Josh White had a remarkable talent for self-reinvention, and his career -- which began in the 1920s and stretched essentially uninterrupted all the way into the 1960s -- is an amazing story of adaptability and survival. Slick, sly, and fiercely intelligent,
White became a sort of pre-
Harry Belafonte black sex idol, complete with a leftist social and political agenda, during his so-called cabaret blues period in the late '40s, and when the
McCarthy era led to his blacklisting, he rebounded into the folk revival period with several carefully assembled albums for
Jac Holzman's Elektra label that recast him as a folk balladeer. Although some folk purists were aghast, doubting
White's authenticity as a folk-blues performer, the fact remains that
White was an excellent acoustic guitar player and a subtle and versatile singer who carefully selected his material, well aware of how it made him appear. This 25-song set of mono recordings comes from
White's cabaret period and features recordings he made for the London, Decca, Asch, and Melodisc labels between 1945 and 1951. The range of styles here is telling, as
White rolls all manner of songs, from light gospel to small-combo jazz and blues, into a kind of folky high art. Highlights include a folk-jazz rendition of
W.C. Handy's "Careless Love," complete with clarinet lines from
Sidney Bechet, a stark reading of
Billie Holiday's "Strange Fruit," and one of the first commercial recordings of what would later become a folk revival staple, "The Riddle Song." Also worth noting are "One Meatball," an odd song based on a ballad from the 1800s called "The Lone Fish Ball," which
White turned into an underground hit, and his small-combo jazz take on
Bill Weldon's classic "I'm Gonna Move to the Outskirts of Town." Fiercely independent, and always in control of his own image in an era when black performers were seldom afforded that luxury,
White helped pave the way for
Belafonte, who followed the same sort of template to international stardom a mere half dozen years after these recordings were made.