vEnessa Acham, Daniel Callis, and Embry Howell have generously bought 135 copies of The African American Heritage Hymnal, abbreviated AAHH, for All Souls. I am immensely grateful to them and beyond excited that our new hymnals have arrived!
Embry approached me shortly after becoming senior warden to express her idea to not only sing more hymns from the African American tradition, but to have a second hymnal in our pews for explicit visibility. She proposed getting Lift Every Voice and Sing II, which is an African American hymnal and one of the three official hymnals of The Episcopal Church. I suggested we get AAHH instead, and I had an extended discussion with Embry and Daniel about my reasoning.
I know AAHH well from serving four years as Organist at Witherspoon Presbyterian Church, an African American congregation in Princeton, NJ. Witherspoon uses both AAHH and The Presbyterian Hymnal, and the two complement each other beautifully, as I know AAHH and The Hymnal 1982 will at All Souls. AAHH has 582 music selections, which is more than double the contents of LEVAS. AAHH also has a wealth of choral arrangements and accompaniments from countless composers and sources. There are spirituals, gospel compositions, and songs from Ghana, South Africa, and the Caribbean.
I encourage everyone to read the preface, the introduction, and two essays: The Ecumenical Nature of African American Church Music and African American Music and the Freedom Movement, all of which are found in the front pages of AAHH. The introduction states, “The musical notations follow very closely the style of performance when African Americans are at worship . . . all representative of the baseline music art-form on which all American-born music depends.” The second essay notes that AAHH includes “Music of protest, hope, justice and love, righteous revolution, and non-violent confrontation.” I experienced considerable personal and spiritual growth from my four years using AAHH. I believe AAHH will help us both deepen our faith and strengthen our commitment to social justice together.
Bobby Stubbs, Director of Music