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The group survived, however,
initially as songwriters for a company associated with the American singer
Johnny Nash who, the following decade, was to have an international smash
with Marley's "Stir It Up". The Wailers also met up with
Lee Perry, whose production genius had
transformed recording studio techniques into an art form.
The Perry / Wailers combination resulted in some of the finest music the
band ever made. Such tracks as "Soul Rebel", "Duppy Conqueror", "400 Years"
and "Small Axe" were not only classics, but they defined the future
direction of reggae.
In 1970
Aston 'Family Man' Barrett and his
brother
Carlton (bass and drums respectively) joined the Wailers. They had
been the rhythm nucleus of
Perry's studio band, working with the Wailers on
those ground-breaking sessions. They were also unchallenged as
Jamaica's
hardest rhythm section, a status that was to remain undiminished during the
following decade. The band's reputation was, at the start of the Seventies,
an extraordinary one throughout the Caribbean. But internationally the
Wailers were still unknown.
In the summer of 1971
Bob accepted an invitation from Johnny Nash to
accompany him to Sweden where the American singer had taken a filmscore
commission. While in Europe
Bob secured a recording contract with CBS which
was also, of course, Nash's company. By the spring of 1972 the entire
Wailers were in London, ostensibly promoting their CBS single "Reggae on
Broadway". Instead they found themselves stranded in Britain.
As a last throw of the dice
Bob Marley walked into the Basing Street Studios
of
Island Records and asked to see its
founder Chris Blackwell. The company, of course, had been one of the prime
movers behind the rise of
Jamaican music in Britain; indeed Blackwell had
launched Island in
Jamaica during the late fifties.
By 1962, however, Blackwell had realised that, by re-locating Island to
London, he could represent all his
Jamaican rivals in Britain. The company
was re-born in May, 1962, selling initially to Britain's
Jamaican population
centered mostly in London and Birmingham.
The hot ska rhythm, however, quickly became established as a burgeoning
dance floor beat with the then growing Mod culture and, in 1964, Blackwell
produced a worldwide smash with 'My Boy Lollipop', a pop/ska tune by the
young
Jamaican singer Millie.
Through the Sixties Island had grown to become a major source of
Jamaican
music, from ska and rock steady to reggae. The company had also embraced
white rock music, with such bands and artists as Traffic, Jethro Tull, King
Crimson, Cat Stevens, Free and Fairport Convention so, when
Bob Marley made
his first moves with Island in 1971, he was connecting with the hottest
independent in the world at that time.
Blackwell knew of Marley's
Jamaican reputation. The group was offered a deal
unique in
Jamaican terms. The Wailers were advanced £4000 to make an album
and, for the first time, a reggae band had access to the best recording
facilities and were treated in much the same way as, say, their rock group
contemporaries. Before this deal, it was considered that reggae sold only on
singles and cheap compilation albums. The Wailers' first album
Catch A Fire
broke all the rules: it was beautifully packaged and heavily promoted. It
was the start of a long climb to international fame and recognition.
Years later the acclaimed reggae dub poet Linton Kwesi Johnson, commenting
on
Catch A Fire, wrote: "A whole new style of
Jamaican music has come into
being. It has a different character, a different sound. . . what I can only
describe as International Reggae. It incorporates elements from popular
music internationally: rock and soul, blues and funk. These elements
facilitated a breakthrough on the international market."
Although
Catch A Fire was not an immediate hit, it made a considerable
impact on the media. Marley's hard dance rhythms, allied to his militant
lyrical stance, came in complete contrast to the excesses of mainstream
rock.
Island also decided The Wailers should tour both Britain and America;
again a complete novelty for a reggae band.
Marley and the band came to London in April 1973, embarking on a
club tour which hardened The Wailers as
a live group. After three months, however, the band returned to
Jamaica and
Bunny, disenchanted by life on the road, refused to play the American tour.
His place was taken by
Joe Higgs, The Wailers' original singing teacher.
The American tour drew packed houses and even included a weekend engagement
playing support to the young Bruce Springsteen. Such was the demand that an
autumn tour was also arranged with seventeen dates as support to Sly & The
Family Stone, then the number one band in black American music.
Four shows into the tour, however, The Wailers were taken off the bill. It
seems they had been too good; support bands should not detract from the main
attraction. The Wailers nevertheless made their way to San Francisco where
they broadcast a live concert for the pioneering rock radio station,
KSAN.
In 1973 The Wailers also released their second Island album,
Burnin', an LP
that included new versions of some of the band's older songs: 'Duppy
Conqueror', for instance, "Small Axe" and "Put It On" - together with such
tracks as 'Get Up Stand Up' and "I Shot The Sheriff". The latter, of course,
was a massive worldwide hit for Eric Clapton the following year, even
reaching number one in the U.S. singles' chart.
In 1974
Marley spent much time of his time in the studio working on the
sessions that eventually provided
Natty Dread, an album that included such
fiercely committed songs as 'Talkin' Blues', "No Woman No Cry", "So Jah
Seh," "Revolution", "Them Belly Full (But We Hungry)" and "Rebel Music (3
o'clock Roadblock)". By the start of the next year, however,
Bunny and
Peter
had quit the group; they were later to embark on solo careers (as
Bunny
Wailer and
Peter Tosh) while the band was re-named Bob Marley & The Wailers.
Natty Dread was released in February 1975 and, by the summer, the band was
on the road again.
Bunny and
Peter's missing harmonies were replaced by the
I-Threes, the female trio comprising Bob's wife
Rita together with Marcia
Griffiths and Judy Mowatt. Among the concerts were two shows at the
Lyceum Ballroom in London which, even
now, are remembered as highlights of the decade.
The shows were recorded and the subsequent live album, together with the
single "No Woman No Cry", both made the charts. Bob Marley & The Wailers
were taking reggae into the mainstream. By November, when The Wailers
returned to
Jamaica to play a benefit concert with Stevie Wonder, they were
obviously the country's greatest superstars.
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 Baldheads", "Johnny Was", "Who the
Cap Fit" and, perhaps most significantly of all, "War", the lyrics of which
were taken from a speech by
Emperor Haile Selassie.
Its international success cemented Marley's growing political importance in
Jamaica, where his firm
Rastafarian stance had found a strong resonance with
the ghetto youth. By way of thanking the people of
Jamaica,
Marley decided
on a free concert, to be held at Kingston's National Heroes Park on December
5, 1976. The idea was to emphasise the need for peace in the slums of the
city, where warring factions had brought turmoil and murder.
Just after the concert was announced, the government called an election for
December 20. The campaign was a signal for renewed ghetto war and, on the
eve of the concert, gunmen broke into Marley's house and shot him. In the
confusion the would-be assassins only wounded Marley, who was hastily taken
to a safe haven in the hills surrounding Kingston. For a day he deliberated
playing the concert and then, on December 5, he
came on stage and played a brief set in
defiance of the gunmen.
It was to be Marley's last appearance in
Jamaica for nearly eighteen months.
Immediately after the show he left the country and, during early 1977, lived
in London where he recorded his next album,
Exodus. Released in the summer
of that year,
Exodus properly established the band's international status.
The album remained on the UK charts for 56 straight weeks, and its three
singles - "Exodus", "Waiting in Vain" and "Jammin" - were all massive
sellers. The band also played a week of concerts at London's Rainbow
Theatre; their last dates in the city during the seventies.
In 1978 the band capitalised on their chart success with
Kaya, an album
which hit number four in the UK the week after release. That album saw
Marley in a different mood; a collection of love songs and, of course,
homages to the power of ganja. The album also provided two chart singles,
"Satisfy My Soul" and the beautiful "Is This Love".
There were three more events in 1978, all of which were of extraordinary
significance to
Marley. In April he returned to
Jamaica to play the
One Love Peace Concert in front of the
Prime Minister Michael Manley and the Leader of the Opposition Edward Seaga.
He was then invited to the United Nations in New York to receive the
organisation's Medal of Peace. At the end of the year
Bob also visited
Africa for the first time, going initially to Kenya and then on to Ethiopia,
spiritual home of
Rastafari. The band had earlier toured Europe and America,
a series of shows that provided a second live album,
Babylon By Bus. The
Wailers also broke new ground by playing in Australia, Japan and New
Zealand: truly international style reggae.
Survival,
Bob Marley's ninth album for
Island Records, was released in the
summer of 1979. It included "Zimbabwe", a stirring anthem for the soon-to-be
liberated Rhodesia, together with "So Much Trouble In The World", "Ambush In
The Night" and "Africa Unite"; as the sleeve design, comprising the flags of
the independent nations, indicated,
Survival was an album of pan-African
solidarity.
At the start of the following year - a new decade - Bob Marley & The Wailers
flew to Gabon where they were to make their African debut. It was not an
auspicious occasion, however, when the band discovered they were playing in
front of the country's young elite. The group, nevertheless, was to make a
quick return to Africa, this time at the official invitation to the
government of liberated
Zimbabwe to play at the country's Independence Ceremony in April, 1980.
It was the greatest honour ever afforded the band, and one which underlined
the Wailer's importance in the Third World.
The band's next album,
Uprising, was released in May 1980. It was an instant
hit, with the single, "Could You Be Loved" a massive worldwide seller.
Uprising also featured "Coming In From the Cold", "Work" and the
extraordinary closing track, "Redemption Song".
The Wailers embarked on a major European tour, breaking festival records
throughout the continent. The schedule included a 100,000-capacity crowd in
Milan, the biggest show in the band's history. Bob Marley & The Wailers,
quite simply, were 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, in company with
Stevie Wonder, that winter. At the end of the European tour Marley and the
band went to America. Bob played two shows at Madison Square Garden but,
immediately afterwards, was taken seriously ill.
Three years earlier, in London, Bob hurt a toe while playing football. The
wound had become cancerous and was belatedly treated in Miami, yet it
continued to fester. By 1980 the cancer, in its most virulent form, had
begun to spread through Marley's body. He fought the disease for eight
months, taking treatment at the clinic of Dr. Joseph Issels in Bavaria.
Issels' treatment was controversial and non-toxic and, for a time anyway,
Bob's condition seemed to stabilise. Eventually, however, the battle proved
too much. At the start of May
Bob Marley left Germany for his
Jamaican home,
a journey he did not complete. He died in a Miami hospital on Monday May 11,
1981.
The previous month,
Marley had been awarded
Jamaica's Order Of Merit, the
nation's third highest honour, in recognition of his outstanding
contribution to the country's culture.
On Thursday May 21, 1981, the
Hon. Robert Nesta Marley O.M. was given an
official
funeral by the people of
Jamaica.
Following the service - attended by both the Prime Minister and the Leader
of the Opposition -
Marley's body was taken to his birthplace at
Nine Mile,
on the north of the island, where it now rests in a
mausoleum.
Bob Marley
was 36-years-old. His legend, however, has conquered the years.
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