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(Bob
Marley)
This
song was written in 1979 after Bob Marley had been diagnosed with cancer
and while he was feeling a lot of pain, according to his wife Rita. The song was the last released
single by Bob Marley and the last song he performed live, on 23rd September 1980, before his death in 1981. It is a version of an
old freedom hymn and deals with his religious beliefs as a Rastafarian and
tells people that they should free themselves from self-imposed physical
and mental slavery. The
introductory notes to the song are taken from a variation on the song
"Guns of Navarone" which had been a popular release by the group
The Skatalites. The released
single was made solely with him singing accompanied by only an acoustic
guitar. The band version was
released as the B-side of the single and also featured as a bonus track on
the re-issued album Uprising in
2001. It is No. 66 in Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs
of All Time and has been covered by artists including U2, Lauryn Hill,
Johnny Cash, Stevie Wonder, Manfred Mann's Earth Band and many more with
his son Ziggy giving a performance of it with the Irish band The
Chieftains. The song has also
been sung by Wyclef Jean at a concert held after the 9/11 attacks, by Pink
in her I’m Not Dead Tour in
Europe, and the singer Joe Strummer has named his biography after it.

Bob Marley and the Wailers
recordings
Redemption Song (Bob Marley)
Redemption Song (Band Version)(Bob
Marley)
Island:
WIP 6653 (
UK
45
PS)
This
version was released in 1980 but did not reach the charts.
Source:
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redemption_Song
- http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/6595911/redemption_song
- http://www.songfacts.com/detail.php?id=4431
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