Bob Marley was posthumously inducted into the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame in 1994; in December 1999, his 1977 album "Exodus"
was named Album of the Century by Time Magazine and his song "One
Love" was designated Song of the Millennium by the BBC. Since its release
in 1984, Marley's "Legend" compilation has annually sold over 250,000
copies according to Nielsen Sound Scan, and it is only the 17th album to exceed
sales of 10 million copies since SoundScan began its tabulations in 1991.
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In 2006 an eight block stretch of Brooklyn's bustling
Church Avenue, which runs through the heart of that city's Caribbean community,
was renamed Bob Marley Boulevard, the result of a campaign initiated by New
York City councilwoman Yvette D. Clarke. This year the popular TV show Late
Night with Jimmy Fallon commemorated the 30th anniversary of Bob Marley's
passing with an entire week (May 9-13) devoted to his music, as performed by
Bob's eldest son Ziggy, Jennifer Hudson, Lauryn Hill, Lenny Kravitz and the
show's house band The Roots. These triumphs are all the more remarkable
considering Bob Marley's humble beginnings and numerous challenges he overcame
attempting to gain a foothold in Jamaica's chaotic music industry while
skillfully navigating the politically partisan violence that abounded in
Kingston throughout the 1970s.
One of the 20th century's most charismatic and
challenging performers, Bob Marley's renown
now transcends the role of reggae luminary: he is regarded as a cultural icon
who implored his people to know their history "coming from the root of
King David, through the line of Solomon," as he sang on "Blackman Redemption";
Bob urged his listeners to check out the "Real Situation" and to
rebel against the vampiric "Babylon System". "Bob had a rebel
type of approach, but his rebelliousness had a clearly defined purpose to
it," acknowledges Chris Blackwell, the founder of Island Records, who
played a pivotal role in the Bob Marley biography by introducing Marley and the
Wailers to an international audience. "It wasn't just mindless
rebelliousness, he was rebelling against the circumstances in which he and so
many people found themselves."
Bob Marley - Early Life
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Norval and Cedella
married in 1945 but Captain Marley's family strongly disapproved of their
union; although the elder Marley provided financial support, the last time Bob
Marley saw his father was when he was five years old; at that time, Norval took
his son to Kingston to live with his nephew, a businessman, and to attend
school. Eighteen months later Cedella learned that Bob wasn't going to school
and was living with an elderly couple. Alarmed, she went to Kingston, found Bob
and brought him home to Nine Miles.
Bob Marley begins his music career
The next chapter in
the Bob Marley biography
commenced in the late 1950s when Bob, barely into his teens, left St. Ann and
returned to Jamaica's capital. He eventually settled in the western Kingston
vicinity of Trench Town, so named because it was built over a sewage trench. A
low-income community comprised of squatter-settlements and government yards
developments that housed a minimum of four families, Bob Marley quickly learned
to defend himself against Trench Town's rude boys and bad men. Bob's formidable
street-fighting skills earned him the respectful nickname Tuff Gong.
Despite the poverty,
despair and various unsavory activities that sustained some ghetto dwellers,
Trench Town was also a culturally rich community where Bob Marley's abundant
musical talents were nurtured. A lifelong source of inspiration, Bob
immortalized Trench Town in his songs "No Woman No Cry" (1974),
"Trench Town Rock" (1975) and "Trench Town", the latter
released posthumously in 1983.
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By the early 1960s
the island's music industry was beginning to take shape, and its development
gave birth to an indigenous popular Jamaican music form called ska. A local
interpretation of American soul and R&B, with an irresistible accent on the
offbeat, ska exerted a widespread influence on poor Jamaican youth while
offering a welcomed escape from their otherwise harsh realities. Within the
burgeoning Jamaican music industry, the elusive lure of stardom was now a
tangible goal for many ghetto youths.
Uncertain about the
prospects of a music career for her son, Cedella encouraged Bob to pursue a
trade. When Bob left school at 14 years old she found him a position as a
welder's apprentice, which he reluctantly accepted. After a short time on the
job a tiny steel splinter became embedded in Bob's eye. Following that
incident, Bob promptly quit welding and solely focused on his musical pursuits.
At 16 years old Bob
Marley met another aspiring singer Desmond Dekker, who would go on to top the
UK charts in 1969 with his single "Israelites". Dekker introduced
Marley to another young singer, Jimmy Cliff, future star of the immortal
Jamaican film "The Harder They Come", who, at age 14, had already
recorded a few hit songs. In 1962 Cliff introduced Marley to producer Leslie
Kong; Marley cut his first singles for Kong: "Judge Not",
"Terror" and "One More Cup of Coffee", a cover of the
million selling country hit by Claude Gray. When these songs failed to connect
with the public, Marley was paid a mere $20.00, an exploitative practice that
was widespread during the infancy of Jamaica's music business. Bob Marley
reportedly told Kong he would make a lot of money from his recordings one day
but he would never be able to enjoy it. Years later, when Kong released a best
of The Wailers compilation against the group's wishes, he suffered a fatal
heart attack at age 37.
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