Island
Natty Dread
Natty Dread
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Bob Marley's Natty Dread captures his decisive transition from Wailers band member to auteur, with his singing and writing now front and center. The revamped band is securely reined in to his defiant, Rastafarian worldview.
This 1974 release mirrors the line-up's more sinewy sound, carved by Al Anderson's spidery guitar fills, Touter's telegraphic keyboard, the I-Threes' female vocal choruses, and vamping horns - a potent brew that bubbles under his most openly political songs. A position paper on the daunting ghetto realities of Jamaica's Trenchtown, the album reels off a series of enduring Marley classics.
It kicks off with the giddy, sexy reggae anthem, "Lively Up Yourself", with its hilarious but mysterious spoken fadeout ('what you got in that bag, there?'). It continues with the uplifting pep talk in "No Woman No Cry", the grim dispatches of "Them Belly Full (But We Hungry)" and "Rebel Music (3 o'clock Roadblock)", as well as the exhortations of the title song and "Revolution".
Marley's own dreadlocks were still just growing in then, but this is nonetheless fully matured, riveting reggae at its most focused, righteous, and rhythmically irresistible.