EXCLUSIVE! Midnight Dread’s Peter Tosh Tribute Show, September 1987

MIDNIGHT RAVER BLOG Co-Editor and world renown reggae broadcaster MIDNIGHT DREAD has allowed us to share a piece of reggae radio history tonight.  On September 15, 1987, just 4 days after Peter Tosh was brutally slain in his home, Midnight Dread took to the airwaves on San Francisco’s KFOG and unleashed 60 minutes of pure, unadulterated truth and rights – word, sound, and power – a legendary broadcast to memorialize the Steppin’ Razor that sets a new standard for thoughtful, soulful, and righteous dialogue about reggae on the airwaves.  JAH spoke through Dread for 60 minutes and the world was listening.

The show carries such a heavy vibe that it was never played again.  UNTIL NOW!

MIDNIGHT DREAD has agreed to broadcast 11 minutes from this legendary broadcast on the MIDNIGHT RAVER BLOG just for our readers and fans.  Know how special this is.  Included in the segment is audio from MIDNIGHT DREAD’S interview with Peter Tosh in 1983 – the very same interview featured throughout the Steppin’ Razor Red X documentary.

Give thanks for the unveiling of this audio nearly 30 years after the original broadcast.

Please support MIDNIGHT DREAD’S archiving efforts and web site at www.midnightdread.com.  The Sept. 15th 1987 “Peter Tosh Memorial Program” in it’s entirety is available for purchase on the site.  There are also a ton of reggae rarities available through his Exclusives Online Store: http://www.midnightdread.com/online.html.

Below is the original poster from the U.S premiere run for STEPPIN’ RAZOR RED X at the Roxie Theatre in San Francisco’s Mission District.

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Also, here is a rare interview with Tosh from Record Mirror magazine, April 30, 1983.

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Last Words from the Steppin’ Razor

Last Words from Peter Tosh: The Last Interview

by Maureen Sheridan
Musician Magazine
December 1987

Included here is Peter Tosh’s last published interview which was published in December 1987, just three months after his brutal murder.

CLICK COVER TO READ INTERVIEW

Ziggy Marley and the Melody Makers, Live in Los Angeles, May 1987

This legendary Melody Makers show was recorded during the Conscious Party tour in May 1987.  The soundboard recording is presented here is of excellent quality.  The Melody Makers perform tracks from the Conscious Party album and also cover their father’s “Time Will Tell” and “Rat Race.”

A video was filmed which showcases this lively show and a 20 year old Ziggy Marley earning his street cred as a live performer.  The DVD can be purchased HERE.  It is a must-have for any serious Melody Makers fan.

1. Conscious Party
2. Tomorrow People
3. What’s True
4. Unuh Nuh Listen Yet
5. We Propose
6. Tumblin’ Down
7. Rat Race
8. Lord, We A Come
9. Time Will Tell
10. All You Got
11. Lee and Molly

DOWNLOAD AUDIO HERE (M4A)

Included here is a review of the Melody Makers’ Bob Marley Day performance, which occurred only a few months earlier in LA.  I could not locate a review for the May 1987 show.

REGGAE RESURGENCE IN L.A. MARLEY’S SON CARRIES ON TRADITION

Los Angeles Times (pre-1997 Fulltext) – Los Angeles, Calif.

Author: STEVE HOCHMAN

Date: Feb 10, 1987

Start Page: 4

Section: Calendar; 6; Entertainment Desk

Text Word Count: 835

A Bob Marley look-alike sang with fire and passion Sunday, accompanied by three undulating female singers and a crack reggae band.

No, the closing event of Los Angeles’ sixth annual Bob Marley Day celebration at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium was not “Marleymania-an incredible simulation.” This was the real thing, and Marley’s ghost was his flesh-and-blood son Ziggy, who demonstrated that he has what it takes to carry on his father’s legacy.

Since Bob Marley died of cancer in May, 1981, reggae has seemed to be at a standstill, with no figure stepping forward to advance the Jamaican-based music as Marley had.

But the events of Sunday, following on the heels of a Saturday performance by longtime reggae leader Burning Spear at the Beverly Theatre, suggested that reggae does indeed have a bright future-and that Los Angeles could play a large role in it.

Unlike Julian Lennon, another offspring of a fallen hero, Ziggy’s resemblance to his father goes far beyond novelty. His songs on the recent “Hey World” album show a striking maturity and promise of great things to come.

On the Civic stage, it was the power and passion behind his message (stated simply in between-song chants of “unity, peace, love, happiness”) and the undeniably sexy presence he displays that justified him as the legitimate heir to his father’s crown.

In a conversation backstage before he went on stage, Marley, 18, expressed no discomfort with having the mantle thrust in his hands. “It feel good and so that why I do it,” he said in a thick Jamaican accent, speaking with the same poise he shows as a performer.

But he also expressed hope that reggae could advance without relying on one central figure. “Even my father say reggae can’t die. It’s not only one man to carry on. It’s many people. I just want to play reggae music and give my message.”

Turning to the Rastafarian faith that fuels much of reggae, Marley concluded, “I no want to be a leader. Jah (God) is the only leader, you know?”

But even Marley’s mother Rita, who sang behind the elder Marley as one of the I-Threes, believes that as much as he might like to, Ziggy cannot avoid being seen as the leader-perhaps even savior-to follow Bob.

“There’s no getting away from it,” said Rita, a non-performing member of the entourage Sunday. “I myself question it when I hear him talk or sing. Is this Bob’s return?”

Performing with an eight-piece band featuring former Bob Marley sidemen Tyrone Downey on keyboards and Chinna Smith on guitar, and backed by three singers including his sisters Sharon and Cedella (their 14-year-old brother Stephen, normally part of this group, couldn’t get away from school for the tour), Ziggy showed that not only is Marley the name of reggae’s past, it is the name of its future.

Equally significant in the Marley Day event was the fact the audience that packed the hall for a bill that also included local reggae acts Metuzalem and Prince Ital Joe was a cultural cross section. Most notably, it included a surprising number of young whites, perhaps introduced to reggae by the popular English group UB40.

The same was true at the Saturday concert by Burning Spear (Winston Rodney). Spear’s spiritual and political meditations never brought him the attention accorded to Marley or Jimmy Cliff, but have made him one of reggae’s central artists for the last two decades.

This certainly exploded the notion held in some quarters that since Bob Marley died, reggae’s audience has been largely restricted to ethnic music fans and latter-day hippies drawn by the slinky rhythms and one-love philosophy. The wider appeal seems to be particularly evident in Los Angeles. “This city is poised to become the No. 1 reggae city in North America,” said Roger Steffens, host of KCRW’s Sunday afternoon “Reggae Beat” show and one of L.A.’s most enthusiastic reggae cheerleaders, before the Burning Spear concert.

Accordingly, the promoters of the Marley Day event promise next year’s celebration will be even bigger. After the concert, Reggae for Cultural Awareness president Henry Thomas announced that he is hoping to have the festival headlined by Peter Tosh, who was Bob Marley’s partner in the original Wailers.

Marley and company will be at the Belly Up tavern in Solana Beach tonight, and at the Coach House in San Juan Capistrano on Wednesday.

And what was the big weekend event in Marley’s native Jamaica? Judging by American media coverage at least, it was MTV’s “Hedonism Weekend,” having little to do with the spirit of the late reggae king.

To be fair, MTV did spotlight some Jamaican performers, including a segment featuring the young Marley taped last week. But most of this had a gosh-look-at-the-colorful-natives tone, while the central focus of the coverage stuck to booze, bikinis and Bon Jovi, the American mainstream metaloid band whose concert was the centerpiece of the channel’s special programming.

Carlton Barrett Tribute by Roger Steffens (KCRW FM Broadcast 1987)

Like many talented Jamaican musicians from the golden age of reggae, Carly met an early, violent end at the age of 36, ironically the same age that Marley met his physical death.  Whilst returning home one night from grabbing dinner after a rehearsal, Carly is ambushed outside of his Kingston residence by a gunman and is shot dead.  While the murder is officially recorded as a domestic matter, rumors still abound regarding the rights and royalties afforded to Wailers musicians for their contributions to the Wailers’ international success.

One thing is for certain though.  The world of music lost a heavyweight that day.

Included here is a radio tribute produced by Roger Steffens that was broadcast on Steffens’ popular US radio show “Reggae Beat” soon after Carly’s murder.  It contains live performances, interviews, and Roger reasoning with several of Carly’s closest “bredren” about his importance to the reggae movement.

An important and rare audio broadcast that is not regularly circulated, this is definitely not to be missed.

DOWNLOAD

Many thanks to Dubwise Garage for the article and photo


“Forever Loving Jah”
For Carlton Barrett


“Running Away” (Nyabinghi)
Carlton Barrett & Alvin Patterson

Please visit the Carlton Barrett Memorial page.

Please visit the Dubwise Garage Carlton Barrett Tribute page.  Audio originally sourced from Dubwise Garage audio.