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Damian Marley

 
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Damian Marley


Singer

Reggae singer Damian Marley was born into a musical legacy. It is little surprise that the son of reggae legend Bob Marley followed in his father’s musical footsteps—older brothers Julian, Ky-Mani, Stephen, and Ziggy did, as well. Damian, the youngest Marley, got his start singing reggae as a teen but soon found his voice as more of a reggae rapper. Through releases like Mr. Marley and Halfway Tree, Marley developed a style that is built on his own leanings toward urban and hip-hop beats, yet he remains strongly committed to his father’s political reggae and Rastafarian tradition. While he explores hip-hop influences, Marley is pioneering a contemporary-but-true reggae sound: he won a Grammy Award for Best Reggae Album in 2002.

Born on July 21, 1978, Damian Robert Nesta Marley is the seventh child and youngest son of Bob Marley. Damian’s mother is Cindy Breakspeare, a Jamaican beauty queen who was crowned Miss World in 1976. He was only two years old when his famous father died of cancer in 1981. The elder Marley had built a recording studio, called Marley Music Studio, at 56 Hope Road, in Kingston, the city where Damian was raised. The studio was the site of many of Bob Marley’s most important recordings and drew many talented musicians who helped create the musical environment that Damian Marley grew up in.

Nicknamed "Junior Gong," Marley began singing in his aunt’s living room and hit the stage at an early age. He sang in a reggae group called the Shepherds, which he formed when he was just 13 years old. The group included other children of reggae stars, including Shiah Coore, who is the son of Third World guitarist Cat Coore, and Yashema Beth McGregor, the daughter of Freddie McGregor and Judy Mowatt. The Shepherds were featured at the 1992 Reggae Sunsplash and Sunfest music festivals in Jamaica, as well as at other Jamaican shows. Marley also performed with rock star Sting in 1992 and toured with the Shabba Ranks World Unity Tour in 1993.

The Shepherds disbanded and Marley began to refine his rapping skills. He released his first single, "Deejay Degree," on his father’s record label, Tuff Gong, in 1993. He released "Sexy Girls on My Mind" on the Main Street record label in 1994. His 1995 release, "School Controversy," earned a slot on the charity compilation Positively Reggae, released on Epic/Sony. Proceeds from the record’s sales benefited the Leaf of Life Foundation, a Jamaican organization that helps HIV-positive children. Marley was selected as the spokesperson for the Positively Reggae campaign, a high-profile position for the teen. Marley paired up with brother Julian in the mid-1990s. The two performed together at the concert celebrating the 50th anniversary of their father’s birth, held in 1995 at the Bob Marley Museum in Kingston. Damian and Julian also were featured on the 1996

Marley Magic North American Tour and opened for brother Ziggy Marley and the Melody Makers.

Marley’s debut album, Mr. Marley, was released in September of 1996. He recorded the album while he was still in high school. Produced by brother Stephen Marley, the album showcases both the artist’s reggae roots and his more urban, hip-hop tendencies. Mr. Marley is a blend of reggae and dancehall rhythms with hip-hop beats that set the stage for Marley’s vocal stylings. His single, "Me Name Junior Gong," was a number-one hit in Hawaii. By the time Marley reached the Hawaiian leg of his tour, he had three hit singles there: "Me Name Junior Gong," "One Cup of Coffee," and "Now You Know." A spot on 1997’s eclectic alternative music festival tour, Lollapalooza, exposed Marley to a wider audience.

In Kingston, the intersection where the city’s uptown and downtown areas meet is called Halfway Tree, an area that acts as a bridge between Kingston’s privileged and poor neighborhoods. Marley embraced the spirit of Halfway Tree and used the name as the title for his 2001 full-length release on the Motown record label. The title refers in part to his own heritage as the son of a ghetto-raised father and an uptown mother, but it also reflects his wish that his music be relevant to all segments of society. Stephen Marley once again worked as producer, helping his brother to successfully meld traditional reggae rhythms with more contemporary hip-hop beats. Stephen also sings on the album and plays harmonica. The album features a spoken-word introduction by Bunny Wailer, of Bob Marley’s band the Wailers, as well as a number of cameo appearances from the reggae and hip-hop worlds. Jamaican DJ Bounty Killer opens the album. Rapper Treach of Naughty by Nature and dancehall legend Yami Bolo appear on "Stand a Chance." Rapper Eve of the Ruff Ryders appears on "Where Is the Love?" returning the services Marley lent to her on her album, Scorpion.

Marley reached back into his father’s collection for the song "And Be Loved," which he built from samples from Bob Marley’s 1979 classic "Could You Be Loved." Bob Marley’s 1973 "Slave Driver" is reworked into "Catch a Fire," with Stephen singing his father’s vocal part and Damian rapping about the dangers of guns and drugs. "Marley does an excellent balancing act," noted critic Jon Azpiri in a review of Halfway Tree located at the All Music Guide website. "He handles his legacy and his future flawlessly." Critic Hannah Appel commented on the Jahworks.org website that the response from some Jamaican Marley-family fans was that the album "is by far the best and most original thing to come from the second-generation Marleys." She went on to say that "this album is a bold step into the larger world of dancehall and hip-hop music, and it will make Jamaica and the rest of the world feel the impact of the Marley children in ways they haven’t before." The singles "More Justice," "It Was Written," and "Still Searching" made it onto American and Jamaican reggae charts, with "Still Searching" becoming a number-one Jamaican hit. Marley earned a Grammy Award for Best Reggae Album for Halfway Tree in 2002, besting several reggae veterans.

The youngest Marley is known for his energetic live shows. "Marley was an ecstatic presence [at Boston’s Paradise Rock Club]," wrote Steve Morse in a 2002 article in the Boston Globe, "delivering one of the best reggae shows in memory while echoing his dad’s passion for revolutionary rhetoric and Rastafarian spirituality." Rastafarians believe that former Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie is divine, that Ethiopia is Eden, and that one day all blacks will return to Africa. During Marley’s shows, Ethiopian flags are waved about onstage while Marley energetically belts out his own and his father’s politically charged songs, backed by his equally tireless band.

Selected discography
Mr. Marley, Lightyear, 1996.
Halfway Tree, Motown/Uptown, 2001.

Sources
Periodicals
Boston Globe, March 27, 2002, p. F10.
Daily News (Los Angeles, CA), February 6, 1995, p. N14.

Online
"CD Review: Halfway Tree" Jahworks.org, http://www.jahworks.org/music/cd/halfwaytree.html (September 9, 2002).
"Damian ‘Jr. Gong’ Marley," RollingStone.com, http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/default.asp?oid=1512276 (July 2, 2002).
"Damian Marley," All Music Guide, http://www.allmusic.com (July 2, 2002).
"Damian Marley Ecstatic about Grammy Triumph," Jahworks.org, http://www.jahworks.org/music/features/d_marley_grammy.html (July 2, 2002).
’"Jr. Gong’ Damian Marley," melodymakers.com, http://www.melodymakers.com/mm/juliandamian.html (July 2, 2002).
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AMG AllMusic Guide: Pop Artists:

Damian "Junior Gong" Marley

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  • Genres: Rap

Biography

Damian Marley was only two when his father died, but the youngest of the Marley sons must have learned something. At the age of 13, he formed his first band, the Shepherds, which also included the son of Third World's Cat Coore and the daughter of Freddie McGregor; the group even opened up the 1992 Reggae Sunsplash festival. By 1994, Damian was working on his own solo project, and with the help of his father's label, Tuff Gong, he recorded Mr. Marley. Also lending a familial air to the sessions was the presence of Stephen Marley, who produced and co-wrote several songs for the LP. Halfway Tree from 2001 earned a Grammy nomination, but the public generally overlooked the ambitious album. Not so for the reggae-meets-hip-hop single "Welcome to Jamrock," which became an urban phenomenon soon after its summer 2005 release. Street-level mixtapes began featuring it, urban radio couldn't get enough of it, and remixes -- both legal and not so legal -- began appearing at a fast pace. The well-rounded album Welcome to Jamrock delivered on the promise of the single that same year, reaching the Top Ten. ~ John Bush, Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Damian Marley

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Damian Marley
Background information
Birth name Damien Marley
Also known as Junior Gong , Gong ZILLA
Born July 21, 1978 (1978-07-21) (age 33)
Kingston, Jamaica
Genres Reggae, dancehall, hip-hop, reggae fusion, ragga
Years active 1996–present
Labels Tuff Gong, Ghetto Youth International, Universal
Associated acts Bob Marley, Ky-Mani Marley, Ziggy Marley, Stephen Marley, Julian Marley, Nas, SuperHeavy, K'naan

Damian "Jr. Gong" Marley (born July 21, 1978) is a Jamaican reggae artist who has won three Grammy awards.[1] Damian is the youngest son of Bob Marley.

Damian was two years old when his father Bob Marley died; he is the only child born to Marley and Cindy Breakspeare, Miss World 1976. Damian's nickname Junior Gong is derived from his father's nickname of Tuff Gong. Marley has been performing since the age of 13. He shares, along with most of his family, a full-time career in music.

Contents

Music

Marley has described his music as "dancehall and reggae. I've noticed...people trying to separate the two of them," he continues. "It's Jamaican culture in general. I don't try to classify or separate."[2]

At age 13, he formed a musical group by the name of the Shephards, which included the daughter of Freddie McGregor and son of Third World's Cat Core. The group opened the 1992 Reggae Sunsplash festival.[3] The band fell apart in the early 1990s and Damian started his solo career.[4]

With the backing of his father’s label, Tuff Gong, he released his 1996 debut album Mr. Marley which surprised many who were unaccustomed to hearing a Marley deejaying rather than singing.[5] Damian’s brother, Stephen Marley, was a producer and co-author for this album.[4]

His second album, Halfway Tree was released in 2001. The cover of Halfway Tree depicts him standing under the clock at halfway tree. This is an embodiment of his parent’s different social origins with this mother from uptown and his father from the ghetto. In Kingston, Jamaica the Halfway Tree was used as a shady halfway point for farmers and vendors who would pass the tree on their route to transport their goods to the downtown market.[6] It brought him much recognition, remaining on the Billboard top reggae albums chart for 158 weeks,[7] and winning the 2002 Grammy Award for Best Reggae Album.[5]

His third album, Welcome to Jamrock was released in September 2005, named after the hugely successful song of the same name. The lyrics to the single "Welcome to Jamrock", which was performed over a riddim produced by Sly and Robbie for Ini Kamoze some 20 years earlier,[8] centered around poverty, politics and crime in Jamaica. While the single was controversial at home over its perceived negative viewpoint of the island,[9] many praised the content of the song. Dr. Clinton Hutton, professor at the University of the West Indies, said of the single, "'Jamrock' uses the icon of the inner city, of alienation, of despair, of prejudice, but of hope, of Jamaican identity, to remind us of the fire of frustration, the fire of creativity, the fire of warning to open up our eyes and look within to the life we are living. And still some of us don't want to hear and to look and say enough is enough."[10] The single reached #13 on the UK Singles Chart[11] and #55 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart.[12] It was also #100 on the Top 100 Songs of the Decade listing by Rolling Stone.[13]

At the 2006 Grammy Awards, he won Best Reggae Album and Best Urban/Alternative Performance for Welcome to Jamrock. He is the only Jamaican reggae artist in history to win two Grammy Awards on the same night. He is also the only reggae artist to win in the Best Urban/Alternative Performance category at the Grammy Awards. The album sold 86,000 copies in its first week of release,[9] and was eventually certified gold after selling 500,000 copies in the United States.[14] Other notable singles from the album include "The Master Has Come Back", "Road to Zion" featuring Nas, and "Khaki Suit" featuring Bounty Killer and Eek-A-Mouse.

On May 17, 2010, Marley released Distant Relatives, a collaborative album with Nas. The album title refers not only to the bond between the artists, but the connection to their African ancestry, which inspired the album both musically and lyrically.[15] They have previously collaborated on “Road to Zion”, on Marley’s Welcome to Jamrock album. The album joins two different flavors of music with Marley’s dub-rock aesthetic and Nas’ flow. Damian and Stephen produced much of the album. The proceeds of this album will go to building schools in the Congo.[16]

Recently, Damian has started work on two new projects. In an interview on Tim Westwood he revealed he had started work on a new album. His street single, released in Jamaica is titled Just Aint The Same. He has also joined Mick Jagger's musical project SuperHeavy with Joss Stone, Dave Stewart and A.R. Rahman. Their debut single "Miracle Worker" was released on June 6, with the album scheduled for a September release. [17]

Personal life and beliefs

Born as Damian Marley, he was nicknamed "Jr. Gong" in honour of his legendary father, Bob "Tuff Gong" Marley. His mother is a Jamaican jazz musician, former model and crowned Miss World 1976 Cindy Breakspeare. After seeing The movie Damien: Omen II, which is about the coming of the Antichrist, one of Bob’s last requests in Germany was to have Damian’s name changed. “Damien being a devil….It was inappropriate for him as a Rastafarian to have a child with that name,” Bob said and Damian’s name was later changed.[18] He has 13 siblings total; 10 on his father's side and 3 on his mother's side. Damian was two years old when his father died due to the spread of melanoma to his lungs and brain, at 36 years of age. Marley has been in the music business since he was a child. He is a Rastafari and his music reflects both his beliefs and the Rastafari guiding principles of one love, one planet, and freedom for all nations. While he travels and tours the better part of the year, his home base is split between Kingston, Jamaica and Miami, Florida in the United States of America. He has a younger half brother Christian and a half sister Leah from his mother Cindy.[19]

Discography

Year Album details Peak chart positions Certifications
(sales thresholds)
US US R&B US Rap US Reggae
1996 Mr. Marley
  • Released: September 9, 1996
  • Label:
  • Format:
2
2001 Halfway Tree
  • Released: September 11, 2001
  • Label: Universal Distribution
  • Format:
2
2005 Welcome to Jamrock
  • Released: September 13, 2005
  • Label: Universal Distribution
  • Format:
7 4 3 1 US: Gold
2010 Distant Relatives (with Nas) 5 1 1 1
2011 SuperHeavy (with SuperHeavy)
  • Released: September 16, 2011
  • Label: A&M Records
  • Format: CD
26 - - -
"—" denotes releases that did not chart.

Singles

Year Title Chart positions Album
US US R&B US Rap UK
[11]
2005 "Welcome to Jamrock" 55 18 12 13 Welcome to Jamrock
"The Master Has Come Back" - - - 74
"Road to Zion" (featuring Nas) - 57 - -
2006 "Beautiful" (featuring Bobby Brown) - - - 39
"All Night" (featuring Stephen Marley) - - - -
2007 "Now That You Got It" (Gwen Stefani feat. Damian Marley) - - - 59 The Sweet Escape
2008 "One Loaf of Bread" - - - - Gang War Riddim
2010 "As We Enter" (Nas & Damian Marley) 116 18 16 39 Distant Relatives
2011 "Nah Mean" (Nas & Damian Marley) - - - -
"—" denotes releases that did not chart.

Other charted songs

Year Song Peak Album
Digital Songs CAN
[20]
2010 "Liquor Store Blues" (Bruno Mars feat. Damian Marley) 68 97 Doo-Wops & Hooligans

References

  1. ^ "Grammy Award Winners Search". Grammy.com. http://www.grammy.com/nominees/search?artist=marley&title=&year=All&genre=All. Retrieved 27 September 2010. 
  2. ^ Henry, Krista. Music a means, a message. Jamaica Gleaner. December 22, 2006. Retrieved 2011-3-3.
  3. ^ Bush, Jon. Damian "Junior Gong" Marley biography. Rovi via MTV.com. Retrieved 2011-3-3.
  4. ^ a b Moskowitz, David Vlado. Caribbean popular music: an encyclopedia of reggae. 2006. pg 188-189. Retrieved 2011-5-11
  5. ^ a b Mills, Claude. Damian Marley: Conveying solid, conscious lyrics. Jamaica Gleaner. January 2, 2003. Retrieved 2011-3-2.
  6. ^ Niaah, Sanjah Stanley. DanceHall: From Slave Ship to Ghetto. 2010. pg 81. Retrieved 2011-5-11.
  7. ^ Jackson,Steven. Sean Paul Billboard Reggae Artiste of the year/decade. Jamaica Observer. December 18, 2009. Retrieved 2011-3-2.
  8. ^ Henry, Krista. Old beats, new hits. Jamaica Star. December 15, 2006.
  9. ^ a b Boyne, Ian. 'WELCOME TO JAMROCK' - A phenomenon. Jamaica Gleaner. October 2, 2005. Retrieved 2011-3-2.
  10. ^ Cooke, Mel. 'Welcome to Jamrock': A celebration of culture and talent. Jamaica Star. September 12, 2005. Retrieved 2011-3-2.
  11. ^ a b Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 350. ISBN 1-904994-10-5. 
  12. ^ Billboard Singles Chart (Welcome to Jamrock-Damian Marley). AllMusic. Retrieved 2011-3-3.
  13. ^ 'Jamrock' stands alone. Jamaica Gleaner. December 15, 2009. Retrieved 2011-3-2.
  14. ^ Evans, Teino. Grammy welcomes Jamrock - Jr. Gong speaks about his double victory. Jamaica Star. February 10, 2006. Retrieved 2011-3-2.
  15. ^ Brunstad, Svein. Nas and Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley are Distant Relatives (Interview). URB. April 19, 2010. Retrieved 2011-3-3.
  16. ^ Lemmon, Kyle. "Damian Marley, Nas: Distant Relatives", Prefix, 12 May 2009. Retrieved 2011-5-11
  17. ^ "Mick Jagger's SuperHeavy Supergroup to Drop Album in September". Retrieved 2011-7-23
  18. ^ White, Timothy. Catch a Fire: the Life of Bob Marley. pg 402. Retrieved 2011-5-11
  19. ^ Salon. July 28, 2008. Retrieved 2011-5-11.
  20. ^ "Canadian Hot 100: Oct 1, 2010". Billboard (magazine). Nielsen Broadcast Data Systems. October 1, 2010. Archived from the original on October 3, 2010. http://www.webcitation.org/5tD397hbF. Retrieved October 3, 2010. 

External links


 
 
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Marley Magic: Tribute to Bob Marley (1996 Music Film)
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