Soul Rebels

1970 studio album by Bob Marley and the Wailers From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Soul Rebels is the second studio album by the Wailers, their first album to be released outside Jamaica. The Wailers approached producer Lee "Scratch" Perry in August 1970 to record an entire album, and the sessions took place at Randy's recording studio (also known as Studio 17)[1] above Randy's Record Mart at 17 North Parade in Kingston, Jamaica,[2] until November. First issued in the UK by Trojan Records in December 1970, the album has since been re-released several times on several different labels. Perry's production is sparse and haunting, only featuring guitar, bass, drums, electronic organs, and vocals with no horns or other embellishments.

ReleasedDecember 1970
RecordedAugust–November 1970
Quick facts Studio album by Bob Marley and the Wailers, Released ...
Soul Rebels
Studio album by
ReleasedDecember 1970
RecordedAugust–November 1970
StudioRandy's, Kingston, Jamaica
GenreReggae
Length33:09
LabelTrojan
ProducerLee Perry
Bob Marley and the Wailers chronology
The Wailing Wailers
(1965)
Soul Rebels
(1970)
Soul Revolution Part II
(1971)
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Songs

The first track, "Soul Rebel", was from the first collaboration of Perry and Bob Marley.[3] Marley initiated the idea for the song, and Perry arranged and co-wrote the music as Marley dictated the lyrics.[4]

Critical reception

More information Review scores, Source ...
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusicStarStarStarStarHalf star[5]
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Writing in Newsday in 1973, Robert Christgau found Soul Rebels superior to Marley and the Wailer's only American release at the time, Catch a Fire.[6]

AllMusic gave Soul Rebels a glowing retrospective review, calling it "a strange and wonderful set of early reggae that at times plays fast and loose with the already established conventions of the genre".[5]

Cover

According to the book, I & I: The Natural Mystics, the band was not happy with the "soft porn" look of the album cover, clashing as it did with their sensibilities, and were upset that they weren't consulted on its look.[7]

Track listing

Original album (1970)

All tracks are written by Bob Marley, except where noted.

More information No., Title ...
Side one
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Soul Rebel" 3:19
2."Try Me" 2:45
3."It's Alright" 2:34
4."No Sympathy"Peter Tosh2:13
5."My Cup"James Brown3:34
6."Soul Almighty" 2:42
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More information No., Title ...
Side two
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
7."Rebel's Hop"Curtis Mayfield, Norman Whitfield, Barrett Strong, Marley2:38
8."Corner Stone" 2:28
9."400 Years"Tosh2:33
10."No Water" 2:08
11."Reaction" 2:41
12."My Sympathy" 2:41
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The Definitive Remastered edition (2002)

More information No., Title ...
Current CD Version
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Soul Rebel" 3:19
2."Try Me" 2:45
3."It's Alright" 2:34
4."No Sympathy"Tosh2:13
5."My Cup"Brown3:34
6."Soul Almighty" 2:42
7."Rebel's Hop"Mayfield, Whitfield, Strong, Marley2:38
8."Corner Stone" 2:28
9."400 Years"Tosh2:33
10."No Water" 2:08
11."Reaction" 2:41
12."My Sympathy" 2:41
13."Dreamland"Bunny Wailer2:44
14."Dreamland" (version)Wailer2:36
15."Dracula"Lee "Scratch" Perry2:55
16."Soul Rebel" (version 4) 2:54
17."Version of Cup"Perry3:13
18."Zig Zag"Perry3:24
19."Jah Is Mighty" 2:26
20."Brand New Second Hand"Tosh3:11
21."Brand New Second Hand" (version)Tosh3:05
22."Downpresser"Tosh3:16
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JAD Remastered edition (2004)

More information No., Title ...
Bonus tracks
No.TitleLength
13."Jah Is Mighty"2:26
14."Soul Rebel" (version 4)2:52
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Also "No Sympathy (Version)" (replaces "My Sympathy", due to error)

References

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