HomeMusic Revelation, Pt. 1: The Root of Life

Revelation, Pt. 1: The Root of Life

Stephen Marley  Guitar Stephen Marley  Composer Stephen Marley  Keyboards Stephen Marley  Producer Stephen Marley  Executive Producer Stephen Marley  Drum Programming Stephen Marley  Main Performer

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1 Made in Africa Grant/Marley/Wale [ 5:37
2 False Friends Illestr Eight/Marle 3:24
3 Break Us Apart Bailey/Marley 3:45
4 Can't Keep I Down Marley/Smith 3:19
5 No Cigarette Smoking (In My Room) Fiona/Marley/Smith 3:41
6 Freedom Time Marley 3:21
7 Jah Army Marley/Marley/Myrie 4:44
8 Old Slaves Marley 6:26
9 Pale Moonlight (How Many Times) Marley 3:25
10 She Knows Now Marley/Smith 5:21
11 Selassie Is the Chapel Marley 4:54
12 Tight Ship Marley/Marley/Smith 4:15
13 Working Days Grant/Marley/Smith 5:07
14 Now I Know Booker/Marley 4:11
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Revelation, Pt. 1: The Root of Life

Audio Compact Disc

Label: Universal Republic

Category: Pop/Rock

Revelation, Pt. 1: The Root of Life

UPC: 602527615189

Release Date: 05/23/2011

Original Release Date: 05/23/2011

Number of Discs: 1

Tracks: [Made in Africa, False Friends, Break Us Apart, Can't Keep I Down, No Cigarette Smoking (In My Room), Freedom Time, Jah Army, Old Slaves, Pale Moonlight (How Many Times), She Knows Now, Selassie Is the Chapel, Tight Ship, Working Days, Now I Know]
Contributors:

David Jeffries

As his brothers venture into unexplored territory such as children?s music (Ziggy) and hip-hop (Damian), Stephen Marley acts as anchor for the clan on Revelation Part 1: The Root of Life. While Part 2 is planned as a more electric and future-minded affair, this first Revelation is a roots reggae-oriented effort, or at least ?roots? in the Wailers (post-Tosh and post-Bunny) sense of the word. Think Father Bob?s Uprising and you?re close to the feel here, which goes from cool and woozy ( ?No Cigarette Smoking (In My Room)? being a great re-creation of the ?Pimper's Paradise" sway) to stately and militant (brother Damian and Buju Banton help make ?Jah Army? the heir apparent to ?Babylon System"), Stephen certainly has his own voice as well, with the wistful heartbreak of ?She Knows Now? and the blues-flavored ?Can?t Keep I Down? being unique entries in the whole Marley clan catalog, plus his songwriting has grown with subtle imagery and rich storytelling playing a bigger role than before. These are the reasons to return to the album, but familiarity is an equally strong point, and also its initial pull. Stone-cold grooves and socially conscious lyrics run rich in the Marley bloodline, and while Revelation might be a less-than-fitting title, fans of the Marley family can simply write ?satisfying? or ?a welcome reminder? on the spine if they choose. ~ David Jeffries, Rovi