Deep River (song)


"Deep River" is an anonymous spiritual of African-American origin.

Overview

The song was first mentioned in print in 1876, when it was published in the first edition of The Story of the Jubilee Singers: With Their Songs, by J. B. T. Marsh. By 1917, when Harry Burleigh completed the last of his several influential arrangements, the song had become very popular in recitals. It has been called "perhaps the best known and best-loved spiritual".

Words

Deep river,
My home is over Jordan.
Deep river, Lord,
I want to cross over into campground.
Oh, don't you want to go,
To the Gospel feast;
That Promised Land,
Where all is peace?
Oh, deep river, Lord,
I want to cross over into campground.
Note: the word campground probably refers to what is now the Campground Historic District in Mobile, Alabama, an African-American military encampment during the American Civil War.

Adaptations

The melody was adopted in 1921 for the song Dear Old Southland by Henry Creamer and Turner Layton, which enjoyed popular success the next year in versions by Paul Whiteman and by Vernon Dalhart.
Deep River has been sung in several films. The 1929 Show Boat featured it mouthed by Laura La Plante to the singing of Eva Olivetti. Paul Robeson famously sang it accompanied by male chorus in the 1940 movie The Proud Valley. And in the 1983 blockbuster hit National Lampoon's Vacation it was sung by Chevy Chase.
Deep River is also one of five spirituals written into the 1941 oratorio A Child of Our Time by Michael Tippett.

Recordings