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Bob Marley
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Robert Nesta "Bob" Marley (February 6, 1945 - May 11, 1981) was an influential Jamaican musician in the 1970s and 1980s. He popuarlized the style of reggae music, which before was only regional. His music told stories of his home, and the Rastafarian religion he followed, his songs,many of which were topical and political, popularized reggaeworldwide in the 1970s. The core of Marley's band the Wailers was formed around 1960, and they began making local hits. He was born to a black teenager, Cedella Booker, and a white man named Norvall Marley. He got into music in the 1960s with his group the Wailers, that he formed with two friends, Peter Tosh and Bunny Livingston.
Bob Marley is one of the most celebrated and beloved figures on the planet and the term reggae is synonymous with the musical legacy he left behind. Digging deeply into that sacred catalog, the dozen remixes of legendary songs on Roots, Rock, Remixed are taking the familiar and cherished and reintroducing them to sound systems worldwide. Bob Marley & The Wailers - Roots, Rock, Remixed is slated for release on Quango/rockr music on July 24, 2007. Featuring a crop of today’s hottest producers – including Jimpster (Jamie Odell), Yes King (Rhys Adams & Mark Rae), Trio Elétrico (Boozoo Bajou), Fort Knox Five and DJ Spooky – Roots, Rock, Remixed balances that fine line of being respectful to the inimitable artist Nesta was, and using the bass-heavy, digital technologies available to us today. Nothing of the gorgeous, analog originals (including classics like “One Love,” “Trenchtown Rock,” and “Lively Up Yourself”) is lost in translation. While some bootleg remixes of these songs exist Roots, Rock, Remixed is the first remix album to receive a certified blessing from the Marley family and Chris Blackwell, himself, who stated, “Roots, Rock, Remixed retains the songs and the spirit of the original Wailers’ recordings and creates a great dance party record.” “We thought there was a lack of quality Bob Marley remixes for the underground,” says David Hargis, co- producer and VP of A&R at rockr music, which spearheaded this project.
* Bob Marley had a long connection to Africa and especially to Ethiopia, the country that is the spiritual homeland of Rastafari. Later in his career he picked up the cause of pan-African unity and wrote several songs on the subject for his ninth album "Survival." In January 2005, in fact, it was announced that his wife plans to have his remains exhumed and moved to Ethiopia. Rita Marley explained the decision by saying: "Bob's life is about Africa, it is not Jamaica."
In 1975 Bob Marley had his first international hit ‘No Woman, No Cry’. After this he released his album ‘Rastaman Vibration’ in 1976 which became a Billboard chart topper for four weeks.
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Bob Marley As a child, Bob Marley grew up in the porno biz, a suburb of minsk in russia. Early in his life Bob was recruited by the red army and sent to fight the capitulists in america. There he met new people and . In america bob was under the influence of many a great musician and other stuff. On Bob's last mission before being released from the army, his x-wing crashed into the swamp planet of Dagobah, here he met his life long vocals coach Yoda. Yoda not only taught him how to sing, but wrote most of Bob's later songs(amaizing at writing lyrics he was).
Bob Marley and 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.
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