You are not logged in.   login to customize your own personal play list     

“Move On Up A Little Higher” by Mahalia Jackson

United States Federal Trade Commission forbids anyone under 13 from viewing these music videos!
I want another random song.
random song


rewind     play     pause     next song

play     pause     rewind     next song     TIME: starting

1954 recording

     
 

song info

    “Move On Up A Little Higher” by Mahalia Jackson is a gospel song from 1947.

    Song Title: Move On Up A Little Higher
    Artist: Mahalia Jackson
    Genre: gospel
    Composer: Copyright © 1947 Rev. William Herbert Brewster
    Lead Vocals: Mahalia Jackson
    Guitar: 1954 Jack Lasberg
    Piano: Mildred Falls
    Organ: 1947 Herbert James Francis 1954 Ralph Jones
    Bass: 1954 Frank Carroll
    Drums: 1954 Bunny Shawker
    Producer: Art Freeman
    Recorded: 1947 Friday, September 12, 1947, New York 1954 November 23, 1954, New York
    Released: early 1948 Apollo 1954 Columbia
    Label: 1948 Apollo 1954 Columbia

    This song is the number three (3) song of 1947 according to Digital Dream Door’s Adam.

    Number of listens: 21105
    Current rank: 286 (updated weekly)
    Highest rank: 201 (play the video all the way through to register a vote for this song)

link to the static song information page for this song:
http://www.thissideofsanity.com/music/songs/mo/moveonupalittlehigher.php

michaelm design
buy concert tickets from Ticket Liquidator buy music from iTunes buy songs from Amazon

    Summary quotation from Wikipedia:

    “Move On Up A Little Higher” is a gospel song written by W. Herbert Brewster, first recorded on September 12, 1947, by gospel singer Mahalia Jackson, that sold eight million copies. The song was honored with the Grammy Hall of Fame Award in (1998). In 2005, the Library of Congress honored the song by adding it to the National Recording Registry. It was also included in the list of Songs of the Century, by the Recording Industry of America and the National Endowment for the Arts, and is in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as one of the 500 songs that shaped rock.

    Composer Rev. William Herbert Brewster (1897-1987) composed “Moved On Up A Little Higher,” through the imagery of a “Christian climbing the ladder to heaven,” the song encourages black upward mobility, hence reflecting the postwar Afro-modernist sentiments:

    “The fight for rights here in Memphis was pretty rough on the Black church … and I We’ll have to move in the field of education. Move into the professions and move into politics. Move in ahas to have to survive. That was a protest idea and inspiration. I was trying to inspire Black people to move up higher. Don’t be mediocre the freedom fights started, before the Martin Luther King days, I had to lead a lot of protest meetings. In order to gengerous could sing it.”


    “Move on Up” was originally written for one of Brewster’s religious pageants or passion plays. Brewster’s maintained that the entire piece—lyrics, melody, and harmony—came to him in one flow, and shortly thereafter he taught the song to his principle vocal soloist, Queen C. Anderson. But it was the Queen of Gospel, Mahalia Jackson, who, according to Brewster, “knew what to do with it. She could throw the verse out there.” Producer Art Freeman insisted Jackson record “Move on Up a Little Higher”; released in early 1948, the single became the best-selling gospel record of all time, selling in such great quantities that stores could not even meet the demand. Brewster was pastor of East Trigg Avenue Baptist Church, one of the churches where young Elvis Presley studied the ecstatic moves of his gospel heroes.

—from Wikipedia (the Wikipedia:Text of Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License applies to Wikipedia’s block of text and possible accompanying picture, along with any alterations, transformations, and/or building upon Wikipedia’s original text that ThisSideofSanity.com applied to this block of text)

 
     

song information page

Contact
your name:
email address:
phone number:
(optional)
suggestions, corrections, additional information:
There is a delay before comments are posted because they must all be reviewed by a human to prevent spam.

open source code:

    This music player is available as open source code. Everyone can build their own personal free and legal music player. This source code is free for any legal non-commercial and/or non-profit and/or educational and/or private purpose. This open source player is courtesy of This Side of Sanity (ThisSideofSanity.com) and OSdata (OSdata.com).

    Build your own player. Avoid the hassles and fees of commercial music services. Let there be a million free and independent music players on the web. Strongly suggest building players dedicated to specific kinds of music. Notify me of the location (URL) and specialties of your custom player.


Proverb:

Friendship likes distance. —Maasai Proverb

listen to music channels:

Adult ContemporaryHip-HopRap
Adult PopHouseReggae
AllIndependentRock
AlternativeJapaneseRockabilly
BluesJazzSmooth Jazz
ChristianKorean K-PopSoft Rock
Classic RockLatinSoul
CountryLatin PopSouthern Rock
Country RockMetalSurf
DanceMéxicanThis Side of Sanity
DemoMixedTop 30
DiscoModern RockTropical
Easy ListeningNew AgeWorld Music
ElectronicaNew Wave1940s
FolkOldies1950s
French MusicOld Pop1960s
FunkPop1970s
German MusicProgressive Rock1980s
GospelPsychedelic2000s
Hard RockR&B2010s
EDMIndianUrban

Green Orange archive
totals
michaelm


visitor number is 101

Twitter

Enjoy the This Side of Sanity website Twitter feed.

Enjoy the This Side of Sanity Twitter feed.


return to home page


    If you spot an error in fact, grammar, syntax, or spelling, or a broken link, or have additional information, commentary, or constructive criticism, please contact Milo at PO Box 5237, Balboa Island, Calif, 92662, USA.

    Copyright © 2011, 2012, 2013 Milo. All rights reserved. Todos Derechos Reservados. The copyrights on all source code and the data base belong to Milo and are used on this web site by permission.

ThisSideofSanity.com


count is 358 and current date is 2024-11-23 and date stored is 2022-05-01 exceeded limit
next date is 0000-00-00 and date stored is 2022-05-01