<< FLAC Parchman Prison Prayer - 2025 - Another Mississippi Sunday Morning (24-48)
Parchman Prison Prayer - 2025 - Another Mississippi Sunday Morning (24-48)
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Category Sound
FormatFLAC
SourceCD
BitrateLossless
TypeAlbum
Date 1 day, 4 hours
Size 336.53 MB
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Website https://nzbindex.nl/search/?q=Parchman+Prison+Prayer+-+2025+-+Another+Mississippi+Sunday+Morning+%2824-48%29
 
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Post Description

Gospel

There are labors of love and then there are obsessive passion projects that we can only marvel over. For Another Mississippi Sunday Morning, Tinariwen producer Ian Brennan took on the arduous task of obtaining permission to record a Sunday service at the notorious Parchman Farm prison. Though recorded separately, it is presented in the order of a church service. The result is a revelation, as it does not sound like a field recording at all, and it mixes traditional and contemporary numbers beautifully. For obscure prison system reasons, the artists were not allowed to be identified or photographed, so the listener is forced to focus entirely on the music, which shows off the deep variety of traditional gospel.

Parchman Farm, also known as Mississippi State Penitentiary, is a maximum-security prison in Sunflower County. It's the state's oldest prison and its only maximum-security prison for men. You might know about it from Delta blues great Bukka White's 1940 song "Parchman Farm Blues", he did hard time there in 1937. It was a notorious facility for good reason, inmates were put to work. White sings "If you wanna do good, you better stay off ol' Parchman farm/ We got to work in the mornin', just at dawn of day/ Just at the settin' of the sun, that's when the work is done."

Another Mississippi Sunday Morning begins with a moaned hymn by a handful of voices—a visceral, updated take on the lining hymn tradition that brings to mind Blind Willie Johnson's "Dark Was the Night." It's followed by "Open the Floodgates of Heaven," which recalls Theotis Taylor's beautiful 45s on the Pitch label from the 1970s: piano-driven, falsetto, perfect. If only we could know the names of these artists. The third track, "Grace Will Lead Me On," is a sermonette delivered on top of a simple organ. When we hear a sublime, humorous, contemporary rap tune called "MC Hammer," we know that this effort is a great update to Dr. Harry Oster's sublime 1959 collection for the Louisiana Folklore Society, Angola Prison Spirituals—in scope, and in sound, and in its inherent Civil Rights message.

The music here is uplifting, strong and deep gospel, but Another Mississippi Sunday Morning has to be understood as a political statement, for the simple fact that the United States has a higher incarceration rate than most developed countries. Per the Department of Justice, in 2022, 32% of sentenced state and federal prisoners in the United States were Black–this, despite Black people making up only 13% of the general U.S. population. All profits from the album benefit the Mississippi Department of Corrections Chaplain Services.

Tracks:
01. Parchman Prison Blues
02. Open the Floodgates of Heaven
03. Grace Will Lead Me On
04. MC Hammer
05. Po' Child
06. Take Me to the King
07. Living Testimony
08. I Shall Not Want
09. I Won't Complain
10. God is Keeping Me
11. Talking About My Jesus
12. Stand for You
13. Jesus Will Never Say No

Staat er compleet op, 10% pars mee gepost. Met zeer veel dank aan de originele poster. Laat af en toe eens weten wat je van het album vindt. Altijd leuk, de mening van anderen. Oh ja, MP3 doe ik niet aan.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rnn-0PHgr2E

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