Bob Marley's 10 Greatest Protest Songs That Still Ring True Today

Bob Marley's 10 Greatest Protest Songs That Still Ring True Today

Kibanga Ampiga Mkoloni

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February 6, 2015 marks what would been the 70th birthday of Bob Marley. And nearly 34 years after his cancer-related death in 1981, the reggae pioneer's songs of love, dissatisfaction, peace, and protest are still as powerful and timely as they were when they originally moved the people of Jamaica and beyond in his heyday. With the countless uprisings, confrontations, and soul revolutions in the decades since his passing, it's incredible how many of the Tuff Gong's politically charged tracks could have been written only a few weeks ago. In honor of Marley's memory, here are his 10 greatest songs of protest, social justice, and fighting the power.


"Simmer Down," 1962


Marley's first hit came when he was part of the ska vocal group the Wailers, alongside his future featured bandmates, and later solo stars, Bunny Wailer and Peter Tosh. Backed by the legendary Skatalites, the band took aim, peacefully, at the rude boys of Kingston, telling them to cut the ---- when it came to the capital city's prevalent violent crime, singing bubblegum pop with a Jamaican twist. Then and now, it takes guts to call out your peers, especially when they're the ones most likely to pull a pistol.


"Concrete Jungle," 1973


This concrete jungle isn't one where dreams are made up. Here, Marley sings about life in a Jamaican ghetto with little to no hope for escape: "No chains around my feet/But I'm not free/I know I am bounded in captivity." He yearns for upward mobility, but knows there's little chance it'll ever become his reality.

"Get Up, Stand Up," 1973


One of the all-time great, universal protest songs, it's worth noting that probably the best line belongs to the Wailers' most aggressive member, Peter Tosh: "You can fool some people sometimes but you can't fool all the people all the time."


"I Shot the Sheriff," 1973


After witnessing police oppression in Jamaica, which was violently divided along political lines, Marley fantasized about the justifiable killing of a corrupt cop on this single while swearing he spared the life of the innocent deputy. Given today's tensions between law enforcement and citizens, especially the #BlackLivesMatter movement, it's easy to see why people would identify with the sentiment. And given the causes for the anger and some of the violence that it's led to, against citizens and police alike, it's a reminder that there's been too much tragedy, with little progress to show for it.

"Burnin' and Lootin'," 1973


Like "Sheriff," this song reflected the frustration and anger of the people who felt suffocated by the curfews and corrupt police force in Kingston. Marley looks at the different angles of a citizen uprising, simultaneously reveling in the destruction, understanding the motivations, expressing disgust at the violence, and weeping for how far things had to fall to get to this point: "We gonna be burning and a-looting tonight (To survive, yeah)/Burning and a-looting tonight (Save your baby lives)." You might as well be reading the accounts of those who saw the shameful rioting and looting during the Ferguson, Missouri protests.


"Them Belly Full (But We Hungry)," 1974


If the people beholden to soup kitchens, food stamps, etc., ever get fed up, anyone in power would be wise to remember that, as Marley sang, "A hungry mob is a angry mob."


"Revolution," 1974


Marley is only getting started with the line "It takes a revolution to make a solution." His call to arms invokes fire, blood, lightning, thunder, and brimstone, predicting that the Rastas will end up "'pon top." It makes the Beatles' song of the same name seem almost apologetic in comparison.


"War," 1976


Rastafarians regarded Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie I as a living god, and this song takes its lyrics from a speech he gave before the United Nations. The first lines stay true to the speech - "Until the philosophy which holds one race superior and another inferior is finally and permanently discredited and abandoned" – with Marley adding, "Everywhere is war/Me say war." While Selassie's words and Marley's altered, more rhythmic interpretation are focused on Africans, the message is applicable to any oppressed country, race, ethnicity, sexuality, etc.


"Crazy Baldhead," 1976


To the dreadlocked Rastas, a "baldhead" is an outsider who, easily spotted by his lack of long coiled hair, obviously isn't part of their spiritual movement. In this song, Marley takes aim at those who exploited their poor community: "Build your penitentiary, we build your schools" sure sounds a lot like the United States' prevalence of for-profit prisons.


"Redemption Song," 1980


Written after his cancer diagnosis, Marley reflects upon his impending death, spirituality, and slavery, borrowing the lines "Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery/None but ourselves can free our minds" from activist Marcus Garvey. With his still-powerful voice and a gently strummed acoustic guitar, Marley put his legacy as an artist and message as an activist into just 108 words, telling all the believers to learn from their pasts, know their presents, and fight for their futures.


Hivi kwa nini jamaa hawajazungumzia "ZIMBABWE" nadhani ilikuwa 1981.
 
kuna ule unaitwa Who the cap fit! let them were! naudedicate kwa magamba
 
Babylon System.......................


We refuse to be
What you wanted us to be;
We are what we are:
That's the way (way) it's going to be. You don't know!
You can't educate I
For no equal opportunity:
(Talkin' 'bout my freedom) Talkin' 'bout my freedom,
People freedom (freedom) and liberty!
Yeah, we've been trodding on the winepress much too long:
Rebel, rebel!
Yes, we've been trodding on the winepress much too long:
Rebel, rebel!

Babylon system is the vampire, yea! (vampire)
Suckin' the children day by day, yeah!
Me say: de Babylon system is the vampire, falling empire,
Suckin' the blood of the sufferers, yea-ea-ea-ea-e-ah!
Building church and university, wo-o-ooh, yeah! -
Deceiving the people continually, yea-ea!
Me say them graduatin' thieves and murderers;
Look out now: they suckin' the blood of the sufferers (sufferers).
Yea-ea-ea! (sufferers)

Tell the children the truth;
Tell the children the truth;
Tell the children the truth right now!
Come on and tell the children the truth;
Tell the children the truth;
Tell the children the truth;
Tell the children the truth;
Come on and tell the children the truth.

'Cause - 'cause we've been trodding on ya winepress much too long:
Rebel, rebel!
And we've been taken for granted much too long:
Rebel, rebel now!

(Trodding on the winepress) Trodding on the winepress (rebel):
got to rebel, y'all (rebel)!
We've been trodding on the winepress much too long - ye-e-ah! (rebel)
Yea-e-ah! (rebel) Yeah! Yeah!

From the very day we left the shores (trodding on the winepress)
Of our Father's land (rebel),
We've been trampled on (rebel),
Oh now! (we've been oppressed, yeah!) Lord, Lord, go to ...
 
Rededemption song!! Huu wimbo ni kama vile aliwaimbia wabongo vile!wanaotaka mabadiliko ila hawapo tayari kupambana na changamoto zinazoweza kuleta hayo mabadiliko,mfano mwana ccm analalamikia hali duni ya maisha!ila ukimwambia sasa tuchukue hatua dhidi ya mfumo huu kandamizi anakumbuka tisheti na kanga+buku tanotano na pilau na kuahirisha nia njema iliyo moyoni mwake,they say its just part of it,they got to fulfill their book,they are not ready to emancipate themselves from their mental slavery,hence they expecting changes to be blown with wind to their desire that will never happen.
 
old pirates,yes they rob i
sold i to the merchant ships,
minutes after they took i
fRom the bottomless pit.

but my hand was made strong by the and of almighty
we foward in this generation
triumphantly.

wont u help to sing
these songs of freedom?
cause all i ever have
redemption songs
redemption sings.
 
Rededemption song!! Huu wimbo ni kama vile aliwaimbia wabongo vile!wanaotaka mabadiliko ila hawapo tayari kupambana na changamoto zinazoweza kuleta hayo mabadiliko,mfano mwana ccm analalamikia hali duni ya maisha!ila ukimwambia sasa tuchukue hatua dhidi ya mfumo huu kandamizi anakumbuka tisheti na kanga+buku tanotano na pilau na kuahirisha nia njema iliyo moyoni mwake,they say its just part of it,they got to fulfill their book,they are not ready to emancipate themselves from their mental slavery,hence they expecting changes to be blown with wind to their desire that will never happen.

the best song of mine, daah bob marley the true hero to remember.
 
redemption song

old pirates,yes they rob i
sold i to the merchant ships,
minutes after they took i
from the bottomless pit.

But my hand was made strong by the and of almighty
we foward in this generation
triumphantly.

Wont u help to sing
these songs of freedom?
Cause all i ever have
redemption songs
redemption sings.
 
Rededemption song!! Huu wimbo ni kama vile aliwaimbia wabongo vile!wanaotaka mabadiliko ila hawapo tayari kupambana na changamoto zinazoweza kuleta hayo mabadiliko,mfano mwana ccm analalamikia hali duni ya maisha!ila ukimwambia sasa tuchukue hatua dhidi ya mfumo huu kandamizi anakumbuka tisheti na kanga+buku tanotano na pilau na kuahirisha nia njema iliyo moyoni mwake,they say its just part of it,they got to fulfill their book,they are not ready to emancipate themselves from their mental slavery,hence they expecting changes to be blown with wind to their desire that will never happen.


MKuu hao MACC miimi nadhani Tuwaite " Stiff Necked Fools"

Stiff-necked fools, you think you are cool
To deny me for simplicity.
Yes, you have gone for so long
With your love for vanity now.
Yes, you have got the wrong interpretation
Mixed up with vain imagination.

So take Jah Sun, and Jah Moon,
And Jah Rain, and Jah Stars,
And forever, yes, erase your fantasy, yea-eah!

The lips of the righteous teach many,
But fools die for want of wisdom.
The rich man's wealth is in his city;
The righteous' wealth is in his Holy Place.

So take Jah Sun, and Jah Moon,
And Jah Rain, and Jah Stars,
And forever, yes, erase your fantasy, yeah!
Destruction of the poor is in their poverty;
Destruction of the soul is vanity, yeah!

So stiff-necked fools, you think you are cool
To deny me for simplicity, yea-ea-eah!
Yes, you have gone - gone for so long
With your love for vanity now.

But I don't wanna rule ya!
I don't wanna fool ya!
I don't wanna school ya:
Things you - you might never know about!

Yes, you have got the wrong interpretation
Mixed up with vain - vain imagination:
Stiff-necked fools, you think you are cool
To deny me for, o-ooh, simplicity. [fadeout]
 
mi nnachojuwa jamaa kwao ni Moshi kwa Sadala.
baada ya Babu zake kupelekwa utumwani ndio wakabadili jina kutoka Mmari mpaka Marley...

hata Tosh ni Tesha.
 
So arm in arms, with arms, we'll fight this little struggle,
'Cause that's the only way we can overcome our little trouble(CCM)

Brother, you're right, you're right,
You're right, you're right, you're so right!
We gon' fight (we gon' fight), we'll have to fight (we gon' fight),
We gonna fight (we gon' fight), fight for our rights!
 
"Small Axe"

Why boasteth thyself
Oh, evil men
Playing smart
And not being clever?
I said, you're working iniquity
To achieve vanity (if a-so a-so)
But the goodness of Jah, Jah
I-dureth for-I-ver

So if you are the big tree
We are the small axe
Ready to cut you down (well sharp)
To cut you down

These are the words
Of my master, keep on tellin' me
No weak heart
Shall prosper
And whosoever diggeth a pit
Shall fall in it, fall in it
And whosoever diggeth a pit
Shall fall in it (... fall in it)

If you are the big tree, let me tell you that
We are the small axe, sharp and ready
Ready to cut you down (well sharp)
To cut you down

(To cut you down)

(To cut you down)

These are the words
Of my master, tellin' me that
No weak heart
Shall prosper
And whosoever diggeth a pit
Shall fall in it, uh, bury in it
And whosoever diggeth a pit
Shall bury in it, uh (... bury in it)

If you are the big, big tree
We are the small axe
Ready to cut you down (well sharp)
To cut you down
If you are the big, big tree, let me tell you that
We are the small axe
Ready to cut you down (well sharp)
To cut you down
Sharpened .
 
Ambush in the night ,mix up mix up na jump nyambhing sio mchezo
 

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