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Protest

 
Album Review: Protest

  • Artist: Bunny Wailer
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1987
  • Total Time: 41:28
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Reggae

Review

Protest may have been overshadowed by the former Wailer's classic solo debut, Blackheart Man, but shouldn't be overlooked. It's an equally compelling work for the same reasons, including creative arranging, assured production, and some of Wailer's sweetest-ever vocal performances. In some ways, his style is arguably the most distinctive, being dreamier and more meditative than the impassioned agit-prop of his old bandmates Bob Marley and Peter Tosh. The obvious drawing card for non-initiates is "Get Up, Stand Up"; it's the only Wailers song to boast three separate covers by its former vocalists. Wailer's version slows the tempo to a reggae-funk crawl, which helps to build the song's impatience with Rasta skeptics, sealed by an impassioned vocal and snappy horn charts. (Tosh himself is among the small pool of "usual suspect" musicians contributing to the album.) Every track, in fact, is a standout; "Moses Children" revisits the Biblical scenario of Egyptian slavery to hint at hope for the future, while "Scheme of Things" confronts listeners with a pointed query: "What are your works toward your brother beings?" "Follow Fashion Monkey" is another roots classic that slaps hard at the "black Yankees" who forsake their culture for Western norms and mores. The album grows increasingly contemplative and personal as it progresses. "&Wanted Children" pleads for people to take responsibility for the lives they create ("As the freedom of a raging storm/Let the little children born"), while "Who Feels It Knows It" is a heartfelt ballad urging the underdog to get back off the mat. Wailer pulls off one of his finest vocals, where he unleashes a massed army of overdubbed backing choruses and harmonies to underscore his message. "Johnny Too Bad" rounds off the album with a compelling slice-of-life portrait of a hardened young offender who gets even with the society that spurns him, only to be overwhelmed by superior police power. Wailer's voice is the glue that holds it all together, being well-suited to plead, please, or attack as the mood requires. By any measure, this album's a landmark -- not only for reggae itself, but also its earnestly low-profile featured artist. ~ Ralph Heibutzki, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Moses' Children Bunny Wailer Bunny Wailer (5:23)
Get Up, Stand Up Bob Marley, Peter Tosh Bunny Wailer (6:13)
Scheme of Things Bunny Wailer Bunny Wailer (4:14)
Quit Trying Bunny Wailer Bunny Wailer (4:16)
Follow Fashion Monkey Bunny Wailer Bunny Wailer (4:11)
Wanted Children Bunny Wailer Bunny Wailer (5:11)
Who Feels It? Bunny Wailer Bunny Wailer (5:41)
Johnny Too Bad Bunny Wailer Bunny Wailer (5:51)

Credits

Toutec K. Sterling (Keyboards), Bobby Ellis (Horn), Solomonic Enchanters (Vocals), Bunny Wailer (Vocals), Robbie Shakespeare (Bass), S. Morris (Arranger), Keith Sterling (Keyboards), Dirty Harry Hall (Horn), Earl Lindo (Keyboards), Tommy McCook (Saxophone), Bunny Wailer (Assistant Engineer), S. Morris (Mixing), Peter Tosh (Guitar), Bunny Wailer (Guitar), Bunny Wailer (Vocals (Background)), Tommy McCook (Flute), Bunny Wailer (Composer), Bernard Touter Harvey (Keyboards), Bunny Wailer (Timbales), Leroy "Horsemouth" Wallace (Drums), Bunny Wailer (Director), S. Morris (Engineer), Mikey "Boo" Richards (Bass), Horsemouth (Drums), Bunny Wailer (Arranger), Marquis (Horn), Solomonic Enchanters (Vocals (Background)), Chinna (Guitar), Herman Marquis (Horn), Earl "Chinna" Smith (Guitar), Bunny Wailer (Mixing Assistant), Mikey "Boo" Richards (Drums), Tommy McCook (Horn), Bunny Wailer (Producer)
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Wikipedia: Protest (The Dears EP)
Top
Protest
EP by The Dears
Released 2002
Genre indie rock
Label MapleMusic Recordings
Professional reviews
The Dears chronology
Nor the Dahlias: The Dears 1995-1998
(2001)
Protest
(2002)
No Cities Left
(2003)

Protest is an EP by The Dears, released in limited quantities in 2002. It was later re-released in a mass market version with different artwork in 2004.

Track listing

(2002 release)

  1. "Heaven, Have Mercy on Us" – 3:56
  2. "Summer of Protest" – 7:01
  3. "No Hope Before Destruction" – 6:33

(2004 release)

  1. "Heaven, Have Mercy on Us" – 3:56
  2. "Summer of Protest" – 7:01
  3. "No Hope Before Destruction" – 6:33
  4. "Protest (Parallel)" – 11:50 (remix and additional production by chaonaut)



 
 
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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Protest (The Dears EP)" Read more