Drunk and Screw”

You know, Jimmy, it’s a really great question. Why don’t we?

Lionel Richie — “All Night Long”

I’m not going to pretend that I did not dance around my room to this as a child using a hairbrush as a mic. 

Catherine Pierce — “You Belong To Me”

Maybe I am biased, but I think that my sister is one of the best songwriters to come out of Alabama. And I know that my mother agrees, so it must be true.