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Rebel Music - The Bob Marley Story |  
List Price: $24.99 
Your Price: $22.49 | 
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 Features:
  
 Description:
  The legend of Bob Marley (1945-1981) is well served by this  comprehensive and clear-eyed look at the turbulent life and times of the reggae  great. Jeremy Marre's documentary presents the man as a vitally important  artist, but a flawed--if immensely appealing--human being. The trajectory of his  rise is traced from his humble beginnings as the son of a poor, teenage mother  in rural Jamaica to the heights of international superstardom in the 1970s.  Along the way, Marre provides a context for the development of his artistry by  exploring the political situation in Jamaica at the time, the roots of  Rastafarianism (to which he was intensely devoted), and his unconventional  relationships with women. Although he remained close to wife, Rita, until his  death, Marley enjoyed a number of public relationships with other women (Rita  admits she found this difficult; Marley claims he didn't see anything unusual  about it). The sheer number of interviews is impressive. Aside from the clips of  Marley himself, Bunny Livingstone and Peter Tosh (the Wailers), Island Records  founder Chris Blackwell, two Jamaican prime ministers (Socialist Michael Manley  and Conservative Edward Seaga), and even a CIA official (Philip Agee) all make  an appearance. The breadth of Marley's music is represented by over 40 tracks,  from the early ska hit "Judge Not" to later political numbers like "Africa  Unite." Although Marley never actually considered himself a "political" person,  he was surely a rebel--brave, passionate, committed--in the best sense of the  word. --Kathleen C. Fennessy
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