How many people remember the good years of the Sunset Symphony when you could spread out a blanket & enjoy the music without some drunk stepping in the potato salad?
I love this! Thank you. Many years ago got to hear him sing this at the closing of Memphis in May but it several years earlier. Mr. Hyter singing that song (along with the orchestra) was a huge event at MIM. What a voice!
I am so grateful my late husband and I were there that night to get to hear this great singer. Thank goodness he left us this rendition Ol' Man River from his beautiful & mighty voice. R.I.P. Mr. Hyter.
Memphis is a deeply southern town. Watching the blacks and whites sitting together and joining in the singing, I realize how far they've come since the days of segregation, only 4 decades earlier. When they had to change, they did. They've much to be proud of.
Memphis will be great again someday. In fact, it already is and never wasn't. In the souls of her people is a resilience and belief if the present and the future. Blue collar through and through. All heart. RIP Mr. Hyter and Maestro Alan Balter. May the percussionists be always on time.
One of my favorite memories from growing up and living in Memphis was seeing James Hyter perform "Ol Man River" at the Sunset Symphony and in Debbie Nelson's production of "Showboat" at Bartlett Community Theatre. He was a very nice, humble man who genuinely loved people. Awesome performance that I hope you'll take a few minutes to watch.
I remember watching that performance on TV at my Great Grandmother's house, with her and my Grandmother. They televised the Sunset Symphony then, I don't think they even have it anymore. So bittersweet, there won't be another like Mr. Hyter! I doubt that song would be allowed to be sung today, with all the political correctness, I'm sure someone would be offended.
Chokes me up every time. Special time and place, with very special performers. Mr Hyter is a legend. I wish Memphis would bring the symphony back in some capacity at Memphis in May. It could use some class again.
Now that I have been moved away for over 20 years, every time I think of being back home in Memphis, this is the song that always plays in the back of my mind. Each time I hear it, I'm picturing the river, the bluffs, the Big M Bridge lit up in the background and Mr. James Hyter's performance of Ol' Man River is quintessential Memphis and home.
Thank you James Hyter and Alan Balter for this beautiful southern ballad. Thanks to you both and Kelly Agee , and the Sunset Symphony in Memphis too for this glorious song. Gratefully, Robert S. J. Hu . May 30, 2020.
True talent! Mr. Hyter''s version of this song is the only one I listen to. Grew up watching the Sunset Symphony on tv and made it down there a couple of times as a teenager including this one. Miss this so much.
Mr. Hyter's "Ol'Man River" bring back memories that I can not describe, other than to say good ones. I moved to Memphis in 1986, met the "right" wife there, etc. It was our tradition to sing along (as best we could) with Mr Hyter. I just discovered this video and that he has passed. I will fondly remember him. our condolences to his family.
Man this took me right to tears. What a great voice. My dad loved this song and always wanted to be able to sing. However, he was TERRIBLE! My little nephew sat on his lap one Sunday Morning in church and I was playing the piano. During devotional service my dad was singing hard and my little nephew put his hands over his ears. LOL! RIP dear Mr. Hyter.
Spine chilling!! RIP This Symphony Orchestra is incredible. As for James Hyter, what a voice, it's saddening to know that he is no longer with us. I'm also saddened to learn that Maestro Balter is also no longer with us. R.I.P. Mr. James Hyter and Maestro Alan Balter.
I remember that like it was yesterday, my wife and I were in the crowd with our young son who is now on his way to college.... It isn't the 1st of June until Mr. Hyter sings Old man River.
Oh how we cried that night, sitting on the banks of the ol' Mississippi, wind blowing through our hair, blankets one against the other as Memphis packed into every spot to say farewell to two of our greatest entertainers, Hyter and Balter, who gave their final bow that night. How many encores was it that night? 7 or was it more that night? I remember 10 was the record for a good many years! I like the anvil cam as well since I had never seen how that sound was produced. I just played this video for my young son. (my cassette tape is a bit weary and you really need to see it as well as hear it.) Hyter or Robeson (no Sinatra!) should be played for every young person in the South so they hear the pain that inspired those lyrics. I cried watching it this time as I did so many, many times in the 20 years we were blessed to call James Hyter a Memphian. May James Hyter and Alan Balter rest in peace- perhaps some will find them singing and conducting on the other side of the river. I agree with those Memphians who want Lou Beaman to take Hyter's spot in our tradition that brings Memphis In May to a close! I haven't returned since that night in '98 but I would for him!!
I first saw and heard Paul Robeson sing this song in the movie when I was a young boy in the early 1950s. The movie was in color that time. Happy to have seen it on Turner several times. Makes me cry to imagine the pain and suffering of too many black folks.
I met Mr. Hyter back in 2001 when the Memphis Symphony and Chorus performed Bernstein's "Chichester Psalms" at Eudora Auditorium. He was such a gracious and dignified southern gentleman. I told him how much I loved hearing him sing "Ol' Man River" and expressed what a disgrace it was that he was no longer allowed to sing that wonderful song for Memphis in May Sunset Symphony. He told me he missed doing it. Many, many years ago Alan Balter brought the Memphis Symphony to the National Guard armory in Bolivar, TN and my family and I went to see the show. I met Alan. He too was such a nice man.
I remember this like it was just yesterday.. My family and i would go every year just to see Mr. Hyter's performance... My Grandmother took me to Mr. Hyter's retirement party where they gave him a framed original sheet music
James Hyter was fantastic singing this song. I've worked a venue several times during the Sunset Symphony in Memphis. Never saw him singing the entire song, but I sure heard him. Seems like everyone in hearing distance stopped what they were doing when he started singing. A moment to remember, always.
I have loved this song ever since I heard PAUL ROBESON sing it in SHOWBOAT in 1956 I was 5 Years old, it has remained with me my whole life and I would play it for democrats to let them know that we know what they were all about and what they did with our African-American brothers and sisters and now this man has re-vamped it and it’s just as beautiful now as it was when I first heard it this man is just awesome thank you so much kind sir ❤
My dad worked on the MS River as a teenager, and my granddad played with the Steamboat Strummers Banjo Group for years playing on these boats and other venues.
Wow.....thanks for posting this. Brought tears to this Memphian's eyes. And I'm sure to many others who had the privilege of seeing one of Mr Hyter's performances live.
i miss singing with the symphony choir 1989-2001 but alan balter and james hyter were the best director and singer in all of america. the best times of my singing career was in the presents of these two very beautiful people. GOD BLESS AMERICA AND OBAMA.
One of the most distinguished non-commercial musicians of all time (he earned his living working for Blue Cross of Tennessee). I went down to Memphis in 1999, hoping to hear him play. But he orchestra director had died, and Mr. Hyter was not invited back to sing. When the symphony was over, the audience -- clearly dismayed that Old Man River had not been performed -- began to spontaneously sing, genuinely, yet in protest at the same time. The controllers of the park and bandshell cranked up some unrelated canned music to purposely drown out the audience. I never returned to Memphis in May. Shame on Memphis.
Doc Esquire, those "idiots" screaming where cheering Mr. Hyter on. Especially during the favorite parts when hit bass notes few can achieve! He would've never seen it as anything but praise to his ability. Perhaps you needed to be there to understand. Keep in mind that Mr. Hyter, a beloved Memphian had just just finished his, I believe, 7th encore so the audience was hyped. Especially knowing this was the last time we'd ever hear Mr. Hyter at the Sunset Symphony. The only thing I didn't like about the fans in this video were the girls kicking as if this song doesn't deserve respect. Typically what happened after Mr. Hyter had an encore or two, and you can see & hear this in the video, people would stand, lock arms, sway and sing along for the next 4-5 encores. I encourage you to go back and watch it again and you'll both hear (during the chorus) and see what I just described. Here we are, all different races, walks of life & religions having picnics on our different blankets for hours & hours and not really talking to the people doing the same around us UNTIL Mr. Hyter appeared. He brought us together, arm in arm, bridging a gap still sometimes present in this city unfortunately. But during his time on stage we came together, listening, understanding and becoming one group. He was able to make 15,000+ people become as one for a moment each year at the end of May! It was worth losing your voice to cheer him on I assure you.
No, it wouldn't have been his seventh, because one year they actually had to institute a rule limiting his refrains to four repeats. We all loved him, and he loved us.
Yeah, the can-can girls probably only listened to the "Old Man River..." portion of the song. The lyrics are quite miserable! And they've been somewhat censored. I can only imagine being stuck in the conundrum of being "Tired of living, and scared of dying...don't look up, and don't look down, you don't dare make, the mean boss frown". Misery. Not a dancing situation. However, the interlocking of arms, and swaying together with absolute strangers, of different races, in normally wet and muddy Memphis In May fashion; I think that is the exact response that the writer of this song, ammended and non-ammended, wished to evoke; solemnity and unification. I believe that Mr Hyter's version is superior to Mr Robeson's, in tonal and voice quality. I'm sitting here in 2020, looking at this, and I just don't understand why, 22 years later, my city is more divided than we were in May of 1998. RIP, Mr Hyter, Mr Balter. One last encore before bed...
We sang this song on jump run when skydiving just before we jumped out of a perfectly good airplane and needlessly risked our lives. Oh wait, we were singing "Down by the River". Nevermind, good songs anyway.
No we were jumping out of John Robert's Twin Beech in Dallas Tx in 1973 and regrettably it was the same plane that Jim Croce's band crashed in Louisiana. @@Hazen75
Sometimes when I'm in the car my mom will sing Old Man River but she keeps forgetting the lines but ready on Scooby-Doo he was saying he said old man River and he cracked me up and my mom 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
The well deserved citation of William Warfield’s rendition of Old Man River in the film has photos of Paul Robeson. Robeson is most attached to this heartbreaking , timeless song. BUT he is different from Warfield - both magnificent, vocally & soulfully. It is my opinion that Paul Robeson would not support this interchange, one for the other. It is likely that more viewers saw the film with Warfield than saw Robeson. I feel strongly that the mention of Warfield on the internet be accompanied by images of him. And Robeson, of him. How blessed we are to have had that Showboat classic in the first place. Both renditions pull at the heartstrings, whether it’s heard for the first or 500th time. 🙏☯️
@313BigDaddy I'm uploading the last song (this one) of James Hyter's 1992 concert, An Evening of Spirituals, at Auburn. It was an honor meeting and singing with him. The first song includes quite a bit of him speaking. I hope you enjoy the concert. (There is only one song, "Give Us This Day," that was damaged to where I couldn't upload it.) I can't post a link here, but you'll find them on my channel.
Not a single cellphone in the crowd!! See, you can really enjoy the experience without recording everything on a freaking phone while sharing it on FB..smh
This is so awesome! I hope its okay that we used the audio track for video footage of the flooding Mississippi River. The video was marked as a response to you and I'm including it in my blog post that gives you credit.
"In the evening light,I saw the waters of the Ohio mingle with those of the Mississippi.I had dreamed of the Mississippi listening to the 'Old Man River',...."""Simone de Beauvoir Force of CirCumtance'
Never mind, I got it, "other folks." Yeah, I guess it was the setting, the audience was always very white (which is a shame considering the city's demographics). I agree that he shouldn't have had to do that though. I hope at least it was his decision and they didn't make him change the lyrics.
@@klagee1970 The song is about a slave longing for freedom. Every reference to “white people” is changed to “mean”. Honestly speaking knowing the lyrics and understanding the meaning of the song seeing a bunch of drunk white people doing a can can is insulting as all hell.
I wish that the idiots in the crowd would stop shouting and let the man sing the song himself. Come on people... Good singing Mr. Hyter. Rest in peace.
How many people remember the good years of the Sunset Symphony when you could spread out a blanket & enjoy the music without some drunk stepping in the potato salad?
I love this! Thank you. Many years ago got to hear him sing this at the closing of Memphis in May but it several years earlier. Mr. Hyter singing that song (along with the orchestra) was a huge event at MIM. What a voice!
I remember watching this on TV. They KEPT bringing him back. I was 13 years old. Fast forward to after college, I sang at his funeral. Amazing man.
I am so grateful my late husband and I were there that night to get to hear this great singer. Thank goodness he left us this rendition Ol' Man River from his beautiful & mighty voice. R.I.P. Mr. Hyter.
❤❤❤❤❤😢😢😢😢
RIP James Hyter and Alan Balter. Both of them are sorely missed.
Memphis is a deeply southern town. Watching the blacks and whites sitting together and joining in the singing, I realize how far they've come since the days of segregation, only 4 decades earlier. When they had to change, they did. They've much to be proud of.
When Memphis was Great... Miss these days as a kid!! I was blessed to be there that night..
me to, my dad used to always sing this song.
So was I... As a young adult this night. But as a kid and a teen for many years! Miss it terrible!
Memphis will be great again someday. In fact, it already is and never wasn't.
In the souls of her people is a resilience and belief if the present and the future. Blue collar through and through. All heart.
RIP Mr. Hyter and Maestro Alan Balter. May the percussionists be always on time.
No one will ever take away our memories. This is when MEMPHIS was COMMUNITY who still love each other. This will never change.
This is really making me miss Memphis right now...
One of my favorite memories from growing up and living in Memphis was seeing James Hyter perform "Ol Man River" at the Sunset Symphony and in Debbie Nelson's production of "Showboat" at Bartlett Community Theatre. He was a very nice, humble man who genuinely loved people. Awesome performance that I hope you'll take a few minutes to watch.
I remember watching that performance on TV at my Great Grandmother's house, with her and my Grandmother. They televised the Sunset Symphony then, I don't think they even have it anymore. So bittersweet, there won't be another like Mr. Hyter! I doubt that song would be allowed to be sung today, with all the political correctness, I'm sure someone would be offended.
Gorgeous !!!!
My dad is going to be SO GLAD I found this.
Chokes me up every time. Special time and place, with very special performers. Mr Hyter is a legend. I wish Memphis would bring the symphony back in some capacity at Memphis in May. It could use some class again.
Now that I have been moved away for over 20 years, every time I think of being back home in Memphis, this is the song that always plays in the back of my mind. Each time I hear it, I'm picturing the river, the bluffs, the Big M Bridge lit up in the background and Mr. James Hyter's performance of Ol' Man River is quintessential Memphis and home.
I've been gone only 6...and it still gives me chill bumps and a SERIOUS case of nostalgia.
There was nothing to compare to thousands of Memphians holding hands and swaying during Mr. Hyter's "Old Man River."
Is it possible to find this?
Thank you James Hyter and Alan Balter for this beautiful southern ballad. Thanks to you both and
Kelly Agee , and the Sunset Symphony in Memphis too for this glorious song. Gratefully, Robert
S. J. Hu . May 30, 2020.
True talent! Mr. Hyter''s version of this song is the only one I listen to. Grew up watching the Sunset Symphony on tv and made it down there a couple of times as a teenager including this one. Miss this so much.
Mr. Hyter's "Ol'Man River" bring back memories that I can not describe, other than to say good ones. I moved to Memphis in 1986, met the "right" wife there, etc. It was our tradition to sing along (as best we could) with Mr Hyter. I just discovered this video and that he has passed. I will fondly remember him. our condolences to his family.
Man this took me right to tears. What a great voice. My dad loved this song and always wanted to be able to sing. However, he was TERRIBLE! My little nephew sat on his lap one Sunday Morning in church and I was playing the piano. During devotional service my dad was singing hard and my little nephew put his hands over his ears. LOL! RIP dear Mr. Hyter.
so many memories come alive when I watch this. I miss Mr Hyter and the way he sings this song.... it gives me chills every time I hear him sing it..
This seems to be where we peaked as society.
Spine chilling!! RIP This Symphony Orchestra is incredible. As for James Hyter, what a voice, it's saddening to know that he is no longer with us. I'm also saddened to learn that Maestro Balter is also no longer with us. R.I.P. Mr. James Hyter and Maestro Alan Balter.
I remember that like it was yesterday, my wife and I were in the crowd with our young son who is now on his way to college.... It isn't the 1st of June until Mr. Hyter sings Old man River.
Noone could've sung this song any better than this wonderfully talented man! May you be with our Lord in Heaven.
Una gran voz, para una gran canción, no cualquiera da la tesitura para aceptar el reto.. Salud2
Oh how we cried that night, sitting on the banks of the ol' Mississippi, wind blowing through our hair, blankets one against the other as Memphis packed into every spot to say farewell to two of our greatest entertainers, Hyter and Balter, who gave their final bow that night. How many encores was it that night? 7 or was it more that night? I remember 10 was the record for a good many years! I like the anvil cam as well since I had never seen how that sound was produced. I just played this video for my young son. (my cassette tape is a bit weary and you really need to see it as well as hear it.) Hyter or Robeson (no Sinatra!) should be played for every young person in the South so they hear the pain that inspired those lyrics. I cried watching it this time as I did so many, many times in the 20 years we were blessed to call James Hyter a Memphian. May James Hyter and Alan Balter rest in peace- perhaps some will find them singing and conducting on the other side of the river.
I agree with those Memphians who want Lou Beaman to take Hyter's spot in our tradition that brings Memphis In May to a close! I haven't returned since that night in '98 but I would for him!!
Tremendously underrated comment. Thank you, sir.
I love this song so much and James Hyter is one of the best singers of Ol Man River I have heard in a long time.
I first saw and heard Paul Robeson sing this song in the movie when I was a young boy in the early 1950s. The movie was in color that time. Happy to have seen it on Turner several times. Makes me cry to imagine the pain and suffering of too many black folks.
I met Mr. Hyter back in 2001 when the Memphis Symphony and Chorus performed Bernstein's "Chichester Psalms" at Eudora Auditorium. He was such a gracious and dignified southern gentleman. I told him how much I loved hearing him sing "Ol' Man River" and expressed what a disgrace it was that he was no longer allowed to sing that wonderful song for Memphis in May Sunset Symphony. He told me he missed doing it. Many, many years ago Alan Balter brought the Memphis Symphony to the National Guard armory in Bolivar, TN and my family and I went to see the show. I met Alan. He too was such a nice man.
Nice sungs ol man missi sippi
I remember this like it was just yesterday.. My family and i would go every year just to see Mr. Hyter's performance... My Grandmother took me to Mr. Hyter's retirement party where they gave him a framed original sheet music
Very beautiful song, soulful, song of river ,song of life ,
Just wonderful to grow up with them❤💔🤩
James Hyter was fantastic singing this song. I've worked a venue several times during the Sunset Symphony in Memphis. Never saw him singing the entire song, but I sure heard him. Seems like everyone in hearing distance stopped what they were doing when he started singing. A moment to remember, always.
Four times I was the mate on the towboat pushing the fireworks barge & yeah we heard him out in the middle of the river channel.
Great times.
I've played it over and over just like Mr. Hyter sang it.
Listening to Mr. Hyter sing Ol' Man River is one of the few things I miss about Memphis!
The river kept us all alive and fed
....a complicated relationship ❤
wow! what a performance!
Thanks so much for posting this. I remember Mr. Hyter from the 80's. Lots of good memories of good Ol' Memphis. A true icon!
This gives me strength to believe in humanity
Beautifully sung. May he rest in peace.
Thanks for the info
Excellent performance!
Yes, this bring back memories of Memphis.
Brought tears to my eyes I remember watching this year after year as a child. THANK YOU Mr. Hyter! and Thank you to the poster as well!
I was born in 55. I spent the first 25 years of my life in the Memphis area. I'm from Byhalia Mississippi. Just 17 miles South South East of Memphis.
Brought tears to my eyes THANK YOU Mr. Hyter! and thank you to the poster as well.
I have loved this song ever since I heard PAUL ROBESON sing it in SHOWBOAT in 1956 I was 5 Years old, it has remained with me my whole life and I would play it for democrats to let them know that we know what they were all about and what they did with our African-American brothers and sisters and now this man has re-vamped it and it’s just as beautiful now as it was when I first heard it this man is just awesome thank you so much kind sir ❤
Memphis ♥️
My dad worked on the MS River as a teenager, and my granddad played with the Steamboat Strummers Banjo Group for years playing on these boats and other venues.
holy crap im in the video i was 10 this brings back the memories
I love this old version of this great old song. I would like to share it with my friends. Thanks to Lindy and Gerrald.
🙏❣️✌️🇺🇸LOVE THIS! RIP Covenant School Angels🇺🇸✌️❣️🙏
Wow.....thanks for posting this. Brought tears to this Memphian's eyes. And I'm sure to many others who had the privilege of seeing one of Mr Hyter's performances live.
Omg! I couldn't believe this..how I miss this and the great James Hyter and Alan Balter..wonderful video...
I always loved the goofy percussionists, too!
Beautiful
Old man River, old man River, the most beautiful song in the World. Lá Piu Bella canzone del mondo.
i miss singing with the symphony choir 1989-2001 but alan balter and james hyter were the best director and singer in all of america. the best times of my singing career was in the presents of these two very beautiful people. GOD BLESS AMERICA AND OBAMA.
@4:21 ...even that little Kid knows the words to this Song!
The most epic version of this song
Love this guy!! Best ever!!!
Excelente
Something about that Mississippi...
Wundervoll. ...💗
Beautiful voice. 🙏
One of the most distinguished non-commercial musicians of all time (he earned his living working for Blue Cross of Tennessee). I went down to Memphis in 1999, hoping to hear him play. But he orchestra director had died, and Mr. Hyter was not invited back to sing. When the symphony was over, the audience -- clearly dismayed that Old Man River had not been performed -- began to spontaneously sing, genuinely, yet in protest at the same time. The controllers of the park and bandshell cranked up some unrelated canned music to purposely drown out the audience. I never returned to Memphis in May. Shame on Memphis.
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Magnificent… nothing more to say .
❤
💞💞
Doc Esquire, those "idiots" screaming where cheering Mr. Hyter on. Especially during the favorite parts when hit bass notes few can achieve! He would've never seen it as anything but praise to his ability. Perhaps you needed to be there to understand. Keep in mind that Mr. Hyter, a beloved Memphian had just just finished his, I believe, 7th encore so the audience was hyped. Especially knowing this was the last time we'd ever hear Mr. Hyter at the Sunset Symphony. The only thing I didn't like about the fans in this video were the girls kicking as if this song doesn't deserve respect. Typically what happened after Mr. Hyter had an encore or two, and you can see & hear this in the video, people would stand, lock arms, sway and sing along for the next 4-5 encores. I encourage you to go back and watch it again and you'll both hear (during the chorus) and see what I just described. Here we are, all different races, walks of life & religions having picnics on our different blankets for hours & hours and not really talking to the people doing the same around us UNTIL Mr. Hyter appeared. He brought us together, arm in arm, bridging a gap still sometimes present in this city unfortunately. But during his time on stage we came together, listening, understanding and becoming one group. He was able to make 15,000+ people become as one for a moment each year at the end of May! It was worth losing your voice to cheer him on I assure you.
No, it wouldn't have been his seventh, because one year they actually had to institute a rule limiting his refrains to four repeats. We all loved him, and he loved us.
He got as many as 21 encores 1 year
@@robinnelsen7869 It was 7 I got to park my sister n laws van next to the stage because she was a quadriplegic.
Exactly. Very emotional time for Memphis. I also agree about the kicking.
Yeah, the can-can girls probably only listened to the "Old Man River..." portion of the song. The lyrics are quite miserable! And they've been somewhat censored. I can only imagine being stuck in the conundrum of being "Tired of living, and scared of dying...don't look up, and don't look down, you don't dare make, the mean boss frown". Misery. Not a dancing situation. However, the interlocking of arms, and swaying together with absolute strangers, of different races, in normally wet and muddy Memphis In May fashion; I think that is the exact response that the writer of this song, ammended and non-ammended, wished to evoke; solemnity and unification. I believe that Mr Hyter's version is superior to Mr Robeson's, in tonal and voice quality. I'm sitting here in 2020, looking at this, and I just don't understand why, 22 years later, my city is more divided than we were in May of 1998. RIP, Mr Hyter, Mr Balter. One last encore before bed...
If I'm not mistaken this was the TENTH encore that night!
TIMES KEEP ROLLING ON!
Maravillos version de una maravillosa cancon
Best audience out there
We sang this song on jump run when skydiving just before we jumped out of a perfectly good airplane and needlessly risked our lives. Oh wait, we were singing "Down by the River". Nevermind, good songs anyway.
Were you jumping out of West Tennessee Skydiving’s King Air?
No we were jumping out of John Robert's Twin Beech in Dallas Tx in 1973 and regrettably it was the same plane that Jim Croce's band crashed in Louisiana. @@Hazen75
Sometimes when I'm in the car my mom will sing Old Man River but she keeps forgetting the lines but ready on Scooby-Doo he was saying he said old man River and he cracked me up and my mom 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
This was also Maestro Balter's last conducting MSO.
The well deserved citation of William Warfield’s rendition of Old Man River in the film has photos of Paul Robeson. Robeson is most attached to this heartbreaking , timeless song. BUT he is different from Warfield - both magnificent, vocally & soulfully. It is my opinion that Paul Robeson would not support this interchange, one for the other. It is likely that more viewers saw the film with Warfield than saw Robeson. I feel strongly that the mention of Warfield on the internet be accompanied by images of him. And Robeson, of him. How blessed we are to have had that Showboat classic in the first place. Both renditions pull at the heartstrings, whether it’s heard for the first or 500th time. 🙏☯️
Der. SONG!! 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟✌️✌️✌️✌️💖💖💖💖
You just can't beat the original.
YK
WWWWOOOOOOOOWWWWWW
what a line "I'm tired of living, but scared of dying"
Incredible
@313BigDaddy I'm uploading the last song (this one) of James Hyter's 1992 concert, An Evening of Spirituals, at Auburn. It was an honor meeting and singing with him. The first song includes quite a bit of him speaking. I hope you enjoy the concert. (There is only one song, "Give Us This Day," that was damaged to where I couldn't upload it.) I can't post a link here, but you'll find them on my channel.
When I was a kid, I always thought the conductor was the coolest because he combined a tuxedo with long hair.
Not a single cellphone in the crowd!! See, you can really enjoy the experience without recording everything on a freaking phone while sharing it on FB..smh
Wonderful voice-magnificent performance-only spoiled by sanitized lyrics.
This is so awesome! I hope its okay that we used the audio track for video footage of the flooding Mississippi River. The video was marked as a response to you and I'm including it in my blog post that gives you credit.
sentiment
"In the evening light,I saw the waters of the Ohio mingle with those of the Mississippi.I had dreamed of the Mississippi listening to the 'Old Man River',...."""Simone de Beauvoir Force of CirCumtance'
Treasure 😢😢😢😢😢😢😅😅😅😂😂😂
13 people dislijked this!!!!??? Are you kidding me what are you tone deaf !!!???
hi mark
❤shamanta vinograd
It's me 4:21!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
+Timothy Endsley The kid??
O Ganga behti hai kuon.
Civilization defeats barbarism.
Why did he censor himself?
?
@@klagee1970 I’m guessing you don’t know the original lyrics to the song
@@sheikdagod9592 I guess not, but thanks for your reply. I understand your comment now. Can you tell me what part is changed?
Never mind, I got it, "other folks." Yeah, I guess it was the setting, the audience was always very white (which is a shame considering the city's demographics). I agree that he shouldn't have had to do that though. I hope at least it was his decision and they didn't make him change the lyrics.
@@klagee1970 The song is about a slave longing for freedom. Every reference to “white people” is changed to “mean”. Honestly speaking knowing the lyrics and understanding the meaning of the song seeing a bunch of drunk white people doing a can can is insulting as all hell.
I wish that the idiots in the crowd would stop shouting and let the man sing the song himself. Come on people...
Good singing Mr. Hyter. Rest in peace.