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    Exodus

    Exodus
    Artist: Bob Marley & The Wailers
    Label: Polygram Records
    Category: Music

    List Price: $11.98
    Buy Used: $5.25
    You Save: $6.73 (56%)



    Used (4) from $5.25

    Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 23 reviews
    Sales Rank: 353810

    Format: Original Recording Reissued
    Media: Audio Cassette
    Discs: 1

    UPC: 042284620840
    EAN: 0042284620840
    ASIN: B000001FY6

    Release Date: October 17, 1990
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Tracks:

      • Natural Mystic
      • So Much Things to Say
      • Guiltiness
      • Heathen
      • Exodus
      • Jamming
      • Waiting in Vain
      • Turn Your Lights Down Low
      • Three Little Birds
      • One Love/People Get Ready

    Similar Items:

      • Rastaman Vibration
      • Natty Dread
      • Uprising
      • Burnin'
      • Catch A Fire (Deluxe Edition)

    Editorial Reviews:

    Amazon.com
    In 1999 Exodus was rightfully voted by Time Magazine the most important album of the 20th century. This is the visionary Bob Marley's masterpiece, a concept album that distills the myriad experiences of both our daily lives and collective unconsciousness into 46 minutes of aural perfection.

    The CD release of Exodus has been flawlessly remastered from the original recordings and showcases what is probably the Wailers' tightest recorded performance. The initial notes of the album's opening track, "Natural Mystic," fade up from a deep silence, giving the listener the impression that the music generates from within a continuum of the past, present, and future. The first half of Exodus bears witness to Marley's shift in focus away from the mundane problems of Babylon existence and toward a greater understanding of vital universal truths. The second half features songs like "Jamming" and "Waiting in Vain," which take a gently wistful look at the more interpersonal aspect of human relations. --Rebecca Levine

    Album Description
    180 gram vinyl pressing. Universal. 2009.

    Album Details
    Japanese Version featuring Two Bonus Tracks


    Customer Reviews:   Read 18 more reviews...

    4 out of 5 stars one of his better efforts   September 18, 2000
    Sean M. Kelly (Portland, Oregon United States)
    16 out of 17 found this review helpful

    "Exodus" is one of those albums that is difficult to be impartial, no less critical, towards due to the intense feelings towards it. Most Marley fans will argue that this is the ONE album of his to get. I would have to disagree and do so at my job in a music store all the time...

    I fully agree that this is one of Bob's crowning achievements-"Natural Mystic," "Jamming" and "One Love/People Get Ready" are among the strongest songs in Marley's canon, but the lp is not the end all be all of Marley's works, no less reggae itself.

    For my money, if I HAD to choose one Marley lp, it would be "Catch a Fire" with Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer, a truly monumental lp from start to finish..If I HAD to choose 2, I would include Bob's "Natty Dread" with "Catch a Fire." I would then choose "Burnin'" and then probably "Exodus."

    The beauty is that we don't have to choose any one Marley lp to be the ONE. They are ALL part of the Great ONE. I love "Exodus"- always have- but people who pigeonhole it as the ONE are missing the beauty of all the others.

    Choose all, or choose none..either way,, enjoy all of the albums, including "Exodus," one of Marley's crowning acheievements.


    5 out of 5 stars The album that nearly didn't happen   January 31, 2001
    11 out of 13 found this review helpful

    What motivated Bob Marley to write some of his best lyrics, with strong spiritual content, messages of biblical condemnation for the wicked and biting criticism of the system and it's defenders? A complete album, some of his best work ever, and in contrast to earlier albums where there were always a few redone songs from his ska and rocksteady days, Exodus was mostly all new songs. Here you have an excellent mix - strong roots reggae rhythms on 'Natural Mystic' a Rasta grounation chant 'Heathen', a lighter dance tune 'Jammin', melodies such as 'One Love' and 'Three Little Birds' and two tracks that show Bob could have sung R&B, soul, love songs namely 'Waiting in Vain' and 'Turn your lights down low'. The title track was unique. Never before had there been a reggae song sounding like it, (funky world beat) nor had a reggae song ever been so long - over 7 minutes, most were short, to the point 3-4 minute jobs. The album built on what had been achieved with the previous album - penetration of the US market, but significantly here 'Exodus' was the first Wailer tune to get extensive airplay on African-American radio. What was the creative force behind all of this? We know that ganja and scripture reading was the fuel for some of Bob's words of wisdom but this album (specifically the first 4 tracks) were forged in direct response to one specific incident that happened to him in late 1976.

    Bob, Rita and the bands manager were at Bob's yard two nights before the 'Smile Jamaica' concert scheduled for December 5. The concert, featuring the Wailers, was to be held at the National Heroes Park in Kingston. It was conceived by Bob himself as a means of getting peoples minds off politics, which was the all consuming force in the Island at that time, with a general election coming up on December 16. Gunmen burst into the Marley house firing shots, all three were hit, Bob's manager five times, a shot grazed Bob's chest and hit his arm and Rita had one graze her skull. Who did it and for what reason was never known as the gunmen were not identified nor caught. Politics was suspected. Although the Wailers were not supporters of party politics they could hardly be called apolitical as their criticisms of the system, inequality, injustices and oppression had always been central to their message. It's just that it was the strongest in the previous album. If that is what it was all about, rather than be subdued, Bob was stirred up and 'Exodus' was his creative response fueled by righteous rastafari anger. Bob himself says so in a line from 'Jammin' - 'No bullet can stop us now'. All in all an album of excellent musical expression.


    5 out of 5 stars Bob Marleys true masterpiece   June 12, 2001
    3 out of 3 found this review helpful

    Really this album is definitive Bob Marley.Legend has assumed the mantle of being Bob's best album, yet it does not include " Roots,Rock,Reggae " which remains his only US top ten hit (No6).So-called connoiseurs fail to realise that " Buffalo Soldier" was a hit posthumously for Bob, but he didn't think it was good enough to put on a album when he was alive.Exodus turned Bob into a superstar although the US did not catch on till the release of Legend.Exodus contains everything, militancy, prophecy,romanticism,righteous education and more." Catch a Fire " is classic reggae, Exodus is classic Bob.


    5 out of 5 stars This is the real thing   March 12, 2000
    3 out of 3 found this review helpful

    If you were to listen to this album, you understand why I hate it when other singers cover his songs. He wrote the songs and the music himself so he should be the only one singing them. If you want to hear "Turn your lights down low", you need to buy this version, not Lauryn Hill's.


    5 out of 5 stars Exodus Rocks   August 4, 2001
    Dave (New York, Ny)
    2 out of 2 found this review helpful

    Exodus is Bob's greatest album. It was after this point where he became the Legend that we know him to be. It was almost unfair for Bob to start off with Natural Mystic on the album; the song is almost too good. The first few almost silent chords are the first indication of what await us. What I like about the album the most is the different mix of beats and rhythms. They range from the smooth easy listening of Turn Your Lights Down Low to the hard one drop roots rhythm of Exodus. Exodus really introduced Bob Marley and the Wailers to the world because it had messages that people from all parts of the earth could relate to. It was post 1977 that the Wailers embarked on their legendary world tours in 1978, 1979, and 1980. They went to places as far Tokyo, New Zealand, and filled stadiums with 100,000 people in Milan, Italy and Berlin, Germany. The album set new standards for reggae by being one of the first reggae albums to become more mainstream and less focused on the trials and tribulations awaiting the Rastaman In Babylon. My favorite song on this album is...too hard a choice.


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