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Man in the Hills

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Released
  
August 18, 1976

Man in the Hills (1976)
  
Dry & Heavy (1977)

Release date
  
18 August 1976

Label
  
Island Records

Length
  
33:53

Artist
  
Burning Spear

Producer
  
Jack Ruby

Genre
  
Reggae

Man in the Hills httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen666Man

Recorded
  
Randy's Recording Studio & Harry J's Recording Studio, Kingston, Jamaica

Similar
  
Burning Spear albums, Reggae albums

Burning spear man in the hills 1976


Man in the Hills is a reggae album by Jamaican musician Burning Spear (Winston Rodney), released in 1976 (see 1976 in music) on Island Records. Man in the Hills was follow-up to the seminal Marcus Garvey; Man in the Hills is usually considered a worthy follow-up, though less innovative and incendiary. produced by Jack Ruby, Man in the Hills is a simple and unadorned album, with songs that reminisce about Spear's childhood in St. Anne's Bay, Jamaica.

Contents

"Door Peep" was originally recorded in 1969 at Studio One after Spear ran into Bob Marley (also from St. Anne's Bay); Spear later quotes Marley "And Bob was going to his farm. The man was moving with a donkey and some buckets and a fork, and cutlass and plants. We just reason man-to-man and I-man say wherein I would like to get involved in the music business. And Bob say, 'All right, just check Studio One.' " The single was released but fared poorly on the Jamaican charts.

After Marcus Garvey, Spear's fame had grown considerably, and he was a star in Jamaica and cult sensation in the United Kingdom. Man in the Hills was a much quieter and more restrained album than its predecessor, and was more astoral and dreamlike than militant and radical (though songs like "Is It Good" and "No More War" continue to address social issues).

"Man in the Hills", the titular album opener evokes the superiority of rural living over urban. In Jamaican history, the roots of radical protest, a national identity and the Rastafari movement, grew from communities formed by escaped slaves in the hills and (after emancipation in 1838) the so-called "Free Villages".

Burning spear man in the hills 01 man in the hills


Track listing

  1. "Man in the Hills" (Rodney) – 4:00
  2. "It's Good" (Fullwood/Rodney) – 2:45
  3. "No More War" (Rodney) – 3:19
  4. "Black Soul" (Rodney) – 3:25
  5. "Lion" (Rodney) – 3:14
  6. "People Get Ready" (Rodney) – 3:22
  7. "Children" (Rodney) – 3:44
  8. "Mother" (Rodney) – 3:37
  9. "Door Peep" (Rodney) – 2:40
  10. "Groovy" (Rodney) – 3:53

Credits

  • Recorded at Randy's Recording Studio, North Parade; and Harry J Studio, Roosevelt Avenue, Kingston, Jamaica
  • Original album design and illustration: Neville Garrick
  • Musicians

  • Winston Rodney – lead vocals and percussion
  • Delroy Hines – harmony vocals
  • Rupert Willington – harmony vocals
  • Robbie Shakespeare – bass
  • Aston "Family Man" Barrett – bass
  • Leroy "Horsemouth" Wallace – drums
  • Bernard "Touter" Harvey – keyboards
  • Earl "Wire" Lindo – keyboards
  • Tyrone "Organ D" Downie – keyboards
  • Earl "Chinna" Smith – lead and rhythm guitar
  • Tony Chin – rhythm guitar
  • Bobby Ellis – trumpet
  • Richard "Dirty Harry" Hall – tenor saxophone
  • Herman Marquis – alto saxophone
  • Vincent "Trommie" Gordon – trombone
  • Songs

    1Man in the Hills4:00
    2It's Good2:46
    3No More War3:20

    References

    Man in the Hills Wikipedia