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SHOUT! Black Gospel Music Moments - Sarah Vaughan

The incomparable Sarah Vaughan recorded a handful of spirituals during her long career, including this gentle version of “Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child.”

The great Sarah Vaughan is one of the treasures of American music. From humble beginnings in Newark, winning the famed Apollo Theater’s Amateur Hour set up her time singing with Earl Hines’ Big Band, which featured the likes of Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker. By the late 1940s, she was recording various solo projects with the top jazz, blues and pop artists in the country.

It was the sweet-voiced Vaughan who popularized songs like “That Lucky Old Sun,” “Black Coffee,” “My Funny Valentine,” “Whatever Lola Wants” and many, many more.

Before her death by cancer at age 66 in 1990, Vaughan was universally acclaimed as an American Master, with a list of awards and triumphs too long to mention here.

Fortunately for us, she recorded a handful of spirituals as well, including this gentle version of “Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child” with Ted Dale and His Orchestra in 1947.

Sarah Vaughan - Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child

I’m Robert Darden … “Shout! Black Gospel Music Moments” is produced by KWBU and the Black Gospel Music Preservation Program at Baylor University Libraries.

SHOUT! Black Gospel Music Moments - Sarah Vaughan
The incomparable Sarah Vaughan recorded a handful of spirituals during her long career, including this gentle version of “Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child.”
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Robert F. Darden is the author of two dozen books, most recently: Nothing But Love in God’s Water, Volume II: Black Sacred Music from Sit-In to Resurrection City (Penn State University Press, 2016); Nothing But Love in God’s Water, Volume I: Black Sacred Music from the Civil War to the Civil Rights Movement(Penn State University Press, 2014); Jesus Laughed: The Redemptive Power of Humor(Abingdon Press, 2008), Reluctant Prophets and Clueless Disciples: Understanding the Bible by Telling Its Stories(Abingdon Press, 2006); and People Get Ready! A New History of Black Gospel Music(Continuum/Bloomsbury, 2004).