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Bunny Wailer - Keep On Moving (Live (Remastered)) (2022) [Hi-Res]

Bunny Wailer - Keep On Moving (Live (Remastered)) (2022) [Hi-Res]

BAND/ARTIST: Bunny Wailer

  • Title: Keep On Moving (Live (Remastered))
  • Year Of Release: 2022
  • Label: Delta Music
  • Genre: Reggae, Ska
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks) [44.1kHz/24bit] / FLAC (tracks) / MP3
  • Total Time: 1:16:04
  • Total Size: 842 / 459 / 178 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

1. Rastaman / Blackheart Man (Live Remastered) (04:30)
2. Armagideon (Live Remastered) (02:19)
3. Fighting Against Conviction (Live Remastered) (01:38)
4. Dreamland (Live Remastered) (03:03)
5. Fire Burning (Live Remastered) (04:57)
6. Liberation (Live Remastered) (03:35)
7. Serious Thing (Live Remastered) (04:27)
8. Baldhead Jesus (Live Remastered) (03:46)
9. Crazy Baldheads (Live Remastered) (04:52)
10. No Woman, No Cry (Live Remastered) (05:47)
11. Legalize It (Live Remastered) (06:22)
12. Cool Running (Live Remastered) (04:01)
13. Rise & Shine (Live Remastered) (06:10)
14. Summer Down (Live Remastered) (03:06)
15. I'm The Dubmaster (Live Remastered) (02:30)
16. Hypocrite (Live Remastered) (05:09)
17. How Does It Feel (Live Remastered) (03:50)
18. Keep On Movin' (Live Remastered) (05:53)

Bunny Wailer's associations with Bob Marley and his role as a founding member of the Wailers were enough to cement him in reggae history, but his contributions to Jamaican music and culture didn't end there. After committing years to the development of the Wailers, he left the band in 1973 and spent the rest of his life in an active and shifting solo career that produced roots reggae masterpieces like 1976's Blackheart Man and a slew of Grammy-winning records throughout the '90s. Wailer's focus turned more toward politics and activism throughout the '90s, but he continued recording and touring until the 2010s, releasing albums like 2000's Communication and playing live well into his late sixties.

Born Neville O'Riley Livingston on April 10, 1947 in Kingston, Jamaica, the young Livingston actually spent his earliest years in the village of Nine Miles in St. Ann's. It was there that he first met Bob Marley, and the two toddlers became fast friends. The boys both came from one-parent families; Livingston was brought up by his father; Marley by his mother. The two parents had much in common, and together moved their families to Kingston in 1952. Around the corner lived singer Joe Higgs, who rose to stardom in the late '50s, both as a solo artist and as one-half of the popular vocal duo Higgs & Wilson in partnership with Delroy Wilson. While only in his early twenties, Higgs was keen to help other young talent around the neighborhood, and gave singing lessons in his tenement yard on Third Street. There the two boys met another pair of equally keen youngsters, Peter Tosh and Junior Braithwaite. Initially, Marley planned on a solo career, but his hopes were dashed by a failed audition for producer Leslie Kong. The upshot was that the four boys joined forces, along with backing singers Cherry Green and Beverly Kelso, as the Teenagers. The band's name would change several times before they finally settled on the Wailers.



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  • User offline
  • Kolomito
  •  wrote in 20:57
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Many thanks
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  • phakedub
  •  wrote in 21:09
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Jah Rastafari, negus negast! Thank you, brother!