Bob Marley, in full Robert Nesta Marley
(born Feb. 6, 1945, Nine Miles, St. Ann, Jam.—died May 11,
1981, Miami, Fla., U.S.), Jamaican singer-songwriter whose thoughtful,
ongoing distillation of early ska, rock steady, and reggae forms blossomed in the 1970s into an electrifying rock-influenced hybrid that made him an international superstar.
Marley—whose parents were Norval Sinclair Marley, a white rural
overseer, and the former Cedella Malcolm, the black daughter of a local custos
(respected backwoods squire)—would forever remain the unique product of
parallel worlds. His poetic worldview was shaped by the countryside,
his music by the tough West Kingston
ghetto streets. Marley’s maternal grandfather was not just a prosperous
farmer but also a bush doctor adept at the mysticism-steeped herbal
healing that guaranteed respect in Jamaica’s
remote hill country. As a child Marley was known for his shy aloofness,
his startling stare, and his penchant for palm reading. Virtually
kidnapped by his absentee father (who had been disinherited by his own
prominent family for marrying a black woman), the preadolescent Marley
was taken to live with an elderly woman in Kingston until a family friend rediscovered the boy by chance and returned him to Nine Miles.
By his early teens Marley was back in West Kingston, living in a
government-subsidized tenement in Trench Town, a desperately poor slum
often compared to an open sewer. In the early 1960s, while a schoolboy
serving an apprenticeship as a welder (along with fellow aspiring singer
Desmond Dekker), Marley was exposed to the languid, jazz-infected shuffle-beat rhythms of ska, a Jamaican amalgam of American rhythm and blues and native mento (folk-calypso) strains then catching on commercially. Marley was a fan of Fats Domino, the Moonglows, and pop singer Ricky Nelson,
but, when his big chance came in 1961 to record with producer Leslie
Kong, he cut “Judge Not,” a peppy ballad he had written based on rural
maxims learned from his grandfather. Among his other early tracks was
“One Cup of Coffee” (a rendition of a 1961 hit by Texas country crooner
Claude Gray), issued in 1963 in England on Chris Blackwell’s Anglo-Jamaican Island Records label.
Marley also formed a vocal group in Trench Town with friends who would later be known as Peter Tosh (original name Winston Hubert MacIntosh) and Bunny Wailer (original name Neville O’Reilly Livingston; b. April 10, 1947, Kingston). The trio, which named itself the Wailers
(because, as Marley stated, “We started out crying”), received vocal
coaching by noted singer Joe Higgs. Later they were joined by vocalist
Junior Braithwaite and backup singers Beverly Kelso and Cherry Green.
In December 1963 the Wailers entered Coxsone Dodd’s Studio One
facilities to cut “Simmer Down,” a song by Marley that he had used to
win a talent contest in Kingston. Unlike the playful mento music that
drifted from the porches of local tourist hotels or the pop and rhythm
and blues filtering into Jamaica from American radio stations,
“Simmer Down” was an urgent anthem from the shantytown precincts of the
Kingston underclass. A huge overnight smash, it played an important
role in recasting the agenda for stardom in Jamaican music circles. No
longer did one have to parrot the stylings of overseas entertainers; it
was possible to write raw, uncompromising songs for and about the
disenfranchised people of the West Indian slums.
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