Bob Marley - Early Life
Norval and Cedella married in 1945 but Captain Marley's family strongly disapproved of their union; although the elder Marley provided financial support, the last time Bob Marley saw his father was when he was five years old; at that time, Norval took his son to Kingston to live with his nephew, a businessman, and to attend school. Eighteen months later Cedella learned that Bob wasn't going to school and was living with an elderly couple. Alarmed, she went to Kingston, found Bob and brought him home to Nine Miles.
Bob Marley begins his music career
The next chapter in the Bob Marley biography commenced in the late 1950s when Bob, barely into his teens, left St. Ann and returned to Jamaica's capital. He eventually settled in the western Kingston vicinity of Trench Town, so named because it was built over a sewage trench. A low-income community comprised of squatter-settlements and government yards developments that housed a minimum of four families, Bob Marley quickly learned to defend himself against Trench Town's rude boys and bad men. Bob's formidable street-fighting skills earned him the respectful nickname Tuff Gong.Despite the poverty, despair and various unsavory activities that sustained some ghetto dwellers, Trench Town was also a culturally rich community where Bob Marley's abundant musical talents were nurtured. A lifelong source of inspiration, Bob immortalized Trench Town in his songs "No Woman No Cry" (1974), "Trench Town Rock" (1975) and "Trench Town", the latter released posthumously in 1983.
By
the early 1960s the island's music industry was beginning to take
shape, and its development gave birth to an indigenous popular Jamaican
music form called ska. A local interpretation of American soul and
R&B, with an irresistible accent on the offbeat, ska exerted a
widespread influence on poor Jamaican youth while offering a welcomed
escape from their otherwise harsh realities. Within the burgeoning
Jamaican music industry, the elusive lure of stardom was now a tangible
goal for many ghetto youths.
Uncertain about the prospects of a music career
for her son, Cedella encouraged Bob to pursue a trade. When Bob left
school at 14 years old she found him a position as a welder's
apprentice, which he reluctantly accepted. After a short time on the job
a tiny steel splinter became embedded in Bob's eye. Following that
incident, Bob promptly quit welding and solely focused on his musical
pursuits.
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