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Bob Marley The True Rastafari Essay, Research Paper

Bob Marley (Robert Nesta Marley) was born on 6 February 1945 in

Nine Miles in the parish of St. Ann, Jamaica. His father (Norval

Sinclair Marley) was a English marine-officer and his mother (Cedella

‘Ciddy’Malcom)was a native Jamaican who lived in Rhoden Hall. After

Bob was born, his father left his mother.

When Bob was five, his father took him to Kingston. Oneyear later

Bob saw his mother again. A couple of years later Bob and his mother

moved to Trench Town (West-Kingston) because his mother was looking

for a job. Bob Marley loved the fast life in the big city, as well as

the music of Fats Domino, Ray Charles he heard. Not much later Bob got

his nickname Tuff Gong. Meanwhile Jamaican musicians were working on

their own style of music. They invented ska and this music became very

popular in Jamaica.

At age 16 Bob wanted to record an album. Like other Jamaican kids

he saw the music as an escape of the though reality. Jimmy Cliff, a

local musician (only 14 years old), had already made a few (hit)

singles and introduced Bob to producer Leslie Kong. Bob made his first

single Judge Not in 1961, but this record and the next one One More

Cup Of Coffee (1962) didn’t do well. Bob left Kong after he hadn’t

received a paycheck of Lesly Kong.

In 1964 Peter (McIn)Tosh, Bunny Livingstone (alias Bunny Wailer),

Junior Braithwaite, Beverley Kelso, Cherry, Constantine ‘Dream Vision’

Walker and Bob Marley formed the band The Wailers. Cherry and Junior

left the band after a few recording sessions. By the recording of

their songs they used ska musicians of Coxsone Dodd’s Studio One. Bob

Marley acted as the leader of the band and he wrote most of the

material. The Wailers became very popular in 1965: they played full

houses. On the Coxsone-label they recorded several hits: Simmer Down,

It Hurts To Be Alone, Rule Them Rudie.

It was 10 February 1966 when Bob Marley married Rita Anderson.

The day after, Bob went to the United States to visit his mother and

her new husband. During Bob’s stay in the States, Beverly Kelso left

The Wailers and Rita and her cousin Dream joined the band. The Wailers

changed their music from ska to rocksteady. The next year (the same

year Bob’s first child, Cedella, was born) the band left Coxsone and

set up their own record label Wail ‘N Soul ‘M Record, also known as

Wailing Souls, Wail ‘M Soul ‘M. Their first single from this label was

Bend Down Low/Mellow Mood. At the end of that year, that same label

was put an end to.

In 1968 Bob’s first son, David (better known as Ziggy) was born.

That same year Bob met Jonny Nash. The Wailers recorded songs for the

record company JAD Records. In 1970 The Upsetters joined The Wailers:

Aston ‘Family Man’ Barret played bass and his brother Carlton played

the drums. The band set up a new label Tuff Gong and the first single

on that label was Run For Cover. It went uphill with the band and

their own label. They made hit after hit.

In December 1971 Bob went to Chris Blackwell of Island Records

and he asked Chris if the band could get a record deal. Chris gave

them 8,000 pounds (in advance) to make an album. It was a

revolutionary move: for the first time a reggae band had access to the

best recording facilities and they were treated in much the same way

as, say, a rock group. Before The Wailers signed to Island it was

considered that reggae sold only singles and cheap compilation albums.

This way The Wailers made the first reggae-album Catch A Fire. The

band makes successful tours through the U.K. and the States. The

follow-up album was “Island was Burnin’” and it included some of the

band’s older songs together with tracks like “Get Up Stand Up” and “I

Shot The Sheriff”.

The Wailers and Bob Marley became more popular after Eric Clapton

recorded “I Shot The Sheriff”. His version hit number one in the U.S.

Singles Chart. With the release of Natty Dread the band lined up as

Bob Marley & The Wailers. In the summer of 1975 the band were touring

through Europe. Among the concerts were two shows at the Lyceum

Ballroom in London. These two concerts are remembered as highlights of

the decade. The shows were recorded on Live and it made the charts.

The, on this album appearing, live-version of “No Woman No Cry” became

a very big hit in the whole world. By that time Peter Tosh and Bunny

Livingstone had officially left the band to pursue their own solo

careers. Lead-guitar player Al Anderson and keyboard player Bernard

‘Touter’ Harvey joined the band; these two guys were succeeded by

Junior Marvin (1977) and Tyrone Downie.

In the year 1976 the reggae-mania boomed in the States. Rolling

Stone Magazine named Bob Marley & The Wailers ‘Band of the year’ in

their February issue. Rastaman Vibration, cracked the American charts,

but didn’t do too well in The Netherlands. The album included a track

called “War” of which the lyrics were taken from a speech by Emperor

Haile Selassie of Ethiopia. On 3 December 1976 a tragedy happened. Six

armed men shot at Bob Marley, his wife, the Wailers manager Don Taylor

and Don Kinsey. Two days later Bob performed at the Smile Jamaica

concert in Kingston, after which he flew to the U.K. The Wailers

followed Bob and they recorded Exodus in 1977. With this album Bob

Marley’s international statusm of superstar was established. In the

U.K. Bob Marley had an audience of prince royal Asfa Wossan

(grandchild of Emperor Haile Selassie) at which Bob received a very

important ring: Jah Rasafari (owned by the Ethiopian emperor). In May

of the same year Bob found out that he had cancer. A toe had to be

amputated, but Bob refused because that would have been against his

beliefs of the Rastafari. On 20 July 1977 the remaining concerts of

the Exodus Tour were canceled.

The following year the band capitalized on their chart success

with the release of Kaya, an album which hit number four in the UK

Chart the week of release. The album showed Bob in a different mood:

love songs and homage?s to the power of ganja (marijuana). The

rastafari smoke ganja to come closer to Jah (God). In April 1978 Bob

Marley returned to Jamaica to perform on the One Love Peace Concert in

front of the Prime Minister Michael Manley and Leader of the Opposite

Edward Seaga. Bob arranged a meeting on stage between the two rivals.

Later that year Bob got the Piece Medal of the Third World from the

United Nations. He also visited Africa (Kenya, Ethiopia and Zimbabwe)

for the first time in his life.

Bob Marley & The Wailers continued their popular status with

Babylon By Bus (registration of a concert in Paris) and Survival. At

the end of the seventies Bob Marley & The Wailers were the most

important band on the road and they broke the festival records on the

European continent. Their new Uprising album entered every chart in

Europe. The band was even planning a new American tour, with Stevie

Wonder, for the winter of 1980. Bob’s health went downhill but he had

the doctor’s approval to start the American tour, which started in

Boston in September. During a concert in New York Bob Marley almost

fainted. The next morning, on 21 September 1980, he went jogging with

Skilly Cole in Central Park. Bob collapsed and was taken back to the

hotel. Several days later it became clear that Bob had a brain tumor

and he had, according to the doctors, not even a month to live. Rita

Marley wanted the tour to be canceled, but Bob wanted to continue the

tour. So he played a marvelous show in Pittsburgh. But Rita couldn’t

agree with Bob’s decision to continue and on 23 September the tour was

canceled.

Bob was transported from Miami to the Memorial Sloan-Kettering

Cancer Center in New York. There, the doctor’s diagnosed cancer in the

brain, lung and stomach. Bob was transported back to Miami, were he

was baptized Berhane Selassie in the Ethiopian Orthodox Church (a

Christian church) on 4 November 1980. Five days later, in a last

attempt to save Bob’s life, he flew to a controversial treatment

center in Germany. In February 1981 Bob had his 36th anniversary in

the German clinic. Three months later, on 11 May 1981, Bob died in a

hospital in Miami.

Bob Marley’s funeral in Jamaica on 21 May 1981 could be compared

with one of a king. Hundreds of thousands of people (including the

Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition) visited the funeral

to celebrate the fact that Bob Marley was a real ‘Jah Rastafari’ after

all. After the funeral Bob Marley’s body was taken to his birthplace

were it rests in a mausoleum. The mausoleum became a real place of

pilgrimage in the years after.

A month before Bob’s death, he was awarded Jamaica’s Order Of

Merit, the nation’s third highest honor, in recognition of his

outstanding contribution to the country’s culture. The prophet Gad

insisted (before Marley’s death) to become the owner of the ring Jah

Rasafari. The ring, however, disappeard miraculously and nobody has

seen the ring again. Bob Marley’s mother says that the ring went back

to the place of origin.

In Montego Bay, Jamaica, a Bob Marley (Performance) Center had

been set up. For a couple of years the Sunsplash Festival has been

held here.

In the spring of 1983 the Confrontation album had been released.

It contained unreleased songs, reshaped songs and songs that had only

been released in Jamaica. The song Buffalo Soldier became a posthumous

hit. In 1984 Legend was released. Thanks to the hit One Love/People

Get Ready this beautiful album became a worldwide bestseller. Bob

Marley & The Wailers were ‘back to live’. After Bob Marley’s death a

special concert took place in Kingston to commemorate Bob Marley.

Several artist, among which Ziggy Marley & The Melody Makers and the

Reggae Philharmonic Orchestra performed and raised money to establish

a Bob Marley Entertainment Complex in Kingston.


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