Caribbean, Countries

Share One Love with Marley

And the thing about the Godfather of Reggae is that he is revered around the world but luuuuurved in the Caribbean as I discovered when I was invited to share One Love with Marley.

You see that’s the thing with the West Indies that while the individual islands all have their individual identities they all share one love…

And if ever they forget it they have Robert Nesta Marley’s enduring anthem.

Which rings out everywhere to remind them.

Even at the height of Soca madness during the Crop Over carnival week in Barbados.

World party

Me-me: And Dee-Dee at Crop Over in Barbados

Where we brought the cooler party (or mas) which was appropriately called One Love to a conclusion.

By following the mass gathering of performers on stage.

By singing One Love before taking our weary, rum-sodden bodies off to our respective billets.

And yes, it was on the minibus home that I dozed off and only awoke when prodded by one of our gang.

Because I was pushing my hands forward in a dig motion, reliving and replicating my pool volleyball move from earlier in the day.

Bob’s the job

Hat’s the boy: Bob outside his museum

All of which rambling brings us back to Bob who has honed ever more into view this month.

With the release of the biopic One Love.

Now, of course, any Marley pilgrimage will have at its heart his beloved Jamaica and the Bob Marley Museum, his old home.

Where One Love is at the heart of the message…

With the display including a life size 3-dimensional hologram of Bob from the One Love Peace Concert in 1978.

While the One Love Café serves Marley inspired recipes and juices… schweet.

And other islands are included

Natty dreads: The new Bob Marley film

It’s a scene played out across the Caribbean and there will be special love for Bob this March on Anguilla this year for Bankie Banx’s Moonsplash Music Festival.

Moonsplash is only the longest-running indy music festival in the region and this year’s bash runs like this:

21 March: Kick-off cocktail with local talent igniting the vibes at Savi Beach Club.

22 March: Reggae night with Grammy-nominated Protoje.

Making a splash: Anguilla

23 March: Legends Night with The Legendary Wailers, channeling Bob and the roots of reggae.

24 March: And the Sunday Festival begins with a day-time Jimmy Buffett tribute concert.

Culminating in performances by Mighty Mystic and the Moonsplash Allstars.

All following in the rich traditions of those who have come before.

With Buffett, Toots & The Maytals, Gregory Isaacs and Third World among the acts jumping in Anguilla.

How to get to Anguilla

Anguilla is accessible from the UK via British Airways or Virgin Atlantic on services to Antigua (ANU), followed by a short inter-island flight transfer to Anguilla (AXA).

An alternative route is with Air France via Paris (CDG) to St Maarten (SXM), followed by a short boat transfer or flight.

American Airlines also operates a service from Miami International Airport (MIA) into Anguilla, with connections to the UK available.

Or you can just float there when you share one love with Marley.

 

 

Africa, America, Countries, UK

Get Black History Month

He’s a bit of a forgotten Commander in Chief but he is the US President who did get Black History Month… he brought it to the masses

Gerald Ford officially recognised the programme in 1976, the bicentenary of the USA.

When he called on the public to: ‘seize the opportunity to honour the too-often neglected accomplishments of Black Americans in every area of endeavour throughout our history.’

Of course theirs is February to mark the birthday months of the Great Emancipator Abraham Lincoln and abolitionist Frederick Douglass.

Frederick the Great: Douglass

Ours in Britain is October and dates back to 1987 to mark 150 years of emancipation in the Caribbean.

Of course black history isn’t and shouldn’t be restricted to either February or October.

And while I’ve had to seek out black history myself around the world thankfully it is taught now in schools.

And, of course, it isn’t a black and white issue, these black icons should be everyone’s icons.

We share your dream

March on: Selma

Dr Martin Luther King: A leader for the ages and how we could do with his like today.

You can follow in Dr King’s footsteps throughout the Deep South from his birthplace of Atlanta, Georgia.

Through the bridge protest in Selma, Alabama to his final days in Memphis, Tennessee.

And his memorial in the unfinished statue in Washington DC, unfinished because it can’t be completed until the struggle is.

Sweet Harriet

I’ll be back: Harriet Tubman

Harriet Tubman: And even before the film of her life Harriet was immortalised in song in Swing Low, Sweet Harriet.

And you thought it was an England rugby song…

No, she was coming for to carry me home (the black slaves of the Civil War era, that is).

And you can see how she did it at the Slave Haven in Memphis.

Rightly now she stands proud on pedestals in the modern-day Oo Es of Eh, and most poignantly in her home state of Maryland.

The long march

Song in our heart: Nelson Mandela

Nelson Mandela: Mandela’s status and reach marks him out as the only statesman icon of our age.

With nearly 300 locations named after the first post-Apartheid President of South Africa.

Of course there were those, take a bow Glasgow who would rename the street on which the SA embassy was after Mandela.

So correspondence would be delivered to Nelson Mandela Place.

Mandela rests for eternity in his native Eastern Cape in inland in Qunu where they still speak his gullet-clicking Xhosa language.

Redemption Song

One love: Bob Marley

Bob Marley: And while there are other deserving black legends of music none pioneered black political empowerment quite like the King of Reggae.

Marley emboldened black people through his musical message at a time when racism was institutionalised throughout the UK and the world.

Of course pilgrims pay homage to Bob in his native Caribbean at mases (concerts) like the One Love gog I attended at Barbados Crop Over.

But most especially in his native and much-referenced Kingston in Jamaica.

Sweet Mary

Angel: Mary Seacole

Mary Seacole: Much though still needs to be done to level up with those we put on a pedestal.

And it is instructive that when the British government set up their emergency hospitals during Covid they called them Nightingales.

After Florence, whose harsh matronly rule of the hospitals out in Crimea are now being revisited by historians.

While Jamaican-born Mary is only recently being studied in schools.

Flo, we should remember, also turned Mary away, probably on account of her race, but she went on to set up her own hospital.

But Flo gets her own museum and gentle Mary must make do with a reference in the London Museum.

All something then to explore as we get Black History Month.

 

America, Caribbean, Countries, Europe, Music

30 years of saltwater welling in my eyes

We are on UN’s red code to Save the World and 30 years of saltwater welling in my eyes since I first heard Julian Lennon’s song,  Rainy Days and Songdays now hails those singers who’ve been addressing the crisis for years.

When will there be?

Sweet music: Isley Brothers

Harvest for the World (Isley Brothers): Gather every man, gather every woman, Celebrate your life, give thanks for your children, gather everyone, gather altogether, overlookin’ none, hopin’ life gets better for the world.

The sonorous tones of Cincinnati, Ohio’s finest, carry on them a wonderfully stripped-back message we can all take on board.

My own focus on Cincinnati has been honed since sending one of my writers there back in the day.

I’d plan out the travel pieces they came back with early in the week for the weekend publication and was relaxing in the Dylan Hotel, Amsterdam (as you do) having mapped out the early draft.

When said writer texted me in a panic saying I’d misspelt Cincinnati and that this was jeopardising his contacts with them.

Despite it, of course, being an early draft and me being back in the office two days later. Hey ho, between us we gave the Cincinnatians what they wanted a justifiable celebration of their city.

Don’t it always seem to go?

Big Yellow Taxi (Joni Mitchell): And the Canadian chanteuse always caught the zeitgeist with her uniquely on-point lyrics.

‘They took all the trees and put ’em in a tree museum and charged the people a dollar and a half just to see ’em’ refers to the Foster Botanical Garden in downtown Honolulu.

Encroaching tourism is as big, if not bigger, threat than when Joni and the other hippies were trailing a blaze. Go and see it before they ruin it.  

Welling in my eye

Saltwater (Julian Lennon): It’s 30 years since John’s boy released this song, a classic in its own right.

And when I hear about the hole in the sky saltwater wells in my eyes.

And alas it’s getting bigger Julian. 

The right Cash

Don’t Go Near The Water (Johnny Cash): The King of Country was a lifelong advocate for ecology and the American landscape. 

And you can learn more about his passion for Nature at his museum in Nashville.

Johnny. of course, was a man of the land, Arkansas in his case, and he would turn in his grave…

Bob’s the job

The Sun Is Shining (Bob Marley): Marley, of course, loved the land so much he tried to smoke it all.

But joking aside his Rasta songs were inspired by a union with Nature.

Chicago‘s The Rock and Roll Playhouse knew it and held an Earth Day celebration concert featuring tunes by the great master of reggae two years ago.

To the rescue… here I am.

If only… because 30 years of saltwater welling in my eyes something has to be done.