"Go Down Moses" is an African American
spiritual that describes the Hebrew
exodus, specifically drawing from the
Book of Exodus 5:1:[1] "And the LORD spoke unto Moses, Go unto Pharaoh, and say unto him, Thus saith the LORD, Let my people go, that they may serve me", where God commands
Moses to demand the release of the
Israelites from bondage in
Egypt. As is common in spirituals, the song discusses freedom,[2] referring both to the freedom of the Israelites, and that of runaway enslaved people.[3] As a result of these messages, this song was outlawed by many enslavers.[4]
The opening verse as published by the Jubilee Singers in 1872:
When Israel was in Egypt's land
Let my people go
Oppress'd so hard they could not stand
Let my people go
Refrain:
Go down, Moses
Way down in Egypt's land
Tell old Pharaoh
Let my people go
Lyrically, the song discusses the liberation of the ancient Jewish people from Egyptian slavery. This story held a second meaning for enslaved African Americans, as they related their experiences under slavery to those of Moses and the Israelites who were enslaved by the pharaoh,[5] and they resonated with the message that God will come to the aid of the persecuted. "Go Down Moses" also makes references to the Jordan River, commonly associated with reaching freedom in spirituals because such an act of running away often involved crossing one or more rivers.[6][7]
Since the Old Testament recognizes the Nile Valley as further south, and thus, lower than Jerusalem and the Promised Land, heading to Egypt means going "down"[8] while going away from Egypt is "up".[9] In the context of
American slavery, this ancient sense of "down" converged with the concept of "down the river" (the
Mississippi), where enslaved people's conditions were notoriously worse. Later verses also draw parallels between the Israelites' freedom from slavery and humanity's freedom won by Christ.[10]
Although usually thought of as a spiritual, the earliest written record of the song was as a rallying anthem for the
Contrabands at
Fort Monroe sometime before July 1862. White people who reported on the song presumed it was composed by them.[11] This became the first spiritual to be recorded in sheet music that is known of, by Reverend Lewis Lockwood. While visiting Fortress Monroe in 1861, he heard runaway enslaved people singing this song, transcribed what he heard, and eventually published it in the National Anti-Slavery Standard.[12] Sheet music was soon after published titled "Oh! Let My People Go: The Song of the Contrabands", arranged by
Horace Waters. L.C. Lockwood, chaplain of the Contrabands, stated in the sheet music that the song was from Virginia, dating from about 1853.[13] However, the song was not included in Slave Songs of the United States, despite its being a very prominent spiritual among enslaved people. Furthermore, the original version of the song sung by enslaved people almost definitely sounded very different from what Lockwood transcribed by ear, especially following an arrangement by a person who had never before heard the song as it was originally sung.[14] The opening verse, as recorded by Lockwood, is:
The Lord, by Moses, to Pharaoh said: Oh! let my people go
If not, I'll smite your first-born dead—Oh! let my people go
Oh! go down, Moses
Away down to Egypt's land
And tell King Pharaoh
To let my people go
Sarah Bradford's authorized biography of
Harriet Tubman, Scenes in the Life of Harriet Tubman (1869), quotes Tubman as saying she used "Go Down Moses" as one of two code songs used with fugitive enslaved people to communicate when fleeing Maryland.[15] Tubman began her underground railroad work in 1850 and continued until the beginning of the
Civil War, so it is possible Tubman's use of the song predates the origin claimed by Lockwood.[16] Some people even hypothesize that she herself may have written the spiritual.[17] Others claim that
Nat Turner, who led one of the most well-known slave revolts in history, either wrote or was the inspiration for the song.[18]
Gregory Miller (portrayed by
Sidney Poitier) played the piano for a quintet singing the song in the film Blackboard Jungle (1955).
A reference is made to the song in the film Ferris Bueller's Day Off (1986), when a bedridden
Cameron Frye sings, "When Cameron was in Egypt's land, let my Cameron go".
The teen comedy film Easy A (2010) remixed this song with a fast guitar and beats. The song was originally published as Original Soundtrack and is listed in
IMDb.[19]
In the film Harriet (2019), the song was sung by Harriet Tubman, played by
Cynthia Erivo, to signal the slaves on the plantation to freedom.
Djuna Barnes, in her 1936 novel Nightwood, titled a chapter "Go Down, Matthew" as an allusion to the song's title.
In
Margaret Mitchell's 1936 novel Gone with the Wind, enslaved people from the Georgia plantation Tara are in
Atlanta, to dig breastworks for the soldiers, and they sing "Go Down, Moses" as they march down a street.
Music
The song was made famous by
Paul Robeson whose deep voice was said by
Robert O'Meally to have assumed "the might and authority of God."[20]
On February 7, 1958, the song was recorded in New York City and sung by
Louis Armstrong with
Sy Oliver's Orchestra.[21]
Avant-garde singer-songwriter and composer
Diamanda Galás recorded a version for her fifth album, You Must Be Certain of the Devil (1988), the final part of a trilogy about the AIDS epidemic that features songs influenced by American gospel music and biblical themes, and later in Plague Mass (1991) and The Singer (1992).
Composer
Nathaniel Dett used the text and melody of "Go Down Moses" throughout his oratorio,
"The Ordering of Moses" (1937). In the first section, Dett sets the melody with added-note harmonies, quartal chords, modal harmonies, and chromaticism (especially French augmented sixth chords). Later in the oratorio, "Go Down Moses" is set as a fugue.
Television
The NBC television comedy The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air twice used the song for comedic effect. In the first instance,
Will Smith's character sings the song after he and his cousin
Carlton Banks are thrown into prison (Smith sings the first two lines, Banks sullenly provides the refrain, then a prisoner sings the final four lines in an operatic voice.)[29] In the second instance, Banks is preparing for an Easter service and attempts to show off his prowess by singing the last two lines of the chorus; Smith replies with his own version, in which he makes a joke about Carlton's height ("...Let my cousin grow!").
In Dr. Katz, Professional Therapist is sung by Katz and Ben during the end credits of the episode "Thanksgiving" (Season 5, Episode 18).
In season 6, episode 13, “Let’s Doo-Wap it Again”, of the TV series Psych, the fictional musical group "Blackapella" performed the song in the opening scene.
"Go Down Moses" was recorded by the
Robert Shaw Chorale on
RCA Victor 33 record LM/LSC 2580, copyright 1964, first side, second band, lasting 4 minutes and 22 seconds. Liner notes by noted African-American author
Langston Hughes.[32]
^For example, in
Genesis 42:2 Jacob commands his sons to "go down to Egypt" to buy grain
^In
Exodus 1:10, Pharaoh expresses apprehension that the Hebrews would join Egypt's enemies and "go up [i.e. away] from the land"
^Warren, G. S. (1997). Ev’ry Time I Feel the Spirit: 101 Best-Loved Psalms, Gospel Hymns, and Spiritual Songs of the African-American Church.” Holt.
^"Editor's Table". The Continental Monthly. 2: 112–113. July 1862 – via Cornell University. We are indebted to Clark's School-Visitor for the following song of the Contrabands, which originated among the latter, and was first sung by them in the hearing of white people at Fortress Monroe, where it was noted down by their chaplain, Rev. L.C. Lockwood.
^Graham, S. (2018). Spirituals and the Birth of a Black Entertainment Industry. University of Illinois Press.
^Lockwood, "Oh! Let My People Go", p. 5: "This Song has been sung for about nine years by the Slaves of Virginia."
^Graham, S. (2018). Spirituals and the Birth of a Black Entertainment Industry. University of Illinois Press.
^Bradford, Sarah (1869).
Scenes in the Life of Harriet Tubman. Dennis Brothers & Co. pp. 26–27. Archived from
the original on June 13, 2017 – via University of North Carolina: Documenting the American South.