20 Years in the Making

Received the following letter from my old friend and comrade, Ed Voci:

“’Mississippi Missive, A Ballad About the Free State of Jones’” has occupied me off and on for 20 years. The song will be available very soon from Amazon, iTunes, eMusic and other on-line music vendors as well as from Woodstock Records. Play it LOUD!

“Thanks to Gina (for answering Levon’s call and waking me up), Francesca (for the Jones County photos on our way to Tulane University) and Renata (for singing Miss-Miss so beautifully to me). Thanks also to Noel Ignatiev and Ken Lawrence (mentors who introduced me to my Jones County heroes)  and special thanks to my musical heroes Kevin “Shinyribs” Russell and Aaron “Prof. Louie” Hurwitz.  Baci e abbracci a tutti.

“p.s. The best book on Jones County is by Victoria E. Bynum.  She will have a cameo appearance as a nurse in the movie due out at the end of this month.”

From the liner notes:

“a country soul rocking anthem for an amazing episode … a story of the Free State of Jones County [Mississippi] which took a heroic stand against a ‘rich man’s war and a poor man’s fight’ and for equality, an extraordinary armed rebellion against the Confederacy.”

Lyrics: Edward Voci

Music: Kevin Russell, Aaron L. Hurwitz

Recorded by Professor Louie and the Crowmatix

Hard Crackers Issue One Spring 2016

 

 

 

1 thought on “20 Years in the Making”

  1. Noel,

    Thanks for asking about whether the tombstone/CSA flag on the “Mississippi Missive” artwork was “necessary.” The tombstone/CSA flag photo and the pine tree photo were among dozens of photos Francesca and I snapped in Jones County in 2010 and I submitted to Woodstock Records which selected those two photos for the artwork. When I questioned the use of the tombstone/CSA flag photo, Woodstock Records acknowledged the potential for controversy (“let’s hope so!”—ah, marketing—and to which your inquiry attests). Woodstock Records also pointed out that the photo as artwork portrayed two things: 1) the symbolic “death” of the CSA in Jones County during the Civil War and 2) the ironic reality of present day Jones County where pro-CSA sentiment exists as evidenced, of course, by that flag and also, as I learned from watching the CBSSunday Morning show yesterday, by the existence of the “Jones County Rosin Heels, Camp 227 of the Sons of Confederate Veterans.” Given the content of the song and the Free State of Jones history, the symbolic “death” of the CSA in the artwork is appropriate. At the same time the photo acknowledges and reminds that white supremacy continues or “lives.” Ah, duality.

    I’m including below the “Mississippi Missive” lyrics which include the line, “After the war and jubilee blue faded to gray and so did we,” a reference to the post-War withdrawal of Union troops, the overthrow of Reconstruction, the rise of Jim Crow and the demise of the Free State of Jones in fact and spirit, all of which explain the presence of the tombstone/CSA flag in the Jones County cemetery six years ago. Btw, that day in Jones County we could not find Newt and Rachel Knight’s tombstones and, if we had, I would have argued for those photos to appear in the artwork.

    Hopefully, the movie (not released yet, so I haven’t seen it—though on the CBS Sunday Show both director Gary Ross and Matthew McConaughey gave excellent interviews and the film clips were promising), Victoria Bynum’s book and maybe even “Mississippi Missive” will rekindle the Free State of Jones spirit and the necessity today of acting boldly for equality everywhere.

    One Big Free State!

    Ed

    Mississippi Missive
    copyright 1996 Edward Voci

    Jones County voted ‘gainst a rich man’s war
    kind that ‘git fought by the mostly poor
    names not heard at the rebel roll call
    Ballentine, Bynum and Sumerall
    we carved a declaration on a big pine tree
    The Free State of Jones was bound to be

    [Refrain:]
    We picked our cotton and cotton’d no slaves
    Rachel rocked her cradle
    while we dug our own graves

    The Free State of Jones was born that day
    every soul knew there’d be a toll to pay
    ol’ Newt Knight rallied our kin
    even Japser Collins quit drinkin’ gin
    took command of ten score men
    The Free State of Jones fought against a sin

    [Refrain…]

    Runaways came like a levee flood
    we all ate grits from the same tin tub
    Lowery raided and we powdered our guns
    took no prisoners and our heroes swung
    cold and martyred from that pine tree’s limb
    The Free State of Jones fought against a sin

    [Refrain…]

    After the war and jubilee
    blue faded to gray and so did we
    we fell and milled that big pine tree
    for a school where young’ns could write ‘n read
    the sweet pine scent of fresh sawn wood
    our saplings root where our missive once stood

    [Refrain…]

    Reply

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