Cover art for Birmingham by Blood Orange

Birmingham

Jul. 12, 20191 viewer9.1K views

Birmingham Lyrics

[Verse: Kelsey Lu]
For when she heard the explosion
Her eyes grew wet and wild
She raced through the streets of Birmingham
Calling for her child
She clawed through the bits of glass and brick
Then lifted out a shoe
Oh, here's the shoe my baby wore
But baby, where are you?


[Refrain: Ian Isiah]
My baby, yeah
My baby, where are you?
Oh, oh, oh
My baby, oh, oh-woah
My baby, my baby, where are you? Oh
My baby
Oh, my baby
My baby, my baby, where are you?

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About

This song bio is unreviewed
Genius Annotation

This song is a tribute to the four children who were killed in the white supremacist 16th St. Baptist Church Bombing that happened on Sunday, September 15, 1963, in Birmingham, Alabama. The lyrics are taken directly from the poem by Randall Dunn called “The Ballad of Birmingham.”
The text is written from the perspective of the mother of Denise McNair, one of the four girls who were killed by the blast. Maxine Pippen McNair, her mother, famously found the shoe of her daughter while searching for her in the building’s wreckage. This personal detail has been inextricably linked to the public’s consciousness of this atrocity due in part to a piece written by journalist and civil right’s advocate Gene Patterson. Originally written for and published in the Atlanta Constitution, the piece was read aloud by Walter Cronkite on the CBS Evening News on following Monday.

“A Negro mother wept in the street Sunday morning in front of a Baptist Church in Birmingham. In her hand she held a shoe, one shoe, from the foot of her dead child. We hold that shoe with her.

Every one of us in the white South holds that small shoe in his hand.

It is too late to blame the sick criminals who handled the dynamite. The FBI and the police can deal with that kind. The charge against them is simple. They killed four children.

Only we can trace the truth, Southerner — you and I. We broke those children’s bodies.

We watched the stage set without staying it. We listened to the prologue unbestirred. We saw the curtain opening with disinterest. We have heard the play.

We — who go on electing politicians who heat the kettles of hate.

We — who raise no hand to silence the mean and little men who have their nigger jokes.

We — who stand aside in imagined rectitude and let the mad dogs that run in every society slide their leashes from our hand, and spring.

We — the heirs of a proud South, who protest its worth and demand it recognition — we are the ones who have ducked the difficult, skirted the uncomfortable, caviled at the challenge, resented the necessary, rationalized the unacceptable, and created the day surely when these children would die."

-Gene Patteron, September 16, 1963
via

Q&A

Find answers to frequently asked questions about the song and explore its deeper meaning

What did Blood Orange say about "Birmingham"?
Genius Answer

I wanted this to feel like an abrupt new chapter. I had it cut into the end of ‘Benzo’ so it felt like kicking the door down. The lyrics are actually a poem called ‘Ballad of Birmingham’ by Dudley Randall, about the church bombing in the early 1960s. I had heard renditions of music set to those words before and they always stuck with me. Even if people aren’t aware of what the words are about, my hope is that the music will drive home a sense of grief and anguish. It’s powerful.

Via: Apple Music

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