Wait, wait, Bob Marley did I Shot the Sherriff? Did he write it, or, like, do a cover? For some reason I've always been convinced that I Shot the Sherriff was some obscure country/western riff that various people (including Eric Clapton) picked up, the way everybody has done a version of Twist And Shout.
Possibly this is what comes of watching
Hud
while sleepy.
Clapton covered Marley. And by covered I mean...
Wait, wait, Bob Marley did I Shot the Sherriff? Did he write it, or, like, do a cover?
This is my first year of university -- having this argument
over
and
over.
Of course, I didn't realise the Beatles did "Here Comes The Sun" before Nina Simone, so my high ground wasn't all that high.
t hums "Pressure Drop" quietly so as to subliminally mess with minds
(It's not Marley, yet is full-on Reggae)
I've never thought of that Toots and the Maytals as full-on reggae. I don't have the vocab to explain why, though.
There's an assload of reggae that's not Bob. He's only the most famous. Not the most prolific, or even, probably the most innovative. He just worked out how to get his message out.
I saw Toots and the Maytalls at a Gathering of the Vibes festival in '92 or thereabouts. It was a very Vegas Elvis-ish performance. Kind of surreal.
So I caved and downloaded Redemption Song since I couldn't recall hearing it. Yep, I've heard it which is not surprising, just didn't remember. I don't seek out reggae, but hear it often in my surroundings. Very little is sing-a-longable for me. It is comfy and enjoyable music for me since I tend to associate it with my loved ones that have it on all the time.
Were I Michael I would have been surprised that Sawyer knew the lyrics.
It's interesting to me that everyone seems to think that it's natural for Michael to know Bob Marley. Is it mostly a race assumption, or because he's an artist, or was before he started doing construction?
Michael hasn't been painted as a music fan, let alone a reggae fan, as far as I know. and it seems to me Sawyer may have had more chances to get exposed to different kind of music than Michael.