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Paul Robeson - The Man They Couldn't Silence (2007/2019)

Paul Robeson - The Man They Couldn't Silence (2007/2019)

BAND/ARTIST: Paul Robeson

  • Title: The Man They Couldn't Silence
  • Year Of Release: 2007/2019
  • Label: Cherry Red Records
  • Genre: Blues, Folk, Pop
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:19:38
  • Total Size: 274 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Summertime
02. A Woman Is A Sometime Thing
03. It Ain't Necessarily So
04. It Takes A Long Pull To Get There
05. Land Of My Fathers
06. The Song Of Freedom
07. Sleepy River
08. Lonely Road
09. Deep River
10. Ol' Man River
11. Trees
12. Solitude
13. St. Louis Blues
14. Mighty Lak' A Rose
15. Mood Indigo
16. Rockin' Chair
17. River Stay 'Way From My Door
18. The Cobbler's Song
19. Lazy Bones
20. Gloomy Sunday
21. I Still Suits Me
22. Short'nin' Bread
23. Killing Song
24. Carry Me Back To Green Pastures
25. Go Down Moses
26. Joshus Fit Battle Of Jericho
27. Jerusalem
28. Mah Lindy Lou

Paul Robeson's recorded musical legacy has been parceled out over the years on many different LP and CD compilations. Although the liner notes to Rev-Ola's 28-track Robeson sampler emphasize the singer's remarkable social awareness, the song selection reflects his stylistic diversity rather than strictly focusing upon songs of struggle and dissent. An operatic basso who handled spirituals, gospel, protest songs, show tunes, pop melodies, and jazz standards with equal and unwavering facility, Robeson is also remembered as a fearless and outspoken political activist. The son of a slave who escaped captivity and became a minister, Robeson founded the American Crusade Against Lynching in 1948. In the days before his passport was revoked, Robeson went to the Iberian Peninsula during the Spanish Civil War and sang for the people, then protested the Non-Intervention Agreement (a policy that essentially benefited the fascist Generalissimo Franco) in 1937. Robeson was treated with respect when he toured Russia, and like Pablo Neruda made the mistake of initially assuming that his own experience reflected the reality of everyday life in the Stalinist Soviet Union; Neruda later said: "A moment in the darkness does not blind us." Robeson then stubbornly refused to revise his public utterances about the U.S.S.R. in order to avoid aligning himself with U.S. Cold War militarism. Note that during his Russian tour, smack in the middle of one of Stalin's anti-Semitic campaigns, Robeson sang in Yiddish the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising song, which begins with the words "Zog nit keynmol az du gueist dem letztn veg" ("Never say that you are walking on your last road"). Back home in the U.S.A., Robeson was banned from television at a time when he was a vital force in the burgeoning Civil Rights Movement. The rest of his story is progressively sad and heartbreaking. The printed information provided with this disc is most inspiring, particularly Robeson's own epitaph that is carved into his tombstone: "The artist must elect to fight for freedom or slavery. I have made my choice. I had no alternative." This is posted on the CD insert beneath a quote from Robeson's eulogy, spoken by Lloyd Brown at the singer's funeral service in 1976: "How fortunate we were to have had Paul Robeson walk the earth among us. As artist and man he was a prophetic vision of how wondrously beautiful the human race may yet become. Now he belongs to the future."


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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 01:25
    • Like
    • 0
Many thanks.