Yahoo Suche Web Suche

  1. Die Wegbereiter für kluges Online-Shopping - jeder Kauf eine gute Entscheidung! Über 330 Millionen Angebote warten auf Euch - unabhängig und transparent zum besten Preis.

  2. Niedrige Preise, Riesenauswahl. Sicher bezahlen mit Kauf auf Rechnung. Kostenlose und einfache Rücksendungen für Millionen von Artikeln.

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. "Keep on Moving" from Bob Marley's 1992 album, Songs of Freedom! Listen to the full album now on all major streaming and digital services at http://hyperurl....

    • 6 Min.
    • 528K
    • Bob Marley
  2. REMASTERED IN HD!Official Music Video for Keep On Moving performed by Bob Marley & The Wailers.Subscribe to never miss an update: http://bobmarley.lnk.to/Sub...

    • 4 Min.
    • 1,3M
    • BobMarleyVEVO
  3. Lord, I've got to keep on moving Lord, I've got to get on down Lord, I've got to keep on moving Where I can't be found Lord, they're coming after me I've bee...

    • 4 Min.
    • 678,4K
    • AyarsizAdam
  4. Keep On Moving Lyrics: Lord, I've got to keep on moving / Lord, I've got to get on down / Lord, I've got to keep on moving / Where I can't be found / Lord, they're coming after me /...

    • Lively Up Yourself
    • Could You Be Loved
    • Buffalo Soldier
    • War
    • Satisfy My Soul
    • Small Axe
    • Rebel Music
    • One Love/People Get Ready
    • Is This Love
    • Slave Driver

    Don’t be no drag: reggae music can lift your soul. Bob Marley And The Wailers let the world know what it’s missing on this homage to their art and the joy of music. The original version from the 1971 single, the glorious cut on 1974’s Natty Dread album, or a celebration from the several official live releases – all will get you on your feet.

    With a funky intro straight out of the playbook of jazz-funk legends The Blackbyrds, and an uptempo reggae swing built to compete in the disco era, this 1980 hit from the Uprisingalbum was an instant smash. It has worn well, still sounding fresh and buoyant.

    A Buffalo Soldier is what Native Americans termed the black cavalrymen they fought in the second half of the 19th Century. Bob extended the imagery further, using it to take in the fight that black men faced simply to survive as the sons of slaves in America and the Caribbean. The song was originated by Bob and reggae vocalist King Sporty, and was ...

    As a Rastafarian, Marley worshipped the religion’s living God, Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia. “War,” a mighty, Biblically thunderous call for peace, dignity, and the end of oppression, is built around a speech His Imperial Majesty gave at the United Nations General Assembly in New York City on October 4, 1963, and directly quotes his words, ac...

    Another song built around a long-standing Marley concept. Down the years, The Wailers had released several songs with the words “satisfy my soul” in their chorus, among them the rootsy “Satisfy My Soul Jah Jah,” the romantic “Satisfy My Soul Babe” and the song that eventually became the 1978 hit “Satisfy My Soul,” previously known as “Don’t Rock Th...

    The story within “Small Axe,” first recorded during Marley’s 1971 sessions for Lee Perry, was coming true when he returned to it two years later on Burnin’. Marley couched his message in terms of the reggae business, which had three major players (“the big t’ree”) in the early 70s, but, as ever, the metaphor flew further: we the people must take wh...

    A tale of trouble in the heat of the night as Jamaica’s police enforce a curfew and Marley runs right into it. He doesn’t take things lying down, however, and sarcastically gives as good as he gets. It’s not an apocryphal tale, either: these hassles went on repeatedly in the Jamaica of 1974 while Natty Dreadwas being recorded.

    Bob and The Wailers cut this upbeat ska song of unity in the mid-60s at their musical alma mater, Studio One, and when Bob returned to it in a reggae style in 1977, he acknowledged the influence of Curtis Mayfield’s “People Get Ready” on its lyrics and intent. The song found the mass audience it deserved when it hit the Top 5 across Europe.

    A simple romantic song from 1978 that’s subtle and stately, and in that sense, it could have dated from Marley’s mid-60s period, when he first attempted to establish his own record label with a series of beautiful rocksteady numbers. Classy and sweet, and a UK Top 10 hit, too.

    “Slave Driver”’s lyrics gave a title to The Wailers’ debut album for Island,Catch A Fire, and it took us back to the days of slavery in a way that only Rasta reggae dared. It still makes a huge impact, with The Wailers’ sweet opening vocals not even hinting at the chilling content to follow. Deliberately left spartan for extra impact, every part of...

    • Ian Mccann
    • 5 Min.
  5. The Best of Bob Marley: Keep on Moving by Bob Marley released in 2006. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic.

  6. Listen to Keep On Moving: Trilogy CD3 on Spotify. Bob Marley & The Wailers · Compilation · 2006 · 20 songs.