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- Oh,_Freedom abstract ""Oh, Freedom" is a post-Civil War African-American freedom song. It is often associated with the American Civil Rights Movement, with Odetta, who recorded it as part of the "Spiritual Trilogy", on her Odetta Sings Ballads and Blues album, and with Joan Baez, who performed the song at the 1963 March on Washington. Baez has since performed the song live numerous times, both during her concerts and at other events. The song was first recorded in 1931 by the E. R. Nance Family with Clarence Dooley as "Sweet Freedom".Some versions of the fourth verse contain the line "No more tommin'," where the word tommin is a derogatory term denoting some black men's extreme submissiveness towards a white person or white people. The word seems to have been derived from Harriet Beecher Stowe's fictitious character Uncle Tom in Uncle Tom's Cabin. These words are not part in the traditional verses, but a later addition, itself part of folk tradition in the USA, in which extra verses are added to traditional songs to highlight different personal feelings, agendas, or lyrical. Invention".
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageID "30861496".
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageLength "2614".
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageOutDegree "12".
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageRevisionID "669364414".
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageWikiLink African-American.
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageWikiLink African_American.
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageWikiLink American_Civil_War.
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageWikiLink Category:African-American_music.
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageWikiLink Category:American_songs.
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageWikiLink Category:Year_of_song_unknown.
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageWikiLink Harriet_Beecher_Stowe.
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageWikiLink Joan_Baez.
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageWikiLink March_on_Washington.
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageWikiLink March_on_Washington_for_Jobs_and_Freedom.
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageWikiLink Odetta.
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageWikiLink Odetta_Sings_Ballads_and_Blues.
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageWikiLink Protest_songs_in_the_United_States.
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageWikiLink Uncle_Toms_Cabin.
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageWikiLinkText "Oh, Freedom".
- Oh,_Freedom hasPhotoCollection Oh,_Freedom.
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:African-American_Civil_Rights_Movement.
- Oh,_Freedom wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Unreferenced.
- Oh,_Freedom subject Category:African-American_music.
- Oh,_Freedom subject Category:American_songs.
- Oh,_Freedom subject Category:Year_of_song_unknown.
- Oh,_Freedom hypernym Song.
- Oh,_Freedom type Agent.
- Oh,_Freedom type Artist.
- Oh,_Freedom type Person.
- Oh,_Freedom type Single.
- Oh,_Freedom type MusicGroup.
- Oh,_Freedom type Person.
- Oh,_Freedom type Agent.
- Oh,_Freedom type NaturalPerson.
- Oh,_Freedom type Thing.
- Oh,_Freedom type Q215627.
- Oh,_Freedom type Q483501.
- Oh,_Freedom type Q5.
- Oh,_Freedom type Person.
- Oh,_Freedom comment ""Oh, Freedom" is a post-Civil War African-American freedom song. It is often associated with the American Civil Rights Movement, with Odetta, who recorded it as part of the "Spiritual Trilogy", on her Odetta Sings Ballads and Blues album, and with Joan Baez, who performed the song at the 1963 March on Washington. Baez has since performed the song live numerous times, both during her concerts and at other events. The song was first recorded in 1931 by the E. R.".
- Oh,_Freedom label "Oh, Freedom".
- Oh,_Freedom sameAs Oh,_Freedom.
- Oh,_Freedom sameAs Oh,_Freedom.
- Oh,_Freedom sameAs m.0g5qw8.
- Oh,_Freedom sameAs Q3349847.
- Oh,_Freedom sameAs Q3349847.
- Oh,_Freedom wasDerivedFrom Oh,_Freedom?oldid=669364414.
- Oh,_Freedom isPrimaryTopicOf Oh,_Freedom.