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Who doesn't know Bob Marley? Who has never heard such songs as 'No Woman, No Cry' or 'Is This Love?' Bob Marley is a worldwide music phenomenon to this day. The king of reggae's life wasn't easy, but one thing is certain: Bob Marley lives on through his music, as well as in his messages on the Rastafarian faith.

Let's look back at his exceptional life and career in this gallery. Click on to get started. 

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Robert Nesta Marley, better known as Bob Marley, was born on February 6, 1945, in Nine Mile, a district in Saint Ann Parish, Jamaica.

▲Bob Marley was a Jamaican singer, guitarist, and composer. He is the best-known reggae musician of all time, famous for popularizing the genre.
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He was born the son of Norval Sinclair Marley, a white military man, and Cedella Booker (pictured), a black teenager from the north of the country.

▲Marley's father left his mother soon after his birth, and died when Marley was only 10.
▲After his father's death in 1955, his mother had a relationship with Thadeus Livingston and moved with Bob Marley to Trenchtown, Kingston's largest and most deprived neighborhood.
▲In Trenchtown, Bob Marley was bullied and rejected by the local black community for being of mixed race and of short stature.
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Bob Marley had a strong connection to music since he was a young boy. He and his friend Bunny built guitars made of tin, and listened to the hit songs coming out of the US, particularly from New Orleans.

▲They listened to Ray Charles, Fats Domino, Brook Benton (one of Bob Marley's favorites), and groups like The Drifters, which were very popular in Jamaica.
▲Jamaica's independence from the British empire in 1962 helped in the development of original Jamaican music.
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When Bob Marley left school at age 14, he seemed to have only one ambition: music. But to please his mother, who feared he would become a rude boy (what the young delinquents of Jamaica were known as), he got a job as a welder.

▲In 1962, Bob Marley composed and published some of his first recordings, 'Judge Not' being the first. However, the songs didn't get radio airtime and attracted little public attention. But they confirmed Marley's ambition to become a singer.
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The following year, Bob Marley put a band together. He teamed up with his friends Bunny Wailer and Peter Tosh to form The Wailing Wailers.

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The Wailing Wailers released their first single, 'Simmer Down,' at the end of 1963. As early as January of the following year, it was #1 in the Jamaican charts, remaining in that position for the next two months.

▲Bob Marley's mother remarried and moved to the United States. Her son moved with her, but Marley's stay in the US was short and he returned to Jamaica after eight months.
▲In the following years, Bob Marley's band released a few more hits. But the economic difficulties they were going through made Junior Braithwaite, Beverley Kelso, and Cherry Smith leave the band.
▲This was a defining period in Marley's life. The Emperor of Ethiopia, Haile Selassie, made a state visit to Jamaica during the period that Bob Marley was away, and the Rastafarian movement gained strength in the streets of Kingston. Bob Marley then began to immerse himself in the Rastafarian spirit and culture.
▲By 1967, Bob Marley's music already reflected his beliefs. Instead of singing anthems, Marley started writing about social and spiritual themes, which became his trademark and his greatest legacy.
▲Bob Marley has sold more than 75 million records.
▲Bob Marley dedicated himself to protest against social issues. His music touched on themes such as the Rastafarian movement and his ideas of peace, brotherhood, social equality, environmental preservation, liberation, resistance, freedom, and universal love.
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The singer was married to Rita Marley (pictured), one of the I-Threes, who started singing with the Wailers after they reached international success.

▲Bob Marley had 11 acknowledged children. The renowned band Ziggy Marley and the Melody Makers were made up of his children Ziggy, Stephen, Sharon, and Cedella Marley.
▲Ky-Mani, Julian, and Damian Marley also followed a career in music.
▲Bob Marley's music was heavily influenced by the social and political issues of his homeland, making him the voice of the black, poor, and oppressed people of Jamaica.
▲Africa also became the subject of some of his songs. It was considered to be the sacred land of the Rastafarian movement.
▲Stars such as Paul McCartney and Mick Jagger also admired Bob Marley's work. Eric Clapton re-recorded Marley's 'I Shot the Sheriff,' which hit the top of the charts and helped further leverage Bob Marley & The Wailers' career.
▲In October 1974, 'Natty Dread' was released. Marley became even more popular, thanks to the success of the track 'No Woman, No Cry,' which reached the top spot on the UK charts. At that time, the band was accompanied by the I-Threes: singers Judy Mowatt, Marcia Griffiths, and Bob's wife, Rita Marley (pictured).
▲The singer became famous in the United States after the release of the album 'Rastaman Vibration' in 1976. In Jamaica, his fame was almost mystical.
▲The 'Legend' compilation, released three years after his death, features songs from a number of the artist's albums, and is the best-selling reggae album in history.
▲Bob Marley was voted the 11th greatest artist of all time by Rolling Stone magazine.
▲The singer began struggling with health problems, though he attempted one more show in Pittsburgh on September 23, 1980, which ended up being his last.  Soon the world received the sad news that the reggae star suffered from a type of skin cancer called malignant melanoma, which developed under his big toenail.
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Doctors advised him to amputate his toe, but Marley refused because of his Rastafarian philosophy that the body is a temple that no one can alter. His other concern was the impact of the surgery on his dance.

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The cancer then spread to his brain, lungs, and stomach. He fought the disease for eight months, seeking treatment at Dr. Joseph Issels' clinic in Germany. For some time, the singer's condition seemed to have stabilized with the natural treatment of the German physician.

▲But in May 1981, when Dr. Joseph Issels announced that nothing more could be done, Bob Marley, already sickened by disease, decided to return to his home in Jamaica to spend his last days with his family and friends. He failed to complete the trip, and was hospitalized in Miami. He died on May 11, 1981.
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Though Bob Marley left us decades ago now, his legacy still lives on. His messages are sung, remembered, and quoted to this day. Bob Marley was instrumental in bringing Jamaican and Rastafarian culture to the world.

See also: Bob and beyond: A short history of reggae and its greatest stars

Bob Marley: the life and legacy of the reggae legend

Bob Marley would have turned 80 this February 6

06/05/19 por StarsInsider

CELEBRITY Retrospective

Who doesn't know Bob Marley? Who has never heard such songs as 'No Woman, No Cry' or 'Is This Love?' Bob Marley is a worldwide music phenomenon to this day. The king of reggae's life wasn't easy, but one thing is certain: Bob Marley lives on through his music, as well as in his messages on the Rastafarian faith.

Let's look back at his exceptional life and career in this gallery. Click on to get started. 

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