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Entries in Marley (7)

Tuesday
Aug072012

Ziggy Marley Celebrates Bob Marley Day And Olympic Wins For Jamaica

As Bob Marley day is proclaimed in Los Angeles, Ziggy Marley, the son of the legendary Jamaican singer and activist reflects on his father's legacy and their homeland's recent Olympic success. John Russell reports.


Monday
Apr302012

Bob Marley: Could You Be Loved

Could you be loved and be loved?
could you be loved and be loved?
don't let them fool ya,
or even try to school ya! oh, no!
we've got a mind of our own,
so go to hell if what you're thinking is not right!
love would never leave us alone,
a-yin the darkness there must come out to light.
could you be loved and be loved?
could you be loved, wo now! - and be loved?
(the road of life is rocky and you may stumble too,
so while you point your fingers someone else is judging you)
love your brotherman!
(could you be - could you be - could you be loved?
could you be - could you be loved?
could you be - could you be - could you be loved?
could you be - could you be loved?)
don't let them change ya, oh! -
or even rearrange ya! oh, no!
we've got a life to live.
they say: only - only -
only the fittest of the fittest shall survive -
stay alive! eh!
could you be loved and be loved?
could you be loved, wo now! - and be loved?
(you ain't gonna miss your water until your well runs dry;
no matter how you treat him, the man will never be satisfied.)
say something! (could you be - could you be - could you be loved?
could you be - could you be loved?)
say something! say something!
(could you be - could you be - could you be loved?)
say something! (could you be - could you be loved?)
say something! say something! (say something!)
say something! say something! (could you be loved?)
say something! say something! reggae, reggae!
say something! rockers, rockers!
say something! reggae, reggae!
say something! rockers, rockers!
say something! (could you be loved?)
say something! uh!
say something! come on!
say something! (could you be - could you be - could you be loved?)
say something! (could you be - could you be loved?)
say something! (could you be - could you be - could you be loved?)
say something! (could you be - could you be loved?) /fadeout/

Friday
Apr202012

Bob Marley Movie Tells Story Of Jamaican Star

A new documentary on Jamican reggae legend Bob Marley celebrates the music and the message of one of the first global stars to come out of the developing world.


Thursday
Apr192012

"Marley" Is Definitive Story Of My Father, Says Ziggy

Ziggy Marley's new documentary about his legendary father Bob Marley gets LA premiere. Cindy Martin reports.


Wednesday
May112011

Legend: Remembering Bob Marley

Bob Marley, here performing in Sweden in 1978, has kept his hold on the popular imagination three decades after his death.

Bob Marley lives.

The reggae star may have died 30 years ago Wednesday, but his music – and impact – are inescapable. “Legend,” the best-of compilation his label, Island Records, originally released in 1984, is among the best-selling albums of all time, with a “Diamond” certification (more than 10 million sold) from the Recording Industry Association of America, more than 1,000 weeks on Billboard’s catalog chart and a listing as No. 46 on Rolling Stone’s list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.

Kevin Macdonald, director of “The Last King of Scotland” and the Oscar-winning “One Day in September,” is preparing a documentary on the Jamaican musician.

"He's gone beyond being a famous musician, he's now a philosopher and prophet," he told the BBC last month.  A portion of Macdonald’s film, “Marley,” is scheduled to screen at the Cannes Film Festival on Wednesday.

And, of course, there’s the endless Marley paraphernalia visible on any college campus: posters, shirts, hats and, well, materiel related to the cannabis plant of which Marley was known to partake.

What was it about this son of a white plantation overseer and Afro-Jamaican woman who continues to inspire three decades after his death at age 36 from a rare form of cancer? Why is Marley the popular face of reggae instead of “Israelites” hitmaker Desmond Dekker, “The Harder They Come” star Jimmy Cliff or pioneering producer Lee “Scratch” Perry?

Part of it, says University of Rochester music historian John Covach, has to do with the singer-songwriter’s charisma.

“His music is accessible because of the groove … (and) Marley the performer was charismatic enough to sell it. A lot of artists don’t have that,” he observes, noting that Marley’s colleagues in his band the Wailers – such as Peter Tosh and Bunny Livingston – didn’t have the success Marley did.

Moreover, Marley became known for a message of peace and understanding, Covach observes. Add that message to the romantic notion of dying young – not to mention partying, dancing and smoking dope – and it’s no surprise that college students have a fondness for the man, Covach says.

But that popular perception is far from complete, Marley fans have pointed out. In a 2006 Slate article headlined “Free Bob Marley!”, Field Maloney wrote that the musician’s early records, such as “Soul Rebels” and “Rasta Revolution,” were “more satisfyingly complex” than his later work – tougher and more clever.

Indeed, Marley remains a hero in Third World countries because of his political bent, Macdonald told the BBC. “In the slums of Nairobi (Kenya), there are murals of Marley and people quote the lyrics to you,” he said.

That’s not the kind of Marley who could be used to sell trips to lush tropical beaches (though Marley remains a key Jamaican tourist attraction.) But, of course, a successful artist’s work is open to many interpretations.

“What's in the popular mind is often a caricature of what the artist really achieved,” Covach says.

For Marley, 30 years after his death, that’s a great deal.