It’s late. Not much energy to
put finger to keyboard. I’m a sucker for
good singing and ‘Negro sprituals’. I found this record in the back of Sydney
bookshop several months ago. It’s hard to think of a mightier voice than Mr Robeson’s.
Enjoy and good night.
Paul Robeson was the epitome of the 20th-century Renaissance man. He was
an exceptional athlete, actor, singer, cultural scholar, author, and political
activist. His talents made him a revered man of his time, yet his radical
political beliefs all but erased him from popular history. Today, more than one
hundred years after his birth, Robeson is just beginning to receive the credit
he is due.
Born in 1898, Paul Robeson grew up in Princeton, New Jersey. His father
had escaped slavery and become a Presbyterian minister, while his mother was
from a distinguished Philadelphia family. At seventeen, he was given a
scholarship to Rutgers University, where he received an unprecedented twelve
major letters in four years and was his class valedictorian. After graduating
he went on to Columbia University Law School, and, in the early 1920s, took a
job with a New York law firm. Racial strife at the firm ended Robeson’s career
as a lawyer early, but he was soon to find an appreciative home for his
talents.
Returning to his love of public speaking, Robeson began to find work as
an actor. In the mid-1920s he played the lead in Eugene
O’Neill’s “All God’s Chillun Got Wings” (1924) and “The Emperor
Jones” (1925). Throughout the late 1920s and 1930s, he was a widely acclaimed
actor and singer. With songs such as his trademark “Ol’ Man River,” he became
one of the most popular concert singers of his time. His “Othello” was the
longest-running Shakespeare play in Broadway history, running for nearly three
hundred performances. It is still considered one of the great-American
Shakespeare productions. While his fame grew in the United States, he became
equally well-loved internationally. He spoke fifteen languages, and performed
benefits throughout the world for causes of social justice. More than any other
performer of his time, he believed that the famous have a responsibility to
fight for justice and peace.
As an actor, Robeson was one of the first black men to play serious
roles in the primarily white American theater. He performed in a number of
films as well, including a re-make of “The Emperor Jones” (1933) and “Song of
Freedom” (1936). In a time of deeply entrenched racism, he continually
struggled for further understanding of cultural difference. At the height of
his popularity, Robeson was a national symbol and a cultural leader in the war
against fascism abroad and racism at home. He was admired and befriended by
both the general public and prominent personalities, including Eleanor
Roosevelt, W.E.B. Du Bois, Joe Louis, Pablo Neruda, Lena Horne,
and Harry Truman. While his varied talents and his outspoken defense of civil
liberties brought him many admirers, it also made him enemies among
conservatives trying to maintain the status quo.
During the 1940s, Robeson’s black nationalist and anti-colonialist
activities brought him to the attention of Senator Joseph
McCarthy. Despite his contributions as an entertainer to the Allied
forces during World War II,
Robeson was singled out as a major threat to American democracy. Every attempt
was made to silence and discredit him, and in 1950 the persecution reached a
climax when his passport was revoked. He could no longer travel abroad to perform,
and his career was stifled. Of this time, Lloyd Brown, a writer and long-time
colleague of Robeson, states: “Paul Robeson was the most persecuted, the most
ostracized, the most condemned black man in America, then or ever.”
It was eight years before his passport was reinstated. A weary and
triumphant Robeson began again to travel and give concerts in England and
Australia. But the years of hardship had taken their toll. After several bouts
of depression, he was admitted to a hospital in London, where he was
administered continued shock treatments. When Robeson returned to the United
States in 1963, he was misdiagnosed several times and treated for a variety of
physical and psychological problems. Realizing that he was no longer the
powerful singer or agile orator of his prime, he decided to step out of the
public eye. He retired to Philadelphia and lived in self-imposed seclusion
until his death in 1976.
To this day, Paul Robeson’s many accomplishments remain obscured by the
propaganda of those who tirelessly dogged him throughout his life. His role in
the history of civil rights and as a spokesperson for the oppressed of other
nations remains relatively unknown. In 1995, more than seventy-five years after
graduating from Rutgers, his athletic achievements were finally recognized with
his posthumous entry into the College Football Hall of Fame. Though a handful
of movies and recordings are still available, they are a sad testament to one
of the greatest Americans of the twentieth century. If we are to remember Paul
Robeson for anything, it should be for the courage and the dignity with which
he struggled for his own personal voice and for the rights of all people.
Track
Listing:
01 Swing Low Sweet Chariot
02 I'm Gonna Let It Shine
03 Scandalize My Name
04 We Are Climbing Jacob's Ladder
05 Mount Zion
06 Amazing Grace
07 No More Auction Block For Me
08 Stand Still, Jordan
09 On Our Knees
10 Didn't My Lord Deliver Daniel
11 Unchanging Grace
12 Bear the Burden in the Heat of the
Day
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