
I & I: The Natural Mystics: Marley, Tosh and Wailer
The Wailers are the undisputed sovereigns of reggae- and one of the biggest and most influential groups of the twentieth century. In the course of their ten years together, Peter Tosh, Bunny Wailer and Bob Marley produced a raft of songs including Get Up, Stand Up , I Shot the Sherriff and Stir It Up - that have come to define an era, and a golden age in music. hey had, at one stage, been inseparable; three great men united in their ambition for the kind of musical harmony and financial reward that would provide an escape from the Trench Town ghetto of Kingston, Jamaica. On the cusp of success however, they d been pulled apart, if not by dark forces, then by the rapacious instincts of Chris Blackwell, the charming Machiavellian boss of Island Records. & I- The Natural Mystics examines for the first time the history and development of the group, and the overlapping stories of each member in detail. It charts the complex relationship of these three strong personalities, from their beginnings as The Teenagers to the group s slow start, the roller-coaster of their fluctuating fortunes and musical peak, and the politics and ideologies that provoked their split in the mid 1
Colin Grant is an independent historian and producer for BBC radio. The son of Jamaican emigrants, he lives in Brighton
Author: Colin Grant
Format: Hardback, 320 pages, 161mm x 240mm, 580 g
Published: 2011, Vintage Publishing, United Kingdom
Genre: Biography: The Arts
The Wailers are the undisputed sovereigns of reggae- and one of the biggest and most influential groups of the twentieth century. In the course of their ten years together, Peter Tosh, Bunny Wailer and Bob Marley produced a raft of songs including Get Up, Stand Up , I Shot the Sherriff and Stir It Up - that have come to define an era, and a golden age in music. hey had, at one stage, been inseparable; three great men united in their ambition for the kind of musical harmony and financial reward that would provide an escape from the Trench Town ghetto of Kingston, Jamaica. On the cusp of success however, they d been pulled apart, if not by dark forces, then by the rapacious instincts of Chris Blackwell, the charming Machiavellian boss of Island Records. & I- The Natural Mystics examines for the first time the history and development of the group, and the overlapping stories of each member in detail. It charts the complex relationship of these three strong personalities, from their beginnings as The Teenagers to the group s slow start, the roller-coaster of their fluctuating fortunes and musical peak, and the politics and ideologies that provoked their split in the mid 1
Colin Grant is an independent historian and producer for BBC radio. The son of Jamaican emigrants, he lives in Brighton
