In 2020, Google played a spoken word version of the song in a Google Doodle celebrating the Juneteenth holiday, performed by LeVar Burton. In May 2018, this song was sung by the Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square during their worldwide broadcast of "Music and the Spoken Word" at the request of the National Executive Board of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) who was holding its board meetings in Salt Lake City that year. On April 14, 2018, Beyoncé included the song in the setlist of her concert at Coachella and as part of the resultant concert film and live album. On October 19, 2017, when white supremacist leader Richard Spencer spoke at the University of Florida, the university's carillon played "Lift Every Voice and Sing" to convey a message of unity. On September 24, 2016, the song was sung by mezzo-soprano Denyce Graves and chorus at the conclusion of the opening ceremonies of the National Museum of African American History and Culture, at which Obama delivered the keynote address. The family of Barack Obama, Smokey Robinson and others singing "Lift Every Voice and Sing" in the White House in 2014 Joseph Lowery, a civil rights movement leader who co-founded and is a former president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, used a near-verbatim recitation of the song's third stanza to begin his benediction at the inauguration ceremony for President Barack Obama. This arrangement of the words of "Lift Every Voice and Sing" with the melody of " The Star-Spangled Banner" became part of the titular suite on her 2011 CD release, The Voice of My Beautiful Country. In 2008, jazz singer Rene Marie was asked to perform the national anthem at a civic event in Denver, Colorado, where she caused a controversy by substituting the words of "Lift Every Voice and Sing" into the song. It was also added to the National Recording Registry in 2016. In 1990, singer Melba Moore released a modern rendition of the song, which she recorded along with others including R&B artists Stephanie Mills, Freddie Jackson, Anita Baker, Dionne Warwick, Bobby Brown, Stevie Wonder, Jeffrey Osborne, and Howard Hewett and gospel artists BeBe & CeCe Winans, Take 6, and The Clark Sisters, after which, "Lift Every Voice and Sing" was entered into the Congressional Record by Del. The 1989 film Do the Right Thing features a 30-second cover of the song, played on a solo saxophone by Branford Marsalis, during the opening logos.
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The music direction and recording was overseen by Stax Records engineer Terry Manning. This performance was included in the film Wattstax made by Wolper Films. In 1972, Kim Weston sang the song as the opening number for the Wattstax Festival at the Coliseum in Los Angeles. In Maya Angelou's 1969 autobiography, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, the song is sung by the audience and students at Maya's eighth-grade graduation, after a white school official dashes the educational aspirations of her class. The 1939 film Keep Punching features the song.
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Like other Fair temporary installations, the sculpture was destroyed at the close of the fair. Savage did not have funds to have it cast in bronze or to move and store it. In 1939, Augusta Savage received a commission from the New York World's Fair and created a 16-foot (4.9 m) plaster sculpture called Lift Every Voice and Sing. It was added to the National Recording Registry in 2016.
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In 1923, the male gospel group Manhattan Harmony Four recorded the song as "Lift Every Voice and Sing (National Negro Anthem)". The song is a prayer of thanksgiving for faithfulness and freedom, with imagery evoking the biblical Exodus from slavery to the freedom of the "promised land." It is featured in 39 different Christian hymnals, and is sung in churches across North America. In 1919, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) dubbed it "the Negro national anthem" for its power in voicing a cry for liberation and affirmation for African-American people. "Lift Every Voice and Sing" was publicly performed first as part of a celebration of Abraham Lincoln's birthday.