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Bob Marley

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 About Bob Marley

Powered by his Rastafarian faith, his love for pop music, and his transparently honest political convictions, Bob Marley was the one and only universal ambassador of Jamaica's renowned reggae music, his songs of resolution, rebellion and justice finding audiences the world over. As a platinum-selling superstar and a semi-religious icon, Marley's pro-active work in promoting peace, justice and brotherhood nearly outweighed the brilliance of his music.

Born of a middle-age white father and a teenage black mother, Robert Nesta Marley grew up poor in Trenchtown, Jamaica. Marley began singing professionally at 16 with two friends, Bunny Livingston (a.k.a. Bunny Wailer) and Peter McIntosh (AKA "Tosh"). He made his first record, "Judge Not," in 1962 with the Teenagers. A few years later, as the Wailers, Marley and associates had begun mixing political content with unusual covers ("And I Love Her," "What's New Pussycat?"), slowing the quick, prevalent ska beat down and calling it "rude boy music.
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It wasn't until 1973 that Marley made his first professional recording. That album, Catch A Fire introduced the reggae idiom to an international audience. With the Wailers--one of the greatest back-up bands of all time--behind him, the freshness gave rock fans something new to dance to and a powerfully compelling brand of lyrical consciousness to hear. In 1974, after Tosh and Livingston exited, and a female vocal trio the I-Threes (which included his wife Rita) was added, Marley released the formidable, moralistic Natty Dread, an album featuring classics "No Woman, No Cry" and "Lively Up Yourself." In the late '70s, Marley continued to enjoy worldwide hits with songs like "Exodus" (1977), "Waiting In Vain" (1977), "Jamming"(1977), and "Is This Love" (1978), and albums Rastaman Vibration and Exodus.

On a European tour in 1977, Marley & the Wailers played an informal soccer game (his other passion) against a team of French journalists. In the process, Marley injured his foot. Treatment revealed cancerous cells, but he refused surgery. In 1980, again on tour, Marley collapsed while jogging in New York's Central Park. The cancer had spread to his brain, lungs and liver, and he died eight months later. The music world had lost one of its true and potent activists, a man who had grown up from the ghettos of Trenchtown to become a musical ambassador the world over.
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