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Bob Marley, without Peter Tosh or Bunny Wailer, moved to Sweden to work with Johnny Nash, writing and composing songs for the soundtrack to the film Want So Much to Believe. [5] From November to December 1971, Marley toured Great Britain with Nash.
Concrete Jungle Vol. 1, or the title song, by South Central Cartel, 1999; Songs ... "Concrete Jungle", by Bob Marley and The Wailers from Catch a Fire, 1973
It was followed by Burnin', which included the song "I Shot the Sheriff". Eric Clapton's cover of the song became a hit in 1974. Bob Marley proceeded with Bob Marley and the Wailers, which included the Wailers Band and the I Threes. In 1975, he had his first own hit outside Jamaica with "No Woman, No Cry", from the Live! album.
Songs of Freedom is a four-disc box set containing music by Bob Marley and the ... Bob Marley: non-album single (1962) ... "Concrete Jungle" B. Marley: Catch a Fire ...
Produced by Elvis Costello, the album captures the disaffection and anger felt by the youth of the UK's "concrete jungle"—a phrase borrowed from Bob Marley's 1973 album Catch a Fire—used to describe the grim, violent inner cities of 1970s Britain. The album features a mixture of original material and several covers of classic Jamaican ska ...
— Bob Marley and the Wailers, “Redemption Song” “So, come with me, to a land of liberty, / Where we can live, live our lives and be free.” — Bob Marley and the Wailers, “400 years”
Grooving Kingston 12 is a 3 disc box set of Bob Marley and the Wailers material from the 1967-1972 period released in 2004 by Universal and JAD Records. [1] An update of the Complete Wailers series along with Fy-Ah Fy-Ah and "Man To Man", it contains remastered versions of almost everything released during that period.
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