| ReggaeTimes.com Feature Marley -The Eclectic Genius By: Howard Campbell Given the accolades bestowed upon Bob Marley in the Closing stages of 1999, even the uninitiated will agree that the reggae legend was an extraordinary human being his gifts as a songs writer and champion of the oppressed earning him the exalted praise from none other than respected institutions such as Time magazine and the British Broadcasting Corporation. Marley’s genius with the pen was complemented by an ear for the perfect sound, a trait that aided greats like Jimi Hendrix and Carlos Santana and made albums like Are You Experienced and Abraxas classics. Bob Marley was no different, both in the area of selecting musicians for his evolving sound and studio personnel to ensure a quality sound, particularly for his island Records albums. Al Anderson, the American guitarist who played on four Marley albums, and Karl Pitterson, the Jamaican musician/ engineer who was at he console for two of those records, are just two of the people that added a different dimension to the reggae King’s music. From different background, both met Bob Marley at a time when his career was making the move to another level. Pitterson first met Marley while he (Pitterson) was an intern at producer Clement Dobb’s Studio One in the 1960s while Anderson first bumped into him in England when Marley was about to start his third album Natty Dread for Island Records. Pitterson’s skills like so many other Jamaican in the music business, was honed at Studio One, but reggae was pretty much an unknown beat to Anderson who was a struggling teenaged guitarist with not much of a resume when Marley invited him to Jamaica to work on Natty Dread. “Jamaica was irie, a lot of good food and herb,” said Anderson, now 45, in a 1995 interview “The seventies was a groovy time in Jamaica,” influenced by blues legend Albert King, Anderson made his mark on Natty Dread which offered the first glimpse of Marley experimenting with different music forms including folk, and according to Anderson, country. Natty Dread was pretty progressive; So Jah Sey was the blues’ Rebel Music was folk and No Woman No Cry was country,” Pitterson, who now operates the Miami-based Southend Production, credits the change in atmosphere, and equipment, for Exodus coming out the way it did. “For one thing it wasn’t Anderson and Pitterson followed different paths after Rastaman Vibration and Exodus respectively. © Copyright 2004 ReggaeTimes.com |