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wa bluska wica
11-04-2008, 02:37 PM
Rastafari 78th anniversary and its impact on reggae
By Basil Walters Observer staff reporter
Sunday, November 02, 2008

Today marks the 78th anniversary of the divine concept Rastafari. It was on Sunday, November 2, 1930, His Imperial Majesty, Emperor Haile Selassie I, was crowned King of Kings, Lord of Lords, Conquering Lion of the Tribe of Judah, the Elect of God, alongside his wife, Empress Menen. The unique coronation was the first time in history a king and his wife were crowned at the same time, and it gave birth to the Rastafari Movement.
Etana among the later breed of roots rock reggae stalwarts

The movement came to light in the community of Pinnacle on the outskirts of Spanish Town, St Catherine, home of the first Rastafarian Leonard Howell who was originally from Redland, Clarendon. The Rastafari worldview, despite being rejected and scorned by mainstream Jamaican society at that time, rapidly impacted on the downtrodden, spreading to the slums of Kingston and neighbouring parish of St Thomas, where Howell, aka The Gong (Bob Marley adaptation for his record company and studio), once lived.

The relationship between Rastafari and reggae is a special one indeed. Both feed from each other, to the point where there was a time when people abroad thought that every reggae artiste was a ganja-smoking, dreadlock-wearing rasta, particularly because members of the Rastafari faith do not evangelise in the way conventional religions do.

Reggae music was the main vehicle to express the Rastafari way of life, and the stage was the pulpit. So the shows became pseudocrusades, and artistes such as Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, Bunny Wailer, Burning Spear, Culture, Black Uhuru, Big Youth, Abyssinians, Fredlocks, Israel Vibration, Jacob Miller, Augustos Pablo, Dennis Brown, I Kong (remember him?), Keith Hudson, Willie Williams, Ijahman Levi, Hugh Mandell, Junior Reid, Freddie McGregor were some of the original crusaders.

Among a later breed of roots rock reggae stalwarts were Garnett Silk, Luciano, Tony Rebel, Capleton, Buju Banton, Sizzla Kalonjie and Spragga Benz, and of more recent vintage are I-Wayne, Queen Ifrica, Etana, Tarrus Riley, Warrior King, and Chuck Fenda, among others.

But the Rastafari contribution to music in Jamaica did not start with reggae. It began with the Nyahbinghi elders, with their style of drumming and chanting and from that emerged the Folks Brothers who gave us Oh Carolina, which in time provided Shaggy with his first international hit.

As far as Jamaican music goes, in all phases of the Rastafari involvement one thing remains constant - the message. The message of a holistic way of life, of mental, physical and spiritual upliftment. A message of equal rights and justice. A message of one love. This message has resonated with people of all races, around the world.

Both Rastafari and reggae were once frowned upon by the wider society. But as the greatest reggae artiste of all time, Bob Marley, told us "Reggae music will rise and rise until it finds it rightful place."

Today, as the Rastafari Community celebrates its 78th anniversary (on a Sunday, as it was in the beginning), all that is left to say is, Jah Lives.

http://jamaicaobserver.com/lifestyle/html/20081101T200000-0500_142047_OBS_RASTAFARI___TH_ANNIVERSARY_AND_ITS _IMPACT_ON_REGGAE_.asp

yumyum2k5
11-06-2008, 02:13 AM
True story, im glad that was actually allowed in the media.

Jah Lives.


Im glad he called Bob Marley the greatest reggae musician of all time too. Good call.

I was thinking the other day that its 78 years since Emperor Haile Selassie I was crowned. I think the link between Reggae music and the Rastafari way of life is very close, i think Reggae that doesnt have that message of one love and upliftment just cannot be classed as Reggae.

It explains why i dont really like non-Rastafarian Reggae artists all that much too.

Good find Wa Buska.

Jah Bless.

wa bluska wica
11-08-2008, 12:53 AM
some rastafari hate all reggae music

i guess if you're totally dedicated to upful living, bits of plastic sold to the children of babylon is none too appealing

music is meant to be live, drums and chants

i kind of agree, but there's no one for hundreds of miles to drum and chant with [the indians won't have anything to do with me]

yumyum2k5
11-12-2008, 12:02 AM
Yeah same man i would fucking love to have a proper drum session with some Rastafari but there is only 3 including myself that i know about anywhere near my town and they are more relaxed about it all.

The way i see it is if i hadnt heard any Reggae music then i probably wouldnt be a Rastafarian right now, so im glad its in there. I can see how Rastafarians would hate Reggae pop like UB40 n shit.

wa bluska wica
11-12-2008, 01:33 AM
also it was cool in jamaica to have dreads and talk rasta [and it helped sales]

while walking the same old way

so you can't trust everyone with upful lyrics