Although Bob Marley's previous album, "Burnin' ", was released internationally in England and the United States, this would be the first to be distributed globally, introducing him and his band, The Wailers, to the world. That year, Peter Tosh and Bunny Livingston, two of the original members of The Wailers, had left the group due to the pressures of constant touring and their growing popularity. With a reformed lineup featuring guitarist Al Anderson, bassist Aston Barrett, and organist Jean Roussel, Bob Marley undertook the recording of this seventh album, which would achieve unprecedented success in the Jamaican musician's career up to that point. Somewhat softening the political message of his earlier works, Bob Marley approached this project with a profound spiritual and emotional intensity. The powerful rhythm section of drummer Carlton Barrett and his brother, bassist Aston Barrett, along with Anderson's riffs and Marley's subtle guitar work and soulful, African-tinged vocals, drive an album brimming with African-American sounds adorned with reggae rhythms. "Takin' Blues", "Them Belly Full", and "Rebel Music (3 O'Clock Roadblock)" are clearly geared toward that antisocial message, while the rebellious "Lively Up Yourself" and the glorious "No Woman No Cry" complete one of Bob Marley and The Wailers' finest albums.

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