A 20th century renaissance man,
Paul Robeson was an actor, singer, writer, scholar, activist, and intellectual with a degree from the Columbia University law school. He also suffered no fools, and his outspoken views on racism and McCarthyism eventually led to his blacklisting in the 1950s, a situation
Robeson met with characteristic dignity and resilience. When no label would record him, he started his own imprint, Othello Records, and recorded some 100 tracks and released three LPs (Robeson Sings, Solid Rock, and Let Freedom Ring) between 1954 and 1958, generally to spare piano accompaniment by either
Lawrence Brown or
Alan Booth. Eventually Monitor Records picked up some of these tracks for a pair of LPs in 1958,
Favorite Songs and
Encore Robeson, which became the first dents in
Robeson's situation on the blacklist, which was smashed entirely when Vanguard Records picked him up a year later. Throughout this period,
Robeson found himself being harassed by the U.S. government in myriad ways, but he responded with diligence, determination, and the kind of personal grace that
Senator McCarthy could only dream about. Now these independent recordings, most of them produced by
Robeson's son
Paul Robeson, Jr. and many recorded in friends' apartments, are fittingly a part of the Smithsonian/Folkways catalog, and a generous sampling of them is included here.
Robeson's deep voice and theatrical singing style sound quaint at first, but as he tackles these traditional spirituals and folk songs, most of which concern themselves with faith, hope, and freedom, the full range of this man's vision becomes clear: one love, one world, as
Bob Marley would put it over a decade later. Among the highlights here are versions of
Dvorák's "Songs My Mother Taught Me," the powerful and majestic "Takin' Names," a probably definitive "Joe Hill," and a resonant take on "No More Auction Block for Me," a song that became the melodic template for "We Shall Overcome," and speeded up, for
Bob Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind," plus a wonderful version of "Hammer Song" done with the harmonica-and-guitar team of
Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee.
Robeson's performing style and approach clearly belong to the early 20th century, but his convictions, vision, and unerring and diligent activism place him intellectually at the close of it.
Robeson blazed the path that
Harry Belafonte,
Joan Baez, and many others would follow in the 1960s, and truthfully, provides a road map for 21st century agitators like
Rage Against the Machine. A true American treasure and icon,
Paul Robeson's work belongs at Smithsonian/Folkways, which will always keep it available and in print.