1. |
The Progressive Campaign
01:02
|
|||
2. |
The Path
03:02
|
|||
The Path (lyrics and music : Tim Hunter)
Sat beneath a tree
Surrounded by beauty
And tranquility
What can I do what can I be
Now I am carefree
No responsibility
Dewdrops are all I want to see
But something is calling me
What difference can I make?
Can I solve all the heartbreak?
We’re sleeping, why can’t we wake?
Which path should I take?
|
||||
3. |
Put Your Trust In Me
03:30
|
|||
Put Your Trust In Me (Lyrics and music: Tim Hunter)
A Third man? Now we’ll have to have an election!
My name is Wilberforce, can I count on your support?
On election day, it isn’t far away
I’m standing for this county, to represent you
Will you vote for me?
Can I count on your support?
These are my policies:
I stand for liberty, Bring an end to cruelty
I stand for dignity
I’m standing for this county
Will you put your trust in me?
Put me in Parliament and
I will represent you all
My name is Wilberforce
Can I count on your support
Give it some thought
Chorus:
Won’t you Put your trust in me
Put your trust in me
I’ll serve his majesty
He’ll have my loyality
With a majority
I’ll serve this constituency
Standing for this county
Won’t you put your trust in me
I’m independent
If I’m in parliament
Won’t be in Government
My name is Wilberforce
Can I count on your support?
Give it some thought
Chorus:
Won’t you Put your trust in me
Put your trust in me
M8
Put your trust in me
I’ll stand against Immorality
Put Your Trust in me
I will stand up for equality
I’ll use all my ability
To stand up for this county
Declaration of the count for the county of Yorkshire in 1807:
I do hereby give notice that the number of votes recorded for each Candidate at the said election is as follows:
William Wilberforce (Independent) 11,808, Lord Milton (Whig) 11,177
Henry Lascelles (Tory) 10,990
And I do hereby declare that William Wilberforce and Lord Milton are duly elected to serve the county of Yorkshire.
Thank you
You put your trust in me
|
||||
4. |
I Got Religion
03:04
|
|||
I Got Religion (lyrics and music Tim Hunter )
I’ve wasted precious time
But I’ve found my way
Now I’ve found my faith I won’t waste another day
I’ll be an advocate for truth, I’ll do what I say
Turn principles to action, for the hearts of men I’ll pray
I Got Religion – I have seen the light
I Got Religion – I will do what’s right
Got Religion – I will fight this fight
Got religion – stop this endless night
Got religion, Got religion, Got religion
No more hangin’ round the clubs , but I’m still gonna sing
Now I’ve found my purpose , enlightenment I’ll bring
We need social improvement and I’ll be campaigning
To end the immorality and excessive drinking
I got religion
I will devote my life from now on
To resolve the situation
I’ve seen the light
Oh I’ve seen the light
I got religion, I got religion
I Got Religion – I have seen the light
Got Religion – I will do what’s right
Got Religion – I will fight the fight
Got religion – stop this endless night
Got religion, Got religion, Got religion
|
||||
5. |
Break The Chains
03:19
|
|||
Break The Chains
You’ve got the money, you’ve got your fame
You’ve got the contacts, let’s start a campaign
Let’s get together and stop this this stain
Let’s all work togther and fight this shame
Let’s Break The Chains Break The Chains
Let’s Make the Change , Make the change
Let’s Break The Chains Break The Chains
Let’s Make the Change , Make the change
You’ve been elected, but you need an aim
You are respected, so use your name
Let’s all get together and stop their games
All because the people want their sugarcane
I’m travelling across this land canvassing for support
To end this evil slavery it’s the noblest cause we’ve fought
|
||||
6. |
||||
Many years ago, when he was a young boy, William came to hear me preaching. I still remembered him and was surprised when he came to see me, as an adult, looking for advice. By then he was a famous MP.
He told me his faith had returned, but he was having self doubts about his worthiness and ability to uphold his beliefs – and that he’d been asked to take on the slavers.
I told him not to live a life of solitude. I told him that God would bring a calm and tranquil state to his troubled mind. I knew the Lord would make him a Christian and a Statesman. How seldom do those characters coincide - but they are not incompatible. I encouraged him to persue the campaign to abolish slavery. I told him that we needed him in Parliament to carry out this noble task. I persuaded him to combine his religious beliefs with a continued political career.
|
||||
7. |
Equiano
03:10
|
|||
Equiano
He was taken from his native land
By an unjust and cruel band
Through his writings he made it known
The cruel treatment he’d been shown
Equiano, Equiano
And so he cried ‘Help Me Lord’
Some mitigation please afford
Many Times he felt despair
While the songs of birds filled the air
Equiano, Equiano
He even bought his freedom but still found
He was just thrown back down on the ground
His strivings all seemed in vain
Nothing he did could ease his pain.
Equiano, Equiano
|
||||
8. |
Loyal To The Crown
03:21
|
|||
If you’re an advocate for change
Then help the working man
Workers are just slaves
I’m doing what I can
You didn’t denounce Peterloo
You’re supported the repression
Is this really your view?
We fear revolution
Chorus
Let’s tear the system down
No – stay Loyal To The Crown
Let’s bring it to the ground
No – stay Loyal To The Crown
Let’s turn it all around
No – stay Loyal To The Crown.
I remain Loyal To The Crown
The country is divided, Civil War could soon begin , Why are you so misguided
I’ll fight it from within
What about your countrymen
Why can’t you help them more
With their dire situation
We need the rule of law
Chorus
I’m not a radical, Believe in what is possible
Change has to be gradual, I’m not fanatical
And I am practical, change has to be gradual
Chorus; We’ll achieve nothing unless we stay Loyal To The Crown
|
||||
9. |
||||
When I heard William Wlberforce was contemplating retirement from public life , I sent him a letter. I stated that it was impossible to measure the good he was doing in parliament. The example, even the presence of a consistent character has a powerful effect on others. I told him, it is true you live in the midst of difficulties and snares - and you need a double guard of watchfulness and prayer
‘I told him - you are not only a representative for Yorkshire you have the far greater honour of being a representative for the Lord – I encouraged Wilberforce to stay in Parliament and "serve God where he was".
|
||||
10. |
The Path (Reprise)
02:41
|
|||
The Path (reprise)
Dundas (in parliament): Mr Speaker, I support this motion.However, I propose an amendment:I propose that abolition is carried out gradually and experimentally, to prove the practicability of abolition of the trade.
Clarkson: I thought I’d find you here, Wilb.
You can’t give up now you know
Wilberforce: Gradual abolition? That means it’ll never happen, Thomas
Clarkson
Don’t underestimate
The difference that you make
You must stay on this path
For everybody’s sake
Please complete this task
You must stay on this track
You must stay on this path
There ain’t no turnin back
I know what is at stake
And the difference I can make
We’re sleeping, but we’ll wake
This path I will take
I’m bringing forward my Bill to Parliament, calling for the abolition of the slave trade throughout the British Empire.
|
||||
11. |
The Vote
04:11
|
|||
Scene: House of commons 1807, a rowdy group of MPs are Debating the Slave Trade Act
The Speaker ‘William Wilberforce!’
Wilberforce: ‘Mr Speaker, I would like to bring to the attention of this house an evil trade founded in iniquity. I am speaking of the Slave Trade. [noise] I know that many honourable members in this house have interests in this trade. But I believe them to be men of humanity. I believe that if the wretchedness of this trade could be brought before their view, they would not persist with the trade (drowned out by noise from MPs)
‘The Speaker: Order! Order!
Colonel Tarleton!’
Tarleton: ‘Mr Speaker, it would appear that my honourable young friend, who appeased the Americans, while I fought them, now wants to hand over the wealth of the Indies to the French! Does he not understand that if we were disposed to sacrifice our African trade, other nations would not enter into so ruinous a plan – and they would reap the rewards!’
(Noise from MPs)
The Speaker: Order! Order! (chamber goes silent) Tarleton (Contd) ‘Mr Speaker, abolition would instantly annihilate a trade which annually employs upwards of 5,500 men and upwards of 160 ships and a huge amount of exports. Without it we couldn’t fill the coffers of the King! It would bring financial disaster to many great cities in the country.’
(Noise from MPs)
The Speaker ‘William Wilberforce!’
Wilberforce: ‘Mr Speaker, I am confident that the people of Great Britain would want to abolish the slave trade if its injustice and cruelty was made clear to them. (noise from MPs) Indeed we have a petition in support of abolition, signed by hundreds of thousands of people!
The Speaker: Order! Order!
Wilberforce: There is no doubt in my mind that the slave trade is so dreadful, so irredeemable in its wickedness, that abolition is the only option! I therefore urge my honourable friends to vote once and for all for the abolition of the slave trade throughout His Majesty’s empire’
Noise from MPs
The Speaker: ‘Order! Order! Division! Clear the lobbies!’
(Sounds of voting – tension grows - 'The Progressive Campaign' music plays)
The Speaker: ‘Order! On the Slave Trade Act, the Bill calling for the abolition of the slave trade throughout the British Empire, the votes are as follows: Ayes to the right 283 , Noes to the left 16. The Ayes have it! The Ayes have it!
(Cheers)
The Speaker: I declare the bill for the abolition of the slave trade to be passed.
Thomas Clarkson: ‘Wilb, why did 16 vote against?’
Wilberforce: ‘Never mind the miserable 16, Thomas, think of the glorious 283!’
Clarkson: What shall we abolish next ?
Wilberforce: The lottery I think
(Noise dies away)
|
||||
12. |
Wilberforce
03:34
|
|||
Wilberforce
Wilberforce – can change the course of history
Only Wilberforce – can stop this evil slavery
You may choose to look the other way
But you can never say you did not know
Great indeed are opportunities;
Great also is our responsibility
Wilberforce – can change the course of history
God Almighty has set before me Two Great Objectives:
The suppression of the Slave Trade And the Reformation of Manners.
Selfishness makes us overate our qualities And overlook our defects
We are too young to realize things are impossible... So we’ll do them anyway.
Wilberforce – can change the course of history Only Wilberforce – can stop this evil slavery
If to be alive to the sufferings of my fellow creatures, is to be a fanatic,
then I’m one of the most incurable fanatics ever permitted to be alive.
Wilberforce – can change the course of history Only Wilberforce – can stop this evil slavery
|
||||
13. |
West Africa Squadron
02:46
|
|||
West Africal Squadron
Transatlantic Enforcement
With the West Africa
The West Africa Squadron
Transatlantic Enforcement
With the West Africa
The West Africa Squadron
We won at Trafalgar
And we defeated the Armada
Don’t see why this will be harder
We can turn back those boats
With forces afloat
Transatlantic Enforcement
Like the West Africa
West Africal Squadron
Transatlantic Enforcement
With the West Africa
West Africal Squadron
And so we had a mission
To police the Abolition
And so we had solutions
Like patrolling the seas
With our Powerful navy
It never gets a mention, but we had good intentions
We carried out prevention
Like patrolling the seas, with our powerful navy
|
||||
14. |
||||
.I’d become an ally of William Wilberforce, who’d gecome the leader of the Parliamentary campaign to abolish the African slave trade. I always remember William liked to sing one of my hymns. It was Faith's Review and Expectation," which has come to be known by its opening phrase, "Amazing Grace" and it was first performed in 1773.
I thank the Lord I lived to witness the culmination of a campaign which transformned the lives of millions - the British passage of the Slave Trade Act 1807 in Parlament.
|
||||
15. |
Amazing Grace
03:29
|
|||
Amazing Grace how sweet the sound That saved a wretch like me
I once was lost, but now I'm found I was blind but now I see
Now I see, Now I see
'Twas grace that taught my heart to fear And grace my fears relieved
How precious did that grace appear The hour I first believed
These verses are taken from 'Faith's Review and Expectation',which has come to be known by its opening phrase, "Amazing Grace". John Newton wrote the hymn and it was published as part of the Olney Hymns in 1779 and first performed in 1773.
|
||||
16. |
My Faith
03:16
|
|||
My Faith, Keeps me fighting on, My Faith ,
Keeping me so strong
Faith and Conviction
Help me get by when things are going wrong
Faith and Conviction
Help me get by when all my hope has gone
My Faith Has Been Tested, So Many Times
But I have never rested, This Mountain I will climb
With My Faith
My Faith, Keeps me singing songs
My Faith, Is my salvation
Faith and Conviction
Helps me get by when things are going wrong
Faith and Conviction
Helps me get by when all my hope has gone
My Faith Has Been Tested So Many Times
But I have never rested ,This Mountain I will climb
With My Faith
My Faith is my Rock, it will save my Soul
My Faith is my Rock, it’s my Rock and Roll
|
Tim Hunter Knaresborough, UK
'Through his musical albums, Knaresborough composer Tim Hunter helps bring to life the stories and legends of Yorkshire's
rich heritage.' Yorkshire Post 1st May 2020.
Tim Hunter is a singer/songwriter/producer. His musical compositions range from pop ballads through to classic rock and have been enjoyed by audiences both in Europe and the United States.
... more
Streaming and Download help
Tim Hunter recommends:
If you like Tim Hunter, you may also like: