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Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child

"Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child", also "Motherless Child", is a traditional spiritual. It dates back to the era of slavery in the United States.

This article is about the Negro spiritual. For the blues song, see Motherless Child Blues.

An early performance of the song was in the 1870s by the Fisk Jubilee Singers.[1][2] Commonly heard during the Civil rights movement in the United States,[3] it has many variations and has been recorded widely.

Description[edit]

The song is an expression of pain and despair as the singer compares their hopelessness to that of a child who has been torn from its parents. Under one interpretation, the repetition of the word "sometimes" offers a measure of hope, as it suggests that at least "sometimes" the singer does not feel like a motherless child.[4]

Multiple recordings of the song were made by , starting in 1926.[5]

Paul Robeson

at negrospirituals.com

Lyrics as by J. W. Johnson & J. R. Johnson (1926)

musical work quoting the spiritual by African-American composer George Walker

Art of the States: Piano Sonata No. 4

a 1976 work for tenor and tape by Olly Wilson, based on the spiritual.

Sometimes