Nesta Robert Marley OM (6 February 1945 – 11 May 1981) was a
Jamaican singer-songwriter who achieved international fame through a series of
crossover reggae albums.Starting out in 1963 with the group the Wailers, he
forged a distinctive songwriting and vocal style that would later resonate with
audiences worldwide. The Wailers would go on to release some of the earliest
reggae records with producer Lee Scratch Perry.After the Wailers disbanded in
1974,Marley pursued a solo career which culminated in the release of the album
Exodus in 1977 which established his worldwide reputation.He was a committed
Rastafarian who infused his music with a profound sense of spirituality.
Bob Marley - Early
Life
Bob and CedellaBob Marley was born Robert Nesta Marley on
February 6, 1945. Bob was born to Cedella Marley when she was 18. Bob's early
life was spent in rural community of Nine Miles, nestled in the mountainous
terrain of the parish of St. Ann. Residents of Nine Miles have preserved many
customs derived from their African ancestry especially the art of storytelling
as a means of sharing the past and time-tested traditions that are oftentimes
overlooked in official historical sources. The proverbs, fables and various
chores associated with rural life that were inherent to Bob's childhood would
provide a deeper cultural context and an aura of mysticism to his adult
songwriting.
Norval and Cedella married in 1945 but Captain Marley's
family strongly disapproved of their union; although the elder Marley provided
financial support, the last time Bob Marley saw his father was when he was five
years old; at that time, Norval took his son to Kingston to live with his
nephew, a businessman, and to attend school. Eighteen months later Cedella
learned that Bob wasn't going to school and was living with an elderly couple.
Alarmed, she went to Kingston, found Bob and brought him home to Nine Miles.
Bob Marley begins his music career
The next chapter in the Bob Marley biography commenced in
the late 1950s when Bob, barely into his teens, left St. Ann and returned to
Jamaica's capital. He eventually settled in the western Kingston vicinity of
Trench Town, so named because it was built over a sewage trench. A low-income
community comprised of squatter-settlements and government yards developments
that housed a minimum of four families, Bob Marley quickly learned to defend
himself against Trench Town's rude boys and bad men. Bob's formidable
street-fighting skills earned him the respectful nickname Tuff Gong.
Despite the poverty, despair and various unsavory activities
that sustained some ghetto dwellers, Trench Town was also a culturally rich
community where Bob Marley's abundant musical talents were nurtured. A lifelong
source of inspiration, Bob immortalized Trench Town in his songs "No Woman
No Cry" (1974), "Trench Town Rock" (1975) and "Trench
Town", the latter released posthumously in 1983.
Early Wailers Line-up
By the early 1960s the island's music industry was beginning
to take shape, and its development gave birth to an indigenous popular Jamaican
music form called ska. A local interpretation of American soul and R&B,
with an irresistible accent on the offbeat, ska exerted a widespread influence
on poor Jamaican youth while offering a welcomed escape from their otherwise
harsh realities. Within the burgeoning Jamaican music industry, the elusive
lure of stardom was now a tangible goal for many ghetto youths.
Uncertain about the prospects of a music career for her son,
Cedella encouraged Bob to pursue a trade. When Bob left school at 14 years old
she found him a position as a welder's apprentice, which he reluctantly
accepted. After a short time on the job a tiny steel splinter became embedded
in Bob's eye. Following that incident, Bob promptly quit welding and solely
focused on his musical pursuits.
At 16 years old Bob Marley met another aspiring singer
Desmond Dekker, who would go on to top the UK charts in 1969 with his single
"Israelites". Dekker introduced Marley to another young singer, Jimmy
Cliff, future star of the immortal Jamaican film "The Harder They
Come", who, at age 14, had already recorded a few hit songs. In 1962 Cliff
introduced Marley to producer Leslie Kong; Marley cut his first singles for
Kong: "Judge Not", "Terror" and "One More Cup of
Coffee", a cover of the million selling country hit by Claude Gray. When
these songs failed to connect with the public, Marley was paid a mere $20.00,
an exploitative practice that was widespread during the infancy of Jamaica's
music business. Bob Marley reportedly told Kong he would make a lot of money
from his recordings one day but he would never be able to enjoy it. Years
later, when Kong released a best of The Wailers compilation against the group's
wishes, he suffered a fatal heart attack at age 37.
The Bob Marley Influence and Legacy
In Koh Lipe, Thailand, Bob Marley's February
6th birthday is celebrated for three days with a cultural festival. In New
Zealand, his life and music are now essential components of Waitangi Day
(February 6) observances honoring the unifying treaty signed between the
country's European settlers and its indigenous Maori population. When Bob
visited New Zealand for a concert at Auckland's Western Springs Stadium on
April 6, 1979, the Maori greeted him with a traditional song and dance ceremony
reserved for visiting dignitaries. Marley's former manager, the late Don
Taylor, referred to the Maori welcoming ritual as "one of my most
treasured memories of the impact of Bob and reggae music on the world".
On April 17, 1980 when the former British
colony of Rhodesia was liberated and officially renamed Zimbabwe and the Union
Jack replaced with the red, gold, green and black Zimbabwean flag, it is said
that the first words officially spoken in the new nation were "ladies and
gentlemen, Bob Marley and the Wailers". For the Zimbabwean freedom fighters
that listened to Bob Marley, inspiration and strength were drawn from his
empowering lyrics. Marley penned a tribute to their efforts,
"Zimbabwe", which was included on the most overtly political album of
his career, 1979's "Survival" and he was invited to headline their
official liberation celebrations. Zimbabwean police used tear gas to control
the crowds that stampeded through the gates of Harare's Rufaro Stadium to get a
glimpse of Marley onstage. As several members of Marley's entourage fled for
cover, he returned to the stage to perform "Zimbabwe", his words
resounding with a greater urgency amidst the ensuing chaos: "to divide and
rule could only tear us apart, in everyman chest, there beats a heart/so soon
we'll find out who is the real revolutionaries and I don't want my people to be
tricked by mercenaries." "There was smoke everywhere, our eyes filled
with tears so we ran off," recalls Marcia Griffiths, who sang backup for
Marley, alongside Rita Marley and Judy Mowatt, as the I-Threes. "When Bob
saw us the next day he smiled and said now we know who are the real
revolutionaries."
Bob
Marley Inspiration
A generation later a group of political
refugees from Sierra Leone living in Guinean concentration camps and
traumatized by years of bloody warfare in their country, found through the
music of Bob Marley, inspiration to form their own band and write and record
their own songs. The Refugee All Stars won international acclaim for their 2006
debut "Living Like A Refugee" and their 2010 album "Rise and
Shine", each utilizing a blend of reggae, Sierra Leone's Islamic rooted
bubu music and West African goombay.
Further evidence of Bob Marley's ongoing
influence arrived on October 13, 2010 when Victor Zamora, one of 33 Chilean
miners rescued after being trapped in a San Jose mine for 69 days, asked to
hear Marley's "Buffalo Soldier" shortly after his release. Recorded
in 1980 and posthumously released in 1983, "Buffalo Soldier" recounts
the atrocities of the slave trade. Like so many of Bob Marley's songs, it
highlights the importance of relating past occurrences to present-day
identities: "if you know your history then you will know where you are
coming from, then you wouldn't have to ask me, who the hell do I think I
am?"
As 2011 draws to a close, Occupy Wall St.
styled protests spread around the world, challenging social and economic
inequality, as well as corporate greed and its influence upon government
policy. The uncompromising sentiments expressed on Bob's "Get Up Stand
Up", lyrics that are repeatedly chanted at these demonstrations, seem to
have directly inspired the protesters' dissenting stance: "Some people
think a great God will come down from the sky, take away everything and make
everybody feel high/but if you know what life is worth, you will look for yours
on earth and now we see the light, we're gonna stand up for our rights!"
Bob and Rastafarian Beliefs
Rastafari Roots
Another primary source from which Rastafari tenets were drawn
was The Holy Piby, The Black Man's Bible, a controversial book compiled by
Robert Athlyi Rogers published in 1924. Barbadian minister Charles F. Goodridge
and Grace Jenkins Garrison brought the Holy Piby to Jamaica in 1925. The Piby's
Afro-centric teachings, intended to counteract the distortions allegedly made
by white leaders when the bible was translated into English, engendered staunch
opposition from traditional Christian church leaders in Jamaica. Goodridge and
Garrison faced ongoing persecution for preaching the Piby's doctrines so they
eventually fled to the rural interior of the eastern Jamaican parish of St.
Thomas. There the seeds of the Rastafarian movement were planted and quickly
proliferated through the leadership of Leonard P. Howell.
When Ras Tafari Makonnen the great grandson of Saheka Selassie
of Shoa was crowned His Imperial Majesty Halie Selassie Emperor of Ethiopia on
Nov 2, 1930 in Addis Ababa, Howell told his followers "the king of all
kings has now been crowned in Ethiopia and all tribute is due to him."
Howell's followers, Garveyites and others saw Selassie I's coronation as the fulfillment
of a prophecy of deliverance.
Born in 1892, Haile Selassie I is the 225th in an unbroken line
of Ethiopian monarchs descended from the Biblical King Solomon and the Queen of
Sheba. Rastafarians claim that His Majesty, the Emperor of Ethiopia from 1930
to 1974, was the reincarnation of Jesus Christ, and a manifestation of Jah upon
Earth. Rastafarians maintain that Halie Selassie I's (supposed) death on August
28, 1975 was a hoax because God cannot die.
Bob Marley wrote the solemn "Jah Live" as a direct
response to newspaper headlines announcing the death of His Imperial Majesty:
"Fool say in their heart Rasta your God is dead/But I and I know, Jah Jah
Dread it shall be Dreader Dread/Jah Live children yeah."
Early Rastafari References on Record
Before the rise of Bob Marley, Rastafari doctrines and practices
were sporadically referenced in Jamaican popular music throughout the early
60s. The Jamaican jazz percussionist Oswald Williams, aka Count Ossie, inspired
by African burru drumming established several Rastafarian camps in the 1940s
where he invited musicians to be a part of his musical experiments. Ossie led a
troupe of Rastafarian Nyabinghi drummers on the 1960 hit "Oh
Carolina" by the Folkes Brothers, marking the first incorporation of
Rastafarian practices into Jamaican popular music.
Don Drummond the acclaimed lead trombonist with Jamaican super
group The Skatalites is credited with introducing Rastafari to ska, the
dominant music genre of the early 60s and the precursor to rocksteady and
reggae. The titles of some of the Skatalites' greatest instrumentals recorded
between 1964-1965 including "Addis Ababa"and "Tribute to Marcus
Garvey" reflected Drummond's Rastafarian faith.
In 1966 The Wailers released the single "Rasta Shook Them
Up" their earliest recorded reference to Rastafari, written about His
Majesty's visit to Jamaica in 1966. But it was Bob Marley's Island Records
releases throughout the 1970s, commencing with "Burnin" and
"Catch A Fire" (both recorded with Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer and
released in 1973) and subsequent albums with the Wailers band that brought
Rastafari to an international audience. Burnin' featured the traditional
"Rasta Man Chant", its worshipful lyrics adapted from the Holy Piby.
Rastaman International Vibrations
The title track to "Natty Dread" (1974) the first Bob
Marley album to chart in the US, provided an affirmation of Bob's unyielding
faith: "Don't care what the world say (Natty Dread) I'n'I couldn't never
go astray (Natty Dread)". "Rastaman Vibration" Marley's highest
US charting album (at no. 8) rightfully proclaimed Rasta as offering "a
new time, a new day" on its title track. Released in 1976, "Rastaman
Vibration" also included "War" a stirring equality anthem, its
lyrics taken from an address by Haile Selassie I to the United Nations' General
Assembly in 1963. "War's" globally pertinent lines ("until the
color of a man's skin is of no more significance than the color of his
eyes...until the ignoble and unhappy regime that holds our brothers in Angola,
in Mozambique, in South Africa, in subhuman bondage, have been toppled and
utterly destroyed everywhere is war") and the reverence with which Marley
regarded His Majesty's words transformed his performances of the song into
spellbinding displays. The title track of 1977's "Exodus" was a
clarion call to heed the guidance of Rastafari: "Many people will fight ya
down when ya see Jah light/let me tell you if you're not wrong then everything
is alright".
Bob Marley's most overtly political album "Survival"
released in 1979 offers several direct references the Rastafarian way of life.
"One Drop" advocates for "the teachings of His Majesty, a we no
want no devil philosophy"; "Africa Unite" champions oneness
among the Diaspora, declaring: "How good and how pleasant it would be before
God and man to see the unification of all RastamanÉWe are the children of the
Rastaman". Although it is common nowadays to see people from various walks
of life wearing their hair in dreadlocks and donning the red, green and gold
colors of the Ethiopian flag, these representations of an uncompromising
African identity developed by Rastafarians were once contemptuously viewed as
deviations from accepted cultural norms. "Survival's" "Ride
Natty Ride" details the opposition Rastafarians have endured: "all and
all you see a-gwaan/is to fight against the Rasta man so they build their world
in great confusion to force on us the devil's illusion".
Bob Marley reaffirms his adherence to Rastafari on "Forever
Loving Jah" from "Uprising" the final album released during his
lifetime. "Uprising" features the acoustic "Redemption
Song" which implores the listener: "emancipate yourselves from mental
slavery none but ourselves can free our mind", reiterating the
self-empowering convictions that Rastafarian tenets have sought to
establish."
"Blackman Redemption" from the posthumously released
"Confrontation" album summarizes Halie Selassie's royal lineage,
"coming from the root of King David through to the line of Solomon, His
Imperial Majesty is the Power of Authority". On "Rasta Man Live
Up" Bob encourages his Rasta brethren and sistren to "keep your
culture, don't be afraid of the vulture/grow your dreadlocks/don't be afraid of
the wolf pack".
When Rastafarian identity first emerged in Jamaica it allowed
displaced Africans to connect to their ancestral homeland despite the
persecution they faced for such practices. Today, thirty years after Bob
Marley's passing his enlightened lyrics, accompanied by the Wailers' powerful
drum and bass driven reverberations continue to provide a voice for the
suffering masses, the injustices of political corruption and the indignities of
racial oppression, in the all-encompassing spirit of "one love".

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