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 New York, USA - Hyperion Books has published No Woman No Cry,
a book about Bob Marley, co-written by the woman who knew Bob Marley best, his
wife, Rita.
Rita Marley grew up in Trench Town, a slum in Kingston, Jamaica, and was
raised by her beloved Aunty. Music ran in their family, and even as a child
Rita possessed a talent for singing that was remarked upon. Nevertheless, by
the time she was eighteen, she had become an unwed mother, and it seemed as
if her musical career was going nowhere. It was then that Rita met Bob
Marley, literally on the road in front of her house. Later, after being
reintroduced at a local recording studio, they became close friends and fell
in love. Soon, Rita was singing backup for the Wailers, Bob's reggae group.
When he was twenty-one and she nineteen, they married.
The rest is history: Bob and the Wailers set all of Jamaica, and eventually
the entire world, on fire with their incredible style of reggae music. But
while Bob's star rose and he traveled the world to promote his art, Rita
stayed at home trying to feed their growing family. From peddling Bob's
records on the back of her bicycle to living in a shack without electricity
and washing his one pair of underwear every night, Rita was the devoted
wife. Eventually her burning desire to be in the music world was satisfied
as well, and she was recognized for her incredible talents as the lead
singer with the I-Three.
Emotionally, though, life was still rough for Rita. Bob conducted liaisons
with other women publicly. At his manager's urging, he allowed the press to
report that he was single, to preserve his "image." Yet throughout it all,
Rita managed to preserve her self-respect, even helping some of Bob's
girlfriends to raise their children by him. She also brought up her own
children and embarked on an international career as a soloist. Bob and Rita
never separated or divorced, and when he became ill with cancer, she did not
leave his side until his passing in 1981.
In the years since then, Rita Marley has become a force in her own right.
She took on a new role as manager of her children's singing group, the
Melody Makers, which includes her son Ziggy Marley. She travels the world as
the Bob Marley Foundation's spokesperson, as a member of the I-Three, and as
a solo performer.
Written with author Hettie Jones, No Woman No Cry is an
account of the life of an incredible woman, married to one of the most
well-known and beloved musicians of all time.
The following are
excerpts from the book:
Prologue
People ask what it's like when I'm somewhere and suddenly Bob's voice comes
on the radio. But the thing about Bob is so deep, it is as if he's always with
me, there's always something to remind me. So I don't wait for his voice.
And he did promise me, before he finally closed his eyes, that he'd be here.
It was May 11, 1981, and the doctors said he was dying of cancer and that there
was no hope. But Bob was hanging on, he wouldn't let go.
I had put his head in my arm, and I was singing "God Will Take Care of You." But
then I started to cry and said, "Bob, please, don't leave me."
And he looked up and said, "Leave you, go where? What are you crying for?
Forget crying, Rita! Just keep singing. Sing! Sing!"
So I kept singing, and then I realized, wow, that's exactly what the song was
saying: "I will never leave you, wherever you are I will be . . ."
So if I hear his voice now, it's only confirming that he's always around,
everywhere. Because you do really hear his voice wherever you go. All over the
world.
And one interesting thing about it, to me, is that most people only hear him.
But I hear more, because I'm on almost all of the songs. So I also hear my
voice, I also hear me.
Chapter Two
Who Feels It, Knows It
Studio One had probably been a home before Coxsone bought it. He had taken
down walls, but it was easy to imagine where the bedroom used to be and the
kitchen and the hall. So you felt like you were at home there, because it was
less like a business and more like a family affair. When anything happened,
everybody got excited -- the musicians, the singers, the man outside. And the
hype was, "We do a hit tune today." "We" meaning it was everybody's hit tune. We
would be there for days, nights, days, but nobody complained -- it was just fun
to wake up and say, "Oooh, I have studio today!"
Coxsone had recorded some of the most successful groups in Jamaica, including
the famous "Skatalites," one of the earliest ska bands. (The word "ska" comes
from a certain sound made by the electric guitar.) Marcia Griffiths, who later
sang with me as one of the I-Three, says that Studio One was Jamaica's Motown,
"where all the great stars grew . . . like a university you graduate." A lot of
times different people would be working at once; songs were being written in
every corner. You couldn't help but learn if you kept your ears open. Coxsone
had a guitar that he loaned to those who were too poor to buy one. Bob had that
guitar most of the time.
The backup group we eventually formed still consisted of Dream, myself, and
Marlene, who would leave school in the evenings to come to Trench Town and
rehearse, and whose parents thought this was the worst ambition. To leave high
school to go to Trench Town, to be with those kinds of people -- the tough guys,
the killers, the thieves!
Dream was my main tootsie, my favorite cousin, my little postman, my little
errand runner. As a baby, he had the most beautiful big eyes you've ever seen,
and always looked as if he was dreaming -- you know that sexy dreamy look? So
from an early age Constantine Anthony Walker was known as "Dream." He was only
about thirteen, the baby amongst us, when we met the Wailers. They, being the
Misters of Black Progress, who taught us that Black Is Beautiful and how wise it
is to know yourself, decided that Dream was so much their little "buds" (buddy)
that they had to change his nickname. Only old men have dreams, they insisted,
but young men have visions. And so Dream became Vision. A much more youthful
flavor!
We sang behind the Wailers and sometimes behind other singers or groups who
were recording. Coxsone and some others on the scene suggested we name ourselves
something like the Marvelettes, an American group we'd heard, and so we became
the "Soulettes." Our first big hit, with Delroy Wilson also singing background,
was "I Love You, Baby." This was a big, big thrill for us. We were unknown, we
weren't out there in the show business arena, and we were all still teenagers,
starry-eyed amateurs.
It was also Coxsone's suggestion that Bob train and rehearse us, and I guess by
then he must have seen something happening between Bob and me.
He was pretty handsome, I thought -- Robert Nesta Marley, Robbie to all of us
then. Jamaicans would call him brown-skinned and Americans might say
light-skinned. His father, Captain Norval Sinclair Marley, was an older white
man, a native Jamaican who had retired from the British Army. Bob had much of
his father's imprint; he was very half-black, half-white, with a high, round
forehead, prominent cheekbones, and a long nose. His mother, Cedella "Ciddy"
Malcolm, was seventeen when she met Norval. He was more than twice her age, and
was then the superintendent for British-owned lands in the rural parish of St.
Ann, where Ciddy lived. By the time she was nineteen, she'd been seduced by,
married to, and then abandoned by Norval. The one time he saw his father, Bob
used to say, the old man offered him a "Willy" penny (an old copper coin,
thought of as a collector's item). Bob claimed he never saw Norval again.
But like me, Bob had an extended family to raise him, at least for a while.
His grandfather, Omeriah Malcolm, was a myalman, or healer, as well as a
successful businessman respected in his community of Nine Miles. So it didn't
surprise me that Bob, as the world would come to know, was very black conscious
-- his black consciousness covered his light skin. You see him, you hear him,
and he's a black man. And he was very disciplined, self-disciplined. Very real.
At fourteen he had come from St. Ann to Kingston with his mother, to live
with her and a man named Thaddius (Taddy) Livingston, who had offered her work
in his bar. Ciddy had a daughter, Pearl, with Taddy, but then found out he was
already married and had other women besides. Looking for a better life, she took
Pearl, who was still a baby, and migrated to Wilmington, Delaware, where she had
some family and friends. Bob was left in Taddy's care, but more like on his own.
He told me that his mother's plan had been to send for him in three months, as
soon as she was settled and could secure the necessary papers. But the papers
weren't easy to get. The three months had become more than three years.
When we met, Bob was living in an uneasy situation with Taddy Livingston,
Taddy's common-law wife, and his son Neville Livingston, called Bunny, the
member of the Wailers eventually known as Bunny Wailer. With his mother away,
Bob lacked the kind of support and defense I got from Aunty. (One of his early
songs is titled "Where Is My Mother.") Taddy's woman resented him, as the son of
a woman who had had an affair with her man. One day Bob told me how fed up he
was with both Taddy and this "stepmother," who wanted him to be her maid because
he wasn't bringing any money to the house. For a while he had simply become an
errand boy, then worked as a trainee in a welding shop, before making his first
singles, "Judge Not" and then "One Cup of Coffee," on the Beverley's label. That
Bob was getting some attention didn't mean he was being paid very much. No one
had money then.
At first, and maybe always, I cared for Robbie Marley from a sisterly point
of view. I was that sort of person, and still am -- the responsible kind. I saw
him and I said, "poor thing." It wasn't "I love him," but "poor thing." My heart
went out to him. I kept thinking, oh, what a nice boy. So nice that I didn't
want to let him know I had a baby -- in those days, for a teenager to be
unmarried and have a baby seemed so shameful. During this time I spent many
hours at Studio One, rehearsing and recording, and always managed to conceal
that fact. But one day, right in the middle of recording, my breasts started to
leak, and Bob noticed. He said, a little surprised, "What's that? You have a
baby?" It was not said unkindly.
Although I was terribly embarrassed, I couldn't deny the evidence, so I just
nodded.
And he said, "I could tell. Why you didn't let us know? Why you didn't ask to
go home early? Is it a boy or girl?"
"Well, it's a girl," I said.
"Where is she? What is her name? Where is her father? Can I see her?"
All these questions came fast, with great concern. I stood there, looking at
him, unable to answer right away. I found that concern to be very mature for a
young man still in his teens -- like caring and at the same time maybe seeing me
through a different eye. His interest in my baby made me feel proud instead of
ashamed. That to me was a good sign, but so unexpected. Finally he said, "Go
home and feed your baby and I'll see you later."
And this is where my love came in. I looked at him and thought, uh-oh, such a
nice guy. And I got weak in the knees. Oh my God, I thought, oh my God. That
evening, he did come by. Sharon was about five months old then. When I brought
her out, he loved her. And she loved him.
When she learned to talk a little she couldn't say "Robbie," so she
called him "Bahu."
From that day on, when you'd see Bob, I'd be his tail. He'd have me by the
hand, walking me, come on, Rita. When all this first started, Sharon's father
and I were still corresponding. Bob didn't like that and made his position
clear. In fact, he insisted that I end the relationship -- why was I having
anything to do with a man who wouldn't help me or the baby? One day he caught
Dream with a letter to be mailed to Sharon's father and took it away from him!
(That ended the correspondence.)
I learned firsthand about his generosity then, this Robbie, the kind of man
he was, because whenever he had a little money he'd come by the house with some
Cow & Gate baby food and a drink for Aunty. And even she began to give in to his
nice ways and manners. "Well," she said, "it looks like something is going on
here."
And so, though I didn't expect this, I became his. As in okay now, guys, this
is my girl. Even Peter Tosh respected that and learned not to touch, because
Peter was very touchy, he would see you and ohh -- hug you up and try to squeeze
you.
But Bob said, no no no . . . this is my girl.
Copyright © 2004 Rita Marley Productions, Inc.
(Excerpted from the book No Woman No Cry: My Life with Bob Marley by Rita
Marley with Hettie Jones; Published by Hyperion; May 2004; $22.95US/$33.95CAN;
0-7868-6867-8)
[Photo: Rita Marley by David Morgan]. Buy No Woman No Cry.
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