"The world has a million different musics – music to make you party; we use music to balance the consciousness… We try to follow the roots."
The name Marley is, of course, synonymous with reggae music. For it was Bob Marley, over a career that spanned only two decades, who changed the face of a music born of oppression and hardship in a tiny country most couldn't locate on a map. The music itself, the music he helped create and develop, was joyous, though it was powerful, it looked to affect change and, as such, Marley and a host of other players left a legacy that lives on today.
A legacy wasn't all Marley left behind. A number of offspring bear his famous name, and a good deal of them have followed in his footsteps, taking this music that runs thick and fast through their veins, and putting their own spin on it, the message itself still as loud and clear as it ever was. Julian Marley, born to Bob and Lucy Pounder in 1975, is but one example, although a fine one none the less.
Marley\ began his career in the mid-'90s, releasing Lion In The Morning (1996), slowly but surely following it with A Time & Place (2003) and most recently, the Grammy-nominated Awake (2009). “This is a time when we have the energy and we have what it takes to really get it to work,” he says, his accent a curious mixture of British High Street (where he was born) and deep Jamaican.
He's on the line from a studio in Miami though, at a time when the creative juices are, so to speak, flowing freely.
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“There's no other time than the present time to be going full blast. Turn on all engines and go.”
But what's informing Marley's writing at the moment, where it's going, what he's looking to say? “It's still the same messages we've always conveyed, just in different ways. Right now, it's still about the social injustice, unity, which we should be talking and singing about daily, putting it in our music,” he explains. “The world has a million different musics – music to make you party; we use music to balance the consciousness… We try to follow the roots.”
Marley goes on to say that, once they've been to Australia over the New Year break, they'll retreat back to the studio to begin in earnest the task of collating these messages, setting them to music and committing them to disc – an epic task, no doubt.
And as a young artist with such huge shoes to fill, whose father did so much for this music, how does he go about making their own music, with that massive legacy looming above them?
“I don't really know, but I don't think about that,” Marley laughs. “I love music, I love what I do, I love who I am and I love where I came from, but I am what I am, you know? I have to be true [to that].”