"I love the development of our music, that's what I
really dig about the whole thing. How we've tried
to develop, y'know? It grows. That's why every day
people come forward with new songs. Music goes on
forever."
--Bob Marley, August 1979
Bob Marley - One Love (spanish subtitles)
We remember the brilliant and evocative music Bob Marley gave
the world; music that stretches back over nearly two decades
and still remains timeless and universal. Marley has been
called "the first Third World superstar," "Rasta Prophet,"
"visionary," and" "revolutionary artist." These accolades were
not mere hyperbole. Marley was one of the most charismatic and
challenging performers of our time.
Bob Marley's career stretched back over twenty years. During
that time Marley's growing style encompassed every aspect in
the rise of Jamaican music, from ska to contemporary reggae.
That growth was well reflected in the maturity of the Wailers'
music.
Bob's first recording attempts came at the beginning of the
Sixties. His first two tunes, cut as a solo artist, meant
nothing in commercial terms and it wasn't until 1964, as a
founding member of a group called the Wailing Wailers, that
Bob first hit the Jamaican charts.
[Bob Marley Photo]
The record was "Simmer Down," and over the next few years the
Wailing Wailers -- Bob, Peter Mclntosh and Bunny Livingston,
the nucleus of the group -- put out some 30 sides that
properly established them as one of the hottest groups in
Jamaica. Mclntosh later shortened his surname to Tosh while
Livingston is now called Bunny Wailer.
Despite their popularity, the economics of keeping the group
together proved too much and the two other members, Junior
Braithwaite and Beverley Kelso, left the group. At the same
time Bob joined his mother in the United States. This marked
the end of the Wailing Wailers, Chapter One.
Marley's stay in America was short-lived, however, and he
returned to Jamaica to join up again with Peter and Bunny. By
the end of the Sixties, with the legendary reggae producer Lee
"Scratch" Perry at the mixing desk, The Wailers were again
back at the top in Jamaica. The combination of the Wailers and
Perry resulted in some of the finest music the band ever made.
Tracks like "Soul Rebel," "Duppy Conquerer," "400 Years," and
"Small Axe" were not only classics, but they defined the
future direction of reggae.
[Bob Marley Photo]
It's difficult to properly understand Bob Marley's music
without considering Rastafari. His spiritual beliefs are too
well known to necessitate further explanation. It must be
stated, however, that Rastafari is at the very core of the
Wailers' music.
In 1970 Aston Familyman Barrett and his brother Carlton (bass
and drums, respectively) joined the Wailers. They came to the
band unchallenged as Jamaica's HARDEST rhythm section; a
reputation that was to remain undiminished during the
following decade. Meanwhile, the band's own reputation was, at
the start of the Seventies, an extraordinary one throughout
the Caribbean. However, the band was still unknown
internationally.
That was to change in 1972 when the Wailers signed to Island
Records. It was a revolutionary move for an international
record company and a reggae band. For the first time a reggae
band had access to the best recording facilities and were
treated in the same way as a rock group. Before the Wailers
signed to Island, it was considered that reggae sold only on
singles and cheap compilation albums. The Wailer's first
album, Catch A Fire broke all the rules: it was beautifully
packaged and heavily promoted. And it was the start of a long
climb to international fame and recognition.
[Bob Marley Photo]
The Catch A Fire album was followed a year later by Burnin',
an LP that included some of the band's older songs, such as "Duppy
Conquerer," "Small Axe," and "Put In On," together with tracks
like "Get Up Stand Up" and "I Shot The Sheriff" (which was
also recorded by Eric Clapton, who had a #1 hit with it in
America).
In 1975 Bob Marley & The Wailers released the extraordinary
Natty Dread album, and toured Europe that summer. The shows
were recorded and the subsequent live album, together with the
single, "No Woman No Cry," both made the UK charts. By that
time Bunny and Peter had officially left the band to pursue
their own solo careers.
Rastaman Vibration, the follow-up album in 1976, cracked the
American charts. It was, for many, the clearest exposition yet
of Marley's music and beliefs, including such tracks as "Crazy
Baldhead," "Johnny Was," "Who The Cap Fit" and, perhaps most
significantly of all, "War," the Iyrics of which were taken
from a speech by Emperor Haile Selassie.
[Bob Marley Photo]
In 1977 Exodus was released, which established Marley's
international superstar status. It remained on the British
charts for 56 straight weeks, and netted three UK hit singles,
"Exodus," "Waiting In Vain," and "Jamming."
In 1978 the band released Kaya, which hit number four on the
UK chart the week of its release. That album saw Marley in a
different mood -- Kaya was an album of love songs, and, of
course, homages to the power of ganja.
There were two more events in 1978, both of which were of
extraordinary significance to Marley. In April that year he
returned to Jamaica (he had left in 1976 after the shooting
that had almost cost him his life), to play the One Love Peace
Concert in front of the Prime Minister Michael Manley, and the
then Leader of the Opposition Edward Seaga. And at the end of
the year he visited Africa for the first time, going initially
to Kenya and then on to Ethiopia, spiritual home of Rastafari.
Marley returned to Africa in 1980 at the official initation of
the Government of Zimbabwe to play at that country's
Independence Ceremony. It was the greatest honor afforded the
band, and one which underlined the Wailers' importance in the
Third World.
[Bob Marley Photo]
In 1979 the Survival LP was released. A European tour came the
following year: the band broke festival records throughout the
continent, including a 100,000 capacity show in Milan. Bob
Marley & the Wailers were now the most important band on the
road that year and the new Uprising album hit every chart in
Europe. It was a period of maximum optimism and plans were
being made for an American tour, an opening slot with Stevie
Wonder for the following winter.
At the end of the European tour, Bob Marley & The Wailers went
to America. Bob played two shows at Madison Square Garden but,
immediately afterwards he was seriously ill. Cancer was
diagnosed.
Marley fought the disease for eight months. The battle,
however, proved to be too much. He died in a Miami Hospital on
May 11,1981.
A month before the end Bob was awarded Jamaica's Order of
Merit, the nations' third highest honor, in recognition of his
outstanding contribution to the country's culture.
On Thursday, May 23,1981, the Honorable Robert Nesta Marley
was given an official funeral by the people of Jamaica.
Following the funeral -- attended by both the Prime Minister
and the Leader of the Opposition -- Bob's body was taken to
his birthplace where it now rests in a mausoleum. Bob Marley
was 36 years old. His legend lives on.