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I am not sure of the spelling, but we sang it in Girl Scout Camp many years ago, and my grand-daughter wants to know what it means. It starts out - Someone's crying Lord - Kum By A...........
Any input would be appreciated.

2006-10-11 01:05:17 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Languages

5 answers

"Kumbaya" (also spelled Kum Ba Yah) is a song composed by Reverend Marvin V. Frey (1918 – 1992) in the 1930s in New York City. Originally titled "Come By Here", it first appeared in "Revival Choruses of Marvin V. Frey", a lyric sheet printed in Portland, Oregon in 1939. In 1946 the song returned from Africa with a missionary family, who toured America singing the song with its now world famous angolan text "Kum Ba Yah".

Sometimes the song is believed to be an original spiritual, 19th century African American folk song, originating among the Gullah, a group descended from enslaved Africans living on the Sea Islands of South Carolina and Georgia, but there is no evidence of the song before Frey's publication.

The song enjoyed newfound popularity during the folk revival of the 1960s, largely due to Joan Baez' 1962 recording of the song, and became associated with the civil rights struggles of that decade.
It is a standard campfire song in Scouting, YMCA, the Indian Guides, and others


You can listen to a short version here: http://www.songsforteaching.com/folk/kumbayah.htm

2006-10-11 01:08:41 · answer #1 · answered by Pti vampire 2 · 3 1

Certainly "come by here'-- implies the place of The Lord

2015-10-29 08:40:40 · answer #2 · answered by K, W 1 · 0 0

I think it means come by here.

2006-10-11 01:45:04 · answer #3 · answered by RB 7 · 1 0

I don't think I could expand any more than the first answer!!

2006-10-11 01:13:00 · answer #4 · answered by shellbugger 5 · 0 1

come near here! seriously.

2006-10-11 01:12:45 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

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