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Rebel Music (Bonus Track Version)

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Download links and information about Rebel Music (Bonus Track Version) by Bob Marley, The Wailers. This album was released in 1986 and it belongs to Reggae, Roots Reggae, World Music, Ska genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 49:17 minutes.

Artist: Bob Marley, The Wailers
Release date: 1986
Genre: Reggae, Roots Reggae, World Music, Ska
Tracks: 11
Duration: 49:17
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Rebel Music (3 O'Clock Road Block) 6:41
2. So Much Trouble In the World 4:00
3. Them Belly Full (But We Hungry) 3:10
4. Rat Race ("Songs of Freedom" Version) 2:51
5. War / No More Trouble (Live) 5:43
6. Roots 3:44
7. Slave Driver (Original) 2:53
8. Ride Natty Ride 3:51
9. Crazy Baldhead 3:10
10. Get Up, Stand Up (Live) 6:34
11. Wake Up and Live, Pts. 1 & 2 (Single) 6:40

Details

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In assembling Bob Marley & the Wailers' British chart singles for the 1984 compilation Legend, Island Records created what turned out to be a perennial seller, but also an album that misrepresented the range of Marley's work, downplaying its political aspect in favor of danceability and romantic sentiments. Of course, what made Marley such a powerful figure internationally was his message about the uprising of the oppressed, but you wouldn't know that from Legend. Two years later, Island sought to redress the balance with its second major Marley compilation, Rebel Music. Here, in tracks drawn from such albums as Natty Dread, Rastaman Vibration, and Survival, Marley the political activist could be heard in all his glory, decrying "So Much Trouble in the World." In "War," presented in the medley with "No More Trouble" that had appeared originally on the 1978 concert album Babylon by Bus, he quoted Ethiopian ruler Haile Selassie about the dire consequences of denying rights to people of color. At the end, in a version taken from the 1975 Live! album, he implored his listeners to "Get Up, Stand Up." (Of course, he was not unaware that that exhortation also allowed them to dance in the aisles.) There were other political songs in Marley's repertoire, of course, and Rebel Music shared with Legend an unfortunate tendency to slight the Wailers' early albums, which contained plenty of appropriate material. (Only one track was drawn from Catch a Fire and none at all from Burnin'.) But for the millions who bought Legend, Rebel Music provided a necessary corrective revealing Marley's impassioned political stance. (Note that this compilation marked the first release on an album of "Roots," the non-LP B-side to the 1977 single "Waiting in Vain.")