ALBUMS: The Harder They Come (1973); We all are one (12-inch single, 1983)
MVC Rating: Harder 4.5 $$$$; One 3.5 $$$
Jimmy Cliff, mon. If somebody walked up to me right now and said they don’t know anything about reggae music and wanted to buy something, relatively cheap, to see if they like this genre, I’d waver on a recommendation.
It’s a tough one to choose between Bob Marley’s ‘Natty Dread’ and the Jimmy Cliff vehicle soundtrack ‘The Harder They Come.”
‘Natty Dread’ was my introduction many years ago and ‘No Woman No Cry’ is in my Top 10 song list (It is? Ok for now it is.) And when I first heard Marley sing in Rebel Music: “Hey Mr. Cop, I ain’t got no birth-surf-a-ticket on me now,” I thought it was the coolest thing. I still pronounce birth certificate like that to this day.
But as much as I love that album, I might steer this newby to the Cliff album. Esteemed and rarely demeaned Rock Critic Robert Christgau, whom I cite a lot in my musical meanderings, called this the best rock movie soundtrack ever or the soundtrack to the best rock movie or the best rock compilation…Oh you read it, I can’t keep jumping back to Christgau’s Consumer Guide, he’ll think I’m plagiarizing him.
The soundtrack featuring Cliff and others is indeed excellent. Cliff’s ‘Many Rivers to Cross’ is on my Top 10 list of great songs, and so is the Melodians ‘Rivers of Babylon. OK my list is going to need some work pruning and expansion. But the above two songs prove if you got rivers you got good reggae.
Be acceptable in thy sight here tonight
Be acceptable in thy sight here tonight
Ye-eah we wept, when we remembered zion
And there’s ‘Johnny Too Bad,’ which UB40 did a great cover later. And the Toots and the Maytals classic ‘Pressure Drop’ which the Clash made their own on my recently reviewed Sandinista!
I also have from 10 years later a promotional single. I distinctly remember buying this from Charlemagne Records in Birmingham probably 1983 or so. (I also bought a 12-inch single by Niles Rogers, which I hope to find and review when I get to the ‘R’s.).
We all are one (We all)
We are the same person (Same person)
I’ll be you, you’ll be me (I’ll be me, you’ll be you)
We all are one (We all), same universal world
I’ll be you, you’ll be me
Is in the conscience
And the shade of our skin
Doesn’t matter, we laugh, we chatter
We smile, we all live for
We all are one … now here’s a great rendition by Cliff himself of his classic: