Throughout Africa, the Caribbean, Europe, and America, Bob Marley represents far more than just the musician who translated spiritual and political beliefs into hypnotic, hard-hitting songs such as Get Up, Stand Up, No Woman, No Cry, and Jammin'.
Marley was born in rural Jamaica and reared in the mean streets of Kingston's Trenchtown; his ascent to worldwide acclaim, first with The Wailers--Peter Tosh and Bunny Livingstone--and later as a solo artist, is a riveting story of the spiritual awakening of a uniquely talented individual.
Now, for the first time, a symphony of voices has joined together to offer perspective on one of this century's most compelling figures.
Dealing with Bob Marley as a man and myth, from his rude boy teens to international fame and his tragic death at the age of thirty-six, Every Little Thing Gonna Be Alrightthen explores the larger picture, examining Marley as the spokesman for Jamaica's homegrown religion of Rastafarianism, as a flash point for the pressure cooker of Jamaican politics, and his unique status as the first pop musical superstar of the so-called Third World.
About the Author Hank Bordowitz is the author of the critically acclaimed Bad Moon Rising: The Unauthorized History of Creedence Clearwater Revival and editor of The U2 Reader: A Quarter Century of Commentary, Criticism, and Reviews.
He lives in the exurbs of New York City.