I met Mr Marley in 1982 when he played...in Ireland Dalymount park....with my friend I who was white and she being of mixed blood....Bob said we were one of a kind and admired us for being together....it was an honor and better again when both of his sons came too..Ireland was so proud x x x you thought me Bob may you rest in peace....One love always....
Stop lying to us and go do your research properly, Bob Marley never made it to 1982 he died on the 11th May 1981. You need to consult a spiritual healer because, you and your friend had seen a ghost in 1982. Lol!🤣
Great documentary but I feel that the powerful voice and role that Peter Tosh's music and speeches played in Jamaica and around the world, his fight against oppression and against apartheid and his captivating combination of music, interspersed with a powerful speech at the One Love Peach Concert should have been given greater prominence. Peter predicted that the peace concert would not make any difference in curtailing the violence at the time- Listen to his song -Peace Treaty. For anyone who is interested have a listen to Peter Tosh live at the one love peace concert.
The way our Ancestors claimed Jamaicans is just beyond imagination. They are very spirited and deeply connected to roots way more than even us in Africa. 🖤🖤🖤
Before the 1970's, Reggae was unknown to the world and was only a traditional music in Jamaica. But Bob Marley, Burning Spear, and Peter Tosh made it a worldwide phenomenon since the 1970s. Bob Marley met Michael Jackson, Stevie Wonder, Johnny Nash, Eric Clapton, Mick Jagger, and George Harrison.
I'm proud to be a jamaican. I'm proud to be black my history shall live on thanks toall who played a significant part in my history so that I'm here and abke to educate my children.
Music is the soul of Jamaica without it the poor man can’t live that’s all they have to eat and die you forget your sorrow and dance it makes you more happier to forget that you’re poor
Absolutely!!! When I lived in Tanzania we used to go to Nairobi once a month just to experience the reggae scene there. I haven't seen anything like it in any other African countries I have visited. Definitely miss it
@@abdickarena-live114 absolutely, brother. What I mean is that this doc sheds a light on the political/ spiritual aspects of reggae and rasta, instead of focusing just on weed. Much love from Brazil!
Not any reggae docu that I've seen spoke about weed for longer than a few short instances and a few images of smoking rastas, which no matter how you think about weed, was an essential part of roots reggae , or even of the post 1982 boring watered down versions of "reggae" .
Blue beat and Jamaica cha cha , ska was the music played every Saturday at home by my mother. At school it was Big youth, Denise Brown, Gregory Isaacs, Delroy Wilson,mighty Diamond to to name a few🤗
@@zh2266 ikr. They show this Alkala dude, talking about roots reggae? He's privledged, growing up in England where a hate crime is now punishable by law- (and you can sue sue sue)..what does he know about poverty in Jamaica? Yet they don't mention Dennis Brown!
I chip Smith host &executive producer of CBMTV had the pleasure of interviewing Mr Rodney AKA. Burning spear after winning the Grammy maximum respect to Mr Rodney keep the music coming JAH BLESS
I grew up as a licka white bwoy in the Caribbean..... I did my schooling there , I had many West Indian teachers and not one of them was unkind to me , not the same for the 'brit' teachers some of them were animals beating us on the ass to the point you couldn't sit down ..... then for me came 'herb ' in 72' .... then reggae with the album burning in the shape of a zippo lighter but when Natty Dread came out in took the Caribbean by storm ⛈.... Rasta and herb were in the forefront of the movement against the ultra conservative establishment and things got heavy ..... it was hard to work and in the end my mother sent me to Europe....... people these days take for granted the freedoms they have ( of course they have other problems) but back in the 60's and 70's the Caribbean was tough but beautiful place ... most days I wish I had never left as the world in the general has truly become 'Babylon ' ..... bless up the Caribbean and its wonderful people and musicians
when I went to Jamaica one of the Rasta man said that Marcus Garvey was seen as highly as haile sellasie. Is this because he was the founder. Is this true and as I have only heard of him when I left England
@Callum Simpson || Marcus Mosiah Messiah Garvey is the ancestor on my dp! He is one of the greatest blacks who fought for black liberation in my personal view, one of the men who awoken the black spirit and mind not by religion or royalty but by logical argument and simple truth ! HIM Haile Silasia I is also a great pan African by all standards, I wouldn’t rank any of this men all I will say is we must now continue this great struggle and unit Africa Now! Ghana 🇬🇭 wants unity, which African state also wants unity ! Let go !
@@sonofgarvey9466 Marcus Garvey learned everything he knew from Booker T Washington an African American and if it wasn't for black American R&B reggae would not exist
Not all true I lived in Brixton late 70s and I learned all about Reggae...and brought it home to Ireland every body love it ...Effra Rd...Brixton I was a child than....
Aside from Bob, Black Uhuru and Wailing Souls is who I jam to most. Also love me some Inner Circle, Aswad, all the Marley kids, too. Visionaries all. Reggae in my soul and blood. Sweetest music on The Earth. Also Hawaiian reggae. All those bands from the North Pacific are incredible.
Even after Jamaican music became mainstream, roots still retains its cultural authenticity. I think that since it did not receive initial acceptance for some time, it was able to retain that authenticity
A medium size Carribbean island. My Boy Lollipop by Mullie Smalls was the first Jamaican song to hit in the US. As a little white kid in the '70s, my Mom exposed me to a lot of it, The Harder They Come sdtrk. Jimmy Cliff, Bob Marley. At the time, I didn't understand it and just grooved on the beats age 6-7. I collected a lot of Ska, Reggae & Rock Steady in my college days & 20s.
My Boy Lollipop is one of the first Jamaican records for a lot of people - you do realise however that Millie’s version was a cover version of an American record by a singer called Barbie Gay. She recorded the original version of the song.
Educative, Inspiring a well grounded positive documentary on Jamaican cultural roots music. Rastas brought an eye opener to the truth and reality injustice still being felt all over the world today as everyone in the world loves reggae, nough respect. peace.
Everyone should go back as far as they can.No matter who or where all should know their ancestors.Its the foundation to build on.Love to all from Australia.💋✌️💯
You ain't never Lied Such a Powerful Song Brings Tears I'm so Proud that My Great Great Grandfather fought for his Freedom as a Heavy Artillery Solider in the U.S. Colored Troops in the Civil War "So Called Buffalo Soldiers but he left after The War he didn't hunt Indian he hated his Oppressor to the point where he named his Son Mister and help organize the Back to Africa Movement in the late 1800's From Arkansas to Africa
Just a little clarification the rastafarian movement is never a religious movement and never will be. And when leonard howell declare the coming of a king from the east he wasnt talking about a supermam with super powers coming to save us, The rastafrian movememt is a liberation movememt against opression and colonialism. Self sufficiency is our mandate then and now also the rastafarian comminity aim to upheld the cultural values of our ancestors who were taken to the island as slaves. One way to do so was to dismiss their religions and thus some rasta in those days ways only expose to christian ideology thus they were equating selassie to david blood line the return of the so call christ. We needed to look to a king like every other ethinic group could look to their king and in that sense leonard howell declare look to the east from whence cometh a king.
big up chronixx ,jah 9, Protoje ,lila ike ,kabaka pyramid,sevana,jessie royal,queen ifrica , mortimer, kalissia, Iba Mars, raging fyah, little Hero, I Wayne , chuck fender ,busy signal , agent asco , romain virgo , chris martin,Queen Marcia Griffeths Great beres hammonds and buju Banton , big youth , bob Andy, freddie Mcgregor ,Coco Tea,Barrington Levy
Loving this one thanks for sharing very important information giving thanks blessed love to all knowledge is power hopefully everyone pays attention keep up the good work knowledge is power hopefully everyone pays attention 🙏🙏🙏🇯🇲🇯🇲🇯🇲💪💪💪
Black people face the hardest time even in 2019 right now we have come a far way , miles to go when will it end .that why the youth bleaching their skin .discriminate and degrade our black history our ancestor fought for
Saw Steel Pulse in concert around 2008. Was one of the most chill concerts ever. (Am in the U.S. where reggae never took off the way it did in Britain). ...they didn't wear the Klan hats tho :)
Great documentary but…you mentioned Ska, Reggae, and Dub recording techniques; featured “War Inna Babylon” and “Police and Thieves” yet failed to mention Lee “Scratch” Perry’s name? Its all good but next time please remember The Mighty Upsetter!
Y NO ONE SAY ANYTHING ABOUT BYRON LEE CHINESE ORIGIN WHO OWNS ALL RECORDING STUDIO AND RECORD SHOPS CREATE ALL THESE SKA, AND REGGAE MUSIC ?🇯🇲📢🖤💚💛💯%👍🏻🙏🏻
Don’t forget some of us are descendants of native/aboriginal people. Who has black skin and kinky hair. We don’t all come from Africa. They did not kill all the native people as they try to teach us.
Gday luv What happened to Lee Perry and Peter Tosh huge history of reggae music The racism was not only across the pond raised in the suburbs in the 50s when asked about my future I said computers my teacher told me be sensible perhaps a mail clerk or secretary My mother was a RN first at Elmhurst Hospital. In NYC My rile model RIP Mommasan
Jackie Jackson It’s not, so you saying he could also say borough, would that be the same, still a word representing an area where people live,but it’s not the same because he is talking about Jamaica and that’s not the word used in the culture, is it ok to say,you one lives in a province in the US, no, in the US culture it’s called a state, Africa has villages not Jamaica. Don’t be silly 😛
@@MindSSetMedia3241 lol...some things are not worth commenting on. We call what he called the village, we call it country now is that the same?? Food for thought. Great documentary though
Rock and come in
th-cam.com/video/kmSaw8qhZ30/w-d-xo.html
As a Displaced African of Jamaican and US nationality I cherish Reggae music it wakens up my soul
Right an African 🎉🎉🎉🎉
Ian Brown once said in interview that reggae is the highest form of music. I couldn't agree more.
Jazz is me bredren...Reggae musicians were Jazz musicians first
And even higher if you smoke.
Jamaica , a country so small , but culture and music oh so large .
Mannaz and Respek! 👊🇯🇲✊😇
The black Americans have the largest if it wasn't for black American R&B reggae would not exist
@@Loveamericasave how is that when musik was always a part of jamaica culture
@@Loveamericasave Mento is older than R & B.
@igoutlawz7768 dont forget Americans are the only black people they invented it all but dont know themselves kmt🙄
“People weren’t listening to the government, they were listening to the message in the music” -Rasta
I met Mr Marley in 1982 when he played...in Ireland Dalymount park....with my friend I who was white and she being of mixed blood....Bob said we were one of a kind and admired us for being together....it was an honor and better again when both of his sons came too..Ireland was so proud x x x you thought me Bob may you rest in peace....One love always....
I thought bob died in 1981, maybe you got your year mixup 🤷🏾♂️
@@kohane35 probably meant 1980 when Bob Marley played at dalymount park.
I did 1980
How lucky I’d loved to of met him I was born 78 to young , but my dad brought me up on reggae ❤️💛💚
Stop lying to us and go do your research properly, Bob Marley never made it to 1982 he died on the 11th May 1981. You need to consult a spiritual healer because, you and your friend had seen a ghost in 1982. Lol!🤣
Great documentary but I feel that the powerful voice and role that Peter Tosh's music and speeches played in Jamaica and around the world, his fight against oppression and against apartheid and his captivating combination of music, interspersed with a powerful speech at the One Love Peach Concert should have been given greater prominence. Peter predicted that the peace concert would not make any difference in curtailing the violence at the time- Listen to his song -Peace Treaty. For anyone who is interested have a listen to Peter Tosh live at the one love peace concert.
Peter Tosh said at the concert that “Peace is something that you find in the cemetery”
No
Rasta revolusin
Amen, Peter stuck to his roots, never let go of his passion and has a musical legacy that easily compares if not surpasses Bob's legacy in my opinion
Well said. BLESS
Mad love and respect from East Africa, Kenya. #wanatitotheworld#wttw
Live for roots
Reggae is my daily sound
Greetings from the Fiji Islands. 12 October,2020.
Greetings Nathaniel from UK one love
Man, always fascinated with Fiji and it's mark on rugby.
-rugby player
Jamaica 🇯🇲
The way our Ancestors claimed Jamaicans is just beyond imagination. They are very spirited and deeply connected to roots way more than even us in Africa. 🖤🖤🖤
Before the 1970's, Reggae was unknown to the world and was only a traditional music in Jamaica. But Bob Marley, Burning Spear, and Peter Tosh made it a worldwide phenomenon since the 1970s. Bob Marley met Michael Jackson, Stevie Wonder, Johnny Nash, Eric Clapton, Mick Jagger, and George Harrison.
Don't also forget Jimmy cliff early in the days (fundamental reggae, I am born to win and many more I used to listen in Ghana
You must be talking about the US Ska, Rocksteady and Reggae were known all over the Caribbean and in the UK in the 1960's.
Dennis Brown
Cliff
Afro viking here Jah rastafari praises blessings respectfully Tucson Arizona Sonoran desert 🏜️
i get a lot of inspiration off reggae music and artist thank you all for reggae music
Wakenya nipee like tukisonga♥️💛💚
Mkenya Ndamu, but I don't like the way Ethiopian thinks they are better than other African
I'm proud to be a jamaican. I'm proud to be black my history shall live on thanks toall who played a significant part in my history so that I'm here and abke to educate my children.
Who can tell me the year Reggae music Barning in kenya
Remember enough elders passed down di music,not all parents were anti anything new.Trench Town is always the home of Reggae!
Music is the soul of Jamaica without it the poor man can’t live that’s all they have to eat and die you forget your sorrow and dance it makes you more happier to forget that you’re poor
Somebody please make a soundtrack of these great reggae songs from this documentary. I want to check them out!
Do it yourself
All reggae music is great bud.
RIP Bob Andy. His legacy lives on.
The medicine is in the the music, the message is the music. Love it.
Love! Big up to Burning Spear!
You know it
Come to Kenya and see how clubs are packed to the rafters on reggae nights... across all social strata!
Best
Willing to do it all the way through
Absolutely!!! When I lived in Tanzania we used to go to Nairobi once a month just to experience the reggae scene there. I haven't seen anything like it in any other African countries I have visited. Definitely miss it
I heard Kenya is big on reggae!!
Lovely to hear about that! :) Thank you for sharing! ^_^
A reggae doc that doesn't speak of weed, I loved it!
Weed is healing of nature, no negative attitude
@@abdickarena-live114 absolutely, brother. What I mean is that this doc sheds a light on the political/ spiritual aspects of reggae and rasta, instead of focusing just on weed. Much love from Brazil!
Not any reggae docu that I've seen spoke about weed for longer than a few short instances and a few images of smoking rastas, which no matter how you think about weed, was an essential part of roots reggae , or even of the post 1982 boring watered down versions of "reggae" .
They dont speak of it.. but they do sing of it haha
Irie response...
That is the
the way reggae is too commonly misinterpreted
Reggae music heals ❤ thank you Jamaica 🎉🎉
Blue beat and Jamaica cha cha , ska was the music played every Saturday at home by my mother. At school it was Big youth, Denise Brown, Gregory Isaacs, Delroy Wilson,mighty Diamond to to name a few🤗
I love you jamaica, you true inspiration for us in all revolution
Jamaica must build a Reggae Hall Of Fame
And put Dennis Brown on it somewhere. So many amazing artists have come out of that tiny island, makes me super proud
Don't they have a music hall of fame !?
Definitely. We build monuments to opression. How about to our freedom fighters
@@zh2266 ikr. They show this Alkala dude, talking about roots reggae? He's privledged, growing up in England where a hate crime is now punishable by law- (and you can sue sue sue)..what does he know about poverty in Jamaica? Yet they don't mention Dennis Brown!
It’s criminal that there’s no Hall of Fame.
But Jamaican artists also produced Sca
Rocksteady & Dub music
Endless RESPECT to Sly and Robbie❤️💛💚
Sly and Robbie were instrumental in NO DOUBT,'underneath it all'...!
Roots reggae style is timeless and speaks to the heart of me ! I will love it always simple!
🎸🎼🎵🎶🎹 Thank You 😎🤓 for sharing. Absolutely love this beautiful documentary ❤💛💚
Reggae deserved respect
Reggae fight for peace
Reggae fight for truth
Reggae fight for education
Reggae fight for creation
Reggae fight for corruption
Reggae got Respeck! It is world heritage music 🎶 and legendary! One Luv ❤️!!!
Reggae fight against corruption
Fantastic revelation on the history of reggae....Brilliant.
Throughly injoyed. Thank you!!
Cheers from Northern California, USA 🤙😎🇯🇲🎹🙂🤹
Thank you, never seen it before, grate information.
Lol. I got sold his exposer for his music. Nice properganda energy doc u made. Much success in ur career 🙏🏽
I chip Smith host &executive producer of CBMTV had the pleasure of interviewing Mr Rodney AKA. Burning spear after winning the Grammy maximum respect to Mr Rodney keep the music coming
JAH BLESS
I grew up as a licka white bwoy in the Caribbean..... I did my schooling there , I had many West Indian teachers and not one of them was unkind to me , not the same for the 'brit' teachers some of them were animals beating us on the ass to the point you couldn't sit down ..... then for me came 'herb ' in 72' .... then reggae with the album burning in the shape of a zippo lighter but when Natty Dread came out in took the Caribbean by storm ⛈.... Rasta and herb were in the forefront of the movement against the ultra conservative establishment and things got heavy ..... it was hard to work and in the end my mother sent me to Europe....... people these days take for granted the freedoms they have ( of course they have other problems) but back in the 60's and 70's the Caribbean was tough but beautiful place ... most days I wish I had never left as the world in the general has truly become 'Babylon ' ..... bless up the Caribbean and its wonderful people and musicians
Nobody cares you clown..
Very interesting
@@oldtimer5283 your mom cares enough to be on her knees speaking directly into the microphone.💋
🎤
Excellent Doco!! Great presentation Akala
Everyone has experienced listening to Bob Marley at some point of their life. You can’t avoid the power of his music.
Reggae music - Feel it in the one drop 💚
Watching this while stoned and I'm learning heaps
Leonard Howel || first ever RASTA || shout to Marcus Garvey the Messiah same way ❣️
when I went to Jamaica one of the Rasta man said that Marcus Garvey was seen as highly as haile sellasie. Is this because he was the founder. Is this true and as I have only heard of him when I left England
@Callum Simpson || Marcus Mosiah Messiah Garvey is the ancestor on my dp! He is one of the greatest blacks who fought for black liberation in my personal view, one of the men who awoken the black spirit and mind not by religion or royalty but by logical argument and simple truth ! HIM Haile Silasia I is also a great pan African by all standards, I wouldn’t rank any of this men all I will say is we must now continue this great struggle and unit Africa Now! Ghana 🇬🇭 wants unity, which African state also wants unity ! Let go !
Rich history...
@son of Garvey NO A DUTY BOUKMAN CHECK HIM OUT
@@sonofgarvey9466 Marcus Garvey learned everything he knew from Booker T Washington an African American and if it wasn't for black American R&B reggae would not exist
Akala!! Pleasant surprise hearing him on this documentary
Excellent doco, thx for making it available!
well done dude...well interesting, big thanks! x
Not all true I lived in Brixton late 70s and I learned all about Reggae...and brought it home to Ireland every body love it ...Effra Rd...Brixton I was a child than....
Really enjoyed this documentary!
Very interesting, good documentary.
The mark of a very good work is that it makes you want more. Well done.
Aside from Bob, Black Uhuru and Wailing Souls is who I jam to most. Also love me some Inner Circle, Aswad, all the Marley kids, too. Visionaries all. Reggae in my soul and blood. Sweetest music on The Earth. Also Hawaiian reggae. All those bands from the North Pacific are incredible.
Pacific Islands.. Hawaii are our brothers. He who feel s it know its or vice versa.
Your island been robbed by the brutish British.. paradise lost.
Even after Jamaican music became mainstream, roots still retains its cultural authenticity. I think that since it did not receive initial acceptance for some time, it was able to retain that authenticity
You is a real youth we love you 🙏🏽❤️🙏🏽
A medium size Carribbean island. My Boy Lollipop by Mullie Smalls was the first Jamaican song to hit in the US. As a little white kid in the '70s, my Mom exposed me to a lot of it, The Harder They Come sdtrk. Jimmy Cliff, Bob Marley. At the time, I didn't understand it and just grooved on the beats age 6-7. I collected a lot of Ska, Reggae & Rock Steady in my college days & 20s.
My Boy Lollipop is one of the first Jamaican records for a lot of people - you do realise however that Millie’s version was a cover version of an American record by a singer called Barbie Gay. She recorded the original version of the song.
R. I. P. Toots. Love you
Until this day we still a fight like this.
Best! Music and story!
Stand tall, stand proud. Hoist your colours🇵🇷🔥. Thank you Jamaica, for gifting us the most amazing music and icon EVER 📣📣📣📣!
#islander
Educative, Inspiring a well grounded positive documentary on Jamaican cultural roots music. Rastas brought an eye opener to the truth and reality injustice still being felt all over the world today as everyone in the world loves reggae, nough respect. peace.
Everyone should go back as far as they can.No matter who or where all should know their ancestors.Its the foundation to build on.Love to all from Australia.💋✌️💯
All those Legends...
You shouldn't have forgotten Lee S. Perry, this crazy guy that lives in Einsiedeln and doesnt pay taxes to babylon. Hail HIM
GREAT documentary 👍
Till this day that song slavery days by burning spear gives me chills
Facts
Gregory Isaacs Slave Driver 💥
Burning Spear sang that song w so much pain and passion...
Classic
@@jacquelinespencer5397 wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww2w2ww22wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww2ww22wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww2
You ain't never Lied Such a Powerful Song Brings Tears I'm so Proud that My Great Great Grandfather fought for his Freedom as a Heavy Artillery Solider in the U.S. Colored Troops in the Civil War "So Called Buffalo Soldiers but he left after The War he didn't hunt Indian he hated his Oppressor to the point where he named his Son Mister and help organize the Back to Africa Movement in the late 1800's From Arkansas to Africa
Just a little clarification the rastafarian movement is never a religious movement and never will be. And when leonard howell declare the coming of a king from the east he wasnt talking about a supermam with super powers coming to save us, The rastafrian movememt is a liberation movememt against opression and colonialism. Self sufficiency is our mandate then and now also the rastafarian comminity aim to upheld the cultural values of our ancestors who were taken to the island as slaves. One way to do so was to dismiss their religions and thus some rasta in those days ways only expose to christian ideology thus they were equating selassie to david blood line the return of the so call christ. We needed to look to a king like every other ethinic group could look to their king and in that sense leonard howell declare look to the east from whence cometh a king.
(人 •͈ᴗ•͈)
✊🏿🔴🟡🟢🔥🔥📚 ty
Thank you...
Liberation Theology
Hard disagree. It is Jah. All Jah, religion. Peace✌️☮️
big up chronixx ,jah 9, Protoje ,lila ike ,kabaka pyramid,sevana,jessie royal,queen ifrica , mortimer, kalissia, Iba Mars, raging fyah, little Hero, I Wayne , chuck fender ,busy signal , agent asco , romain virgo , chris martin,Queen Marcia Griffeths Great beres hammonds and buju Banton , big youth , bob Andy, freddie Mcgregor ,Coco Tea,Barrington Levy
and KOFFEE
And the real one: ALBOROSIE
and the real real one: CAPLETON
how could youforget Jacob Miller?
All the presidents of this world should listen to This music 10 minutes everyday burning the herb
HOO yes my man. Greetings!!
What a great documentary!!
Powerful documentary, but ai wanted to hear more on the most powerful reggae rebel Peter Tosh 👊👊👊
Hopefully one day we will have a documentary on Vaughn Benjamin Midnite, Ake Beka!
This is the History of Reggae Music or Culture.
💃🏾🦁🏇🏻🇯🇲🇪🇹💎🎸🎶📻🛻
Loving this one thanks for sharing very important information giving thanks blessed love to all knowledge is power hopefully everyone pays attention keep up the good work knowledge is power hopefully everyone pays attention 🙏🙏🙏🇯🇲🇯🇲🇯🇲💪💪💪
REGGAE MUSIC TO THE WORLD 🆙🔊🇯🇲🔊🆙
Black people face the hardest time even in 2019 right now we have come a far way , miles to go when will it end .that why the youth bleaching their skin .discriminate and degrade our black history our ancestor fought for
Trop bien la vidéo
do wonder why there's no mention of Lee Perry as he did have quite a huge influence on Marley & co, love is love
I love island music 🎶
Saw Steel Pulse in concert around 2008. Was one of the most chill concerts ever. (Am in the U.S. where reggae never took off the way it did in Britain).
...they didn't wear the Klan hats tho :)
Who else is watching this for homework?
me aha
lmaoo mee
Summer school MUS 107. Need to right about a documentary.
Ya'll are very lucky! Haha
i'm really happy i found this tbh
Well said ..!! Music kept the sanity in those whom were let down by those they trusted..!
Great documentary but…you mentioned Ska, Reggae, and Dub recording techniques; featured “War Inna Babylon” and “Police and Thieves” yet failed to mention Lee “Scratch” Perry’s name? Its all good but next time please remember The Mighty Upsetter!
Great coverage ! With the references to Millie and Marcia the WOMEN WERE LEFT OUT!
watanzania twende pamoja🇹🇿🇯🇲👊❤️🔥💥
i wish they had music timestamps a lot of the somgs sound so good in the background
Rest in Peace Bob Marley 🙏
I have to watch this for music homework - is anyone able to give a summary to save me some time?
The sound quality needs dealing with. On such an important documentary
what about gladiators and culture ? are they forgotten ? greetings and loveful thanks
Culture is one of my favorites...
Culture
A spirit of revelation
nothing compares to the pre synth roots reggae.
✊🏿✊🏿✊🏿✊🏿. Pure, organic
Pretty good documentary .
Y NO ONE SAY ANYTHING ABOUT BYRON LEE CHINESE ORIGIN WHO OWNS ALL RECORDING STUDIO AND RECORD SHOPS CREATE ALL THESE SKA, AND REGGAE MUSIC ?🇯🇲📢🖤💚💛💯%👍🏻🙏🏻
They made a one hour documentary about the history of reggae without mentioning Lee Perry?!!!!!?!??!!!
Don’t forget some of us are descendants of native/aboriginal people. Who has black skin and kinky hair. We don’t all come from Africa. They did not kill all the native people as they try to teach us.
Second Generation Cherokee
Third Generation Cree
Family married into the Shinnecock Nation
Teaching myself my language
You came Africa to this land prior to Columbus and Vaspucci.
Your self hate for being AFRICAN has no place in jamaica or anywhere in the diaspora.
thankyou bro,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
There are also great acts from Africa like Alpha Blondy.
One of my favorites Jerusalem!!
Well done..
LOVE over Every thing
Gday luv
What happened to Lee Perry and Peter Tosh huge history of reggae music
The racism was not only across the pond raised in the suburbs in the 50s when asked about my future I said computers my teacher told me be sensible perhaps a mail clerk or secretary
My mother was a RN first at Elmhurst Hospital. In NYC
My rile model RIP Mommasan
Them that feels it knows it!!!
When Jamaicans leave they either go to Miami, New York, Canada or United Kingdom we need to be every where.
We don’t have villages in Jamaica, we have parishes divided into communities. Great documentary other than that one thing you said,
Same difference
Jackie Jackson It’s not, so you saying he could also say borough, would that be the same, still a word representing an area where people live,but it’s not the same because he is talking about Jamaica and that’s not the word used in the culture, is it ok to say,you one lives in a province in the US, no, in the US culture it’s called a state, Africa has villages not Jamaica. Don’t be silly 😛
@@MindSSetMedia3241 lol...some things are not worth commenting on. We call what he called the village, we call it country now is that the same?? Food for thought. Great documentary though