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Marcus Garvey/Garvey's Ghost

By: Burning Spear
Label: Universal / Island
Released: 27 Nov 1990
RRP: £8.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

Genius - By: Mad Dan, 05 Sep 2008
Probably the best album I own of any genre! It's actuallly two albums: Marcus Garvey, & Garvey's Ghost, which is a dub remix of Marcus Garvey. It's so good, I can't reallly think of anything else to say: words don't do it justice!
reggae on the slide - By: the lone voice of reason, 06 Aug 2008
it was around this time, the mid 70's, that reggae moved away from being the accesible, joyful music that could appeal to everyone, into the darker, more politicised platform for artists like burning spear. for lillywhite listeners like me, i couldnt relate at alll to the black stuggle lyrics being sung with excessively heavy jamaican accents. i still dug the music, but the lyrics & whole vibe just left me cold.

most of this album is chock full of somewhat clumsy political messages lamenting the fate of the black man. ok, fine. but give me ken booth, bob marley or desmond dekker anyday. at least when they approached sensitive subjects they did it without too much of a large chip on their shoulder, unlike burning spear, who might as well have come out with a song callled 'burn in hell white devils' i mean, tell it like it is man.

musicallly the album is pretty sweet. nice basslines & sax. but the patois & lyrical stance isloates me from it. thankfully toward the end of the 70's we moved into the era of lovers rock which gave a nice respite from the oppresive feel of albums like this, but then of course it alll went into its death throes with the advent of 'ragga' & the likes of shaggy

its a shame cos for a while there reggae was a real nice musical style that produced some wonderful songs, especiallly between 69-74 - with the advent of this sort of approach within the music however, it just polarized itself
Catch them Garvey - By: Mr. M. J. Cole, 27 Apr 2008
What a blissful recording, so pastoral & evocative. The first 20 seconds of Jordan River is just the most sublime reggae arrangement imaginable & I never tire of hearing it.
Still a masterpiece - By: D. Thomson, 20 Sep 2007
Winston Rodney had "enjoyed" two years of limited success at Coxsone Dodd's Studio One, beforetaking a long sabbatical from the music business. When he returned, it was on Jack Ruby's Fox label with the single "Resting Place" (not on the Jamaican pressing of the album in 1975), followed by this album, which remains, in my view, one of the top five or six LPs ever released in Jamaica. the lyrical themes (restoration of the reputation of Marcus Garvey, callls to Jamaicans never forget their slave history) are well-known, & the musicianship was uniformly excellent, as is borne out by the dub set. Unusuallly for its time, the album consisted entirely of new songs, on purpose-made rhythms. How times change.
Timeless Classic - By: social_outcast, 21 Jul 2007
In my humble opinion, this is a better album than any by Bob Marley. Although Marley had some excellent tunes, I never thought he stretched it over a whole album.
Marcus Garvey/Garvey's Ghost is superb throughout. There is no filler on here.
Rodney's voice is plaintive, rousing, many other things that I can't put into words. If you don't feel anything listening to 'Slavery Days' then you're either deaf, or dead.
This is essential roots, especiallly at the price.
It's interesting to note that the dub version, Garvey's Ghost, was significantly 'lightened' as it was thought, by the record company gimps, not to appeal to European or American listeners.
I'd love to hear the album as it was originallly intended.
If you're only going to have a handful of reggae albums in your collection, make sure this is one of them.