Roots of Barbershop Harmony
Roots of Barbershop Harmony
Roots of Barbershop Harmony
KEEPTHEWHOLEWORLDSINGING
I
Jim Henry
Music Ph.D. and
bass of The Gas
House Gang
(1993 quartet
champ) jim@
gashousegang.com
Historical evidence
The African-American origins theory is not new.
Several of our early Society members and recent historians have made the assertion, or at least suggested
an African-American influence upon barbershop harmony. But it was a non-Barbershopper, Lynn Abbott,
who in the Fall 1992 issue of American Music published, Play That Barber Shop Chord: A Case for
the African-American Origin of Barbershop Harmony, presented the most thoroughly documented
exploration into the roots of barbershop to appear up
to that time.1 In that writing, Abbott draws from
rare turn-of-the-twentieth-century articles, passages
from books long out of print, and reminiscences of
early quartet singing by African-American musicians,
including Jelly Roll Morton and Louis Armstrong, to
argue that barbershop music is indeed a product of
the African-American musical tradition.
Among Abbotts recreational quartets, W.C.
Handy, for example, offers a memory that is quite
telling of the racial origins of barbershop music. Before he became famous as a composer and band leader,
Handy sang tenor in a pickup quartet who, he recalls,
often serenaded their sweethearts with love songs;
the young white bloods overheard, and took to hiring them to serenade the white girls. The Mills Brothers learned to harmonize in their fathers barber shop
July/August 2001
The HARMONIZER
13
14
The HARMONIZER
July/August 2001
with accelerandos,
ritards, and different
tempi. 9 This metric
sense is so ingrained in
the music of the African Diaspora that it is
stressed even in the
absence of actual instruments.10
The African-American a cappella quartets
devised a method
whereby the feeling of percussion and
meter is created through vocal means.
The technique employs a class of devicescalled rhythmic propellants by
recent barbershop theoristswhich are
designed to maintain the metric pulse
through held melodic notes and rests.
Like call-and-response patterns (which
themselves can be considered types of
rhythmic propellants) the rhythmic propellant is fundamental to the barbershop style, and most Barbershoppers will
recognize the prevalence of these devices in the songs they have sung or
listened to.
Perhaps the most common rhythmic
propellant in barbershop music is the
echo. The echo is closely related to
call-and-response pattern and usually
occurs at the end of a musical phrase
while the melody is holding a note. To
keep the pulse going under the held
note, one or more of the harmony parts
The HARMONIZER
15
16
The HARMONIZER
July/August 2001
siderations.
The barbershop
seventh
The single most
telling hallmark of
the barbershop style
is that curious sonority we call the
barbershop seventh chord. The
barbershop seventh
chord is described as
a major-minor seventh chord because it results from taking a simple,
three-note major chord and adding to
it a minor seventh above the root, i.e.,
the lowest note of the chord).12 If we
were to build seventh chords on every
note of the major scale, the only one
that would yield this sound would be
the fifth note of the scale, sometimes
called the dominant. For this reason,
many musicians call this chord a dominant seventh, and give it the Roman
numeral shorthand V7.
In Western classical music, this
dominant seventh chord anticipates a
harmonic return back to the tonic chord
(called Roman numeral I because it is
built on the first note of the scale, the
key note). We call this motion a falling fifth because the progression from
the dominant to the tonic is down a
perfect fifth. So in the key of C, the
major-minor seventh chord built on the
fifth note of the scale (G) will tend to
lead back to C. (Go backward down the
musical alphabet counting each letter:
G-F-E-D-Cfive total letters.) The
major-minor seventh chord as heard in
classical music is almost always used to
suggest this dominant function.
In African-American music, however, we may hear the major-minor
sound built on, and functioning as, any
number of chords other than the dominant. A major-minor seventh chord
built on the subdominant (i.e., the
fourth note of the scale, Roman numeral
IV), for example, is a common occurrence. The natural seventh of this particular major chord is a major seventh.
Yet in African-American music one will
often hear it sounded with a minor seventh, thus giving it a major-minor or
Whats next?
While barbershop has been an everchanging musical art form, certain hallmarks of the style seem to have remained
implacable for well over a century. Calland-response patterns, rhythmic propellants and barbershop seventh
chords are among the many distinctive
features of the barbershop tradition that,
when considered alongside the entirety
of found historical evidence, root the
genre in the African-American musical tradition. The road that leads back
to barbershop, however, is still fraught
with holes that need to be filled. Thus,
while the performer in me looks excitedly to what our 21st century singers will
add to barbershops future, the historian in me prays for more scholars who
will dedicate themselves to its rich and
enigmatic past.
Notes
1. Lynn Abbott, Play That Barber Shop
Chord: A Case for the African-American
Origin of Barbershop Harmony, (American Music, 10 [Fall 1992], pp. 289-326).
Wilbur Sparks review of the Abbotts article
is found in the January/February 1994 edition of The Harmonizer.\
2. Irving Berlin, When Johnsons Quartet
July/August 2001
The HARMONIZER
17