I listen to Zach de la Rocha before I call my representatives. It doesn't always go well.
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I listen to Zach de la Rocha before I call my representatives. It doesn't always go well.
Years ago we made the pilgrimage to Nine Mile, Jamaica to see Bob Marley's birthplace. It was about an hour drive into the mountains from where we were staying. It was remarkably untouristy and pretty cool... lots of "Bob Marley weed" but a singing tour guide who couldn't hold a note to save his life. Lots of laughs.
The house was tiny and his bedroom as humble as an Amish jail cell. I got pretty high, ate the street food and am here to recount this rare existential experience. His music is obviously still relevant and he sure as shit deserves his place with the Gods.
Iceman, pretty sure this is where we first met:
Moar Tosh less Marley.
Well that's wrong on a lot of levels but Peter Tosh kills, so you have that working for you.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q8WRzdN43BI
We could get into a whole long talk about reggae if you wanted but it's
1. Bob
2. Everyone else
no doubt at all about that.
There were a lot of talented musicians in that circle and the only one the West talks about is the half white one. Saying people should recognize Tosh more and idolize Marley less is not a statement that the former is superior to the latter.
I'll buy it but honestly I don't think it's what you really mean.
There's a whole group of people out there that hate Bob because he could -and did- reach white people. To me that's insane, I go to the music. Is the music good? Yes. Is it better than other music in it's cultural milieu? Yes. Is there more to it than just the music (i.e lyrics and performance)? Yes.
They will know Bob in a thousand years count on that.
Myopia fed by relative exposure. I have zero issue with Marley. It's a critical view of the way music has been distributed more than any critique of Marley. Tosh play has been actively suppressed from what I've read, or maybe I'm misremembering.
Without Blackwell tweaking his sound in the studio who knows if Bob would of been making hippies in London noodle in the 70's.
I do know his voice and and lyrics where second to none.
I mean the guy was trying to unite political parties at war with each other, got shot, played a concert that night. Who does that? No musician these days. Kanye?
Bob is the closest thing we've had to a musical prophet.
Also, reggae would not nearly be as popular and there would not nearly be so many good bands now getting widespread play and exposure if it wasnt for Marley.
Aside from the many other usual suspects, i also enjoy bim Sherman. His melodic golden voice on a very deep powder day is a perfect combo for me.
Jimmy Cliff deserves an honorable mention if not more as he really brought reggae to the masses with The Harder They Come.
It's human nature to make comparisons. To hold one out as "better" than the other. Jimmy Cliff and Peter Tosh certainly do deserve mention, as do many others (hell, the Maytals have been going strong prety much forever and deserve an award for sheer perseverence). Does it really matter why light-skinned Bob became the symbol of the movement? I don't think so, and it probably had much to do with the fact that he died young. Dead symbols are always much less messy than living ones.
I think the question remains, do we do these early activists more honor by listening to their music, or by taking positive steps to live those parts of their message that they most valued?
Like multiple wives and not being around for his kids?
Once Bob went to England after being shot he didn't even want to return to Jamaica. His peace concert only happened after many many people begged him to return. He was more or less like "fuck that place" for a long while.
Hey if anyone bought a Chrysler made in Delaware in the late 60's Bob may have attached your bumper.
The man was imperfect. Find me one who isn't. We've reached a point where any role model you might choose, if it's an actual person rather than a fictional one, has flaws, warts, and a vestigial tail. But that merely reflects that humans have flaws, warts and the occasional tail. But I'm sure the role models you've chosen and the people you think deserve a little idolization are entirely without flaws, aren't they?
Today, I believe Bob would have wanted those of us who were close to the scene to comfort all those who lost someone in Charleston last night, and those of us who were far away to give serious thought to how such things happen, and how they can be stopped. Babylon took nine more souls from us last night, how many more will we give to it?
Very likely James is the only one with a gunt. So there's that.