1974


A Song Without Words

"A Song Without Words" is a vocalise by Charles Samuel Brown that is based on the singing of Blind Willie Johnson.

About

Charles Samuel Brown’s vocalise is an evocative short piece for voice and piano. Historian Samuel A. Floyd Jr. writes in The Power of Black Music that “A Song Without Words” has a “telling effect” and that it is “an analogue to the human feeling represented in black folk life.” Brown includes various markings to bring out the blues feel of the song: the tempo is marked as “very slow and improvisatory; not strict” and several notes are meant to be sung in “blue” note approximation. Floyd writes that there is a “moaning delivery” in the setting as well. Brown also includes breath marks for both the vocal and piano line that suggest pauses filled with deep meaning.

 

Bethany Worrell

This profile was created in 2021 as part of The Savvy Singer, an EXCEL Lab course at the University of Michigan, School of Music, Theatre, and Dance and a collaboration with the Hampsong Foundation via the Classic Song Research Initiative.

 

Bibliography:

Floyd, Samuel A. The Power of Black Music: Interpreting its History from Africa to the United States. New York: Oxford University Press, 1995, p. 248-252.

Video

Sheet Music