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Entertainment
30th anniversary release of Live Final Marley Performance
Thursday, August 26, 2010
At the time, everyone in Pittsburgh's Stanley Theatre knew they were witnesses to history. Bob Marley stood tall and proud on stage and beckoned them to Get Up, Stand Up, and they responded loudly with "wo yo yo yo". Later they discovered the history they witnessed, was in fact Bob's last performance.
Live Forever encapsulates the pure energy of that fateful performance by Jamaica's most legendary son. The original live recording, captured on tape by Marley's engineer Dennis Thompson, has been lovingly preserved and remastered for the 30th anniversary album release exclusively in the Caribbean. Adding to the distinctiveness of the collection-worthy album, is the special eco-friendly packaging.
Bob had ascended to the pinnacle of his career when he took the stage in Pittsburgh; he had just completed a successful European run on his Uprising Tour and he had played on sold-out bills in New York's Madison Square Garden; simply put, he had arrived.
Everything about the concert was a reflection of Bob - the superior production, the masterful collection of musicians and the eclectic range of songs emphasising the complexity on the man turned superstar.
As widely respected journalist Patricia Meschino alluded to, the Live Forever album liner notes, "He was an anointed African freedom fighter celebrating an independent Zimbabwe, a visionary reggae emissary, straight from "yard", on Jammin', and an exiled leader inciting the movement of Jah people on Exodus. A compelling ghetto griot, Bob warned of the impending consequences due to the continual marginalisation of the poor on Burning and Looting and Dem Belly Full; he was a purveyor of peace decrying War and insisting on No More Trouble, and a progressive spiritualist glorifying the Natural Mystic. Effectively resolute in his desire to chase those Crazy Baldheads out of town, and in his excoriation of The Heathen, he was also a quintessentially cool roots-rocker, skanking to Carlton and Aston Barrett's deeply-grooved drum and bass cadence on the instrumental break of Rastaman Vibration. An irresistible suitor who coyly asked Is This Love? Bob was also a vulnerable, absolutely riveting romantic in his passionately conveyed rendition of No Woman No Cry.
The album also includes live renditions of: Uprising, Coming In From The Cold, Work, Zion Train, Redemption Song and Could You Be Loved. The entire concert, from his opening song to the final applause, spans the special double CD album.
Live Forever is Bob's last live recording from his final concert. This definitive Marley album, special double CD in eco-friendly packaging is a limited regional release which becomes available through Tuff Gong Distribution on September 23, 2010.
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8/26/2010
"Dem a go tyad fi si mi face,caan get mi outa di race".
8/26/2010
I am always in awe of the continuted power of Bob Marley's music. It has NEVER been duplicated and never will. I love listening to Damien Marley because I hear it as the same genius but with his own personal touch. A few years back, I bought a Bob Marley military jacket in London at Nottinghill's carnival with my last 50 bucks. I have never regretted it. The students I teach LOVE that coat! "Where'd you get that!". I love to walk around in it because I feel wrapped in Bob Marley's vibe.
8/26/2010
Cant wait to purchase that one. Rastaman lives on.
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