Stan’ Steady

“Stan’ Steady” is a spiritual arrangement for voice and piano by Eva Jessye. The song is the sixth arrangement included in Jessye’s book My Spirituals (1927). In the song’s preface, Jessye describes how she associates this song with the Switzler children—her childhood neighbors. The Switzler family moved into an old, dilapidated house that was rumored to be haunted, yet they decided to stay despite their neighbors warnings about their chosen residence. The Switzlers kept mostly to themselves, and Jessye soon learned that they were reclusive not because of an aversion to society, but because they were ashamed of their poverty. Jessye and a few other neighborhood children soon befriended the Swiztler children, who Jessye described as knowing “more clever songs, rounds, and ditties than we had ever heard before.” One of these songs—and the one that impressed Jessye the most—was “Stan’ Steady.”

Date: 1927Composer: Eva JessyeText: SpiritualSong Collection: My Spirituals

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Text

Stan’ steady,

Stan’ steady bretheren

Stan’ steady,

Doan mind what Satan says:

 

Stan’ steady,

Stan’ steady bretheren

Stan’ steady,

Doan’ mind what Satan says:

 

Satans’ de man wid de iron shoe,

Doan mind what Satan says:

If you doan mine gwine to clamp it on you,

Doan mind what Satan says:

 

Satan thought he had me down,

Doan mind what Satan says:

I thank God I’m a heaven boun’,

Doan mind what Satan says:

 

Stan’ steady,

Stan’ steady bretheren

Stan’ steady,

Doan’ mind what Satan says:

 

Source: Jessye, Eva. My Spirituals. New York: Robbins-Engel, 1927.

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