Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Aston ‘Family Man’ Barrett... Bob Marley’s quiet storm

- BY HOWARD CAMPBELL Observer senior writer

Jamaica Observer’s

The

Entertainm­ent Desk presents the 25th in a series titled Bob Marley — The Last 40 Days to commemorat­e the 40th anniversar­y of his passing.

WHAT would Elvis Presley’s sound be without guitarist Scotty Moore, or James Brown’s funk grooves minus Fred Wesley’s trumpet? It’s hard to think of Bob Marley with no Aston “Family Man” Barrett.

The legendary bassist is largely responsibl­e for The Wailers’ patented one-drop beat that helped make Marley a superstar.

Barrett, 74, played on many of Marley’s most famous songs including

No Woman No Cry, Rastaman Vibration, Exodus, Crazy Baldhead, Sun is Shining, One Love.

and the anthem,

On over 90 per cent of the songs Marley did for Island Records, Barrett and his younger brother Carlton (aka Carly) on drums provided a rhythm section many bands have tried to emulate.

Last June, magazine placed Barrett at number 28 among its The 50 Greatest Bassists of All Time.

The Rolling Stone tribute read:

“As half of the rhythm section for Bob Marley’s Wailers, Aston Barrett and his younger brother Carlton played a primary role in introducin­g the sound of reggae’s one-drop rhythm to internatio­nal audiences. But the influence of the self-proclaimed ‘Architect of Reggae’

Rolling Stone extended far beyond that genre into pop, R&B, and funk: His strutting bass line on the 1969 instrument­al track by the Harry J All Stars, would end up serving as a direct template for the Staples Singers’ smash three years later. “The drum, it is the heartbeat, and the bass, it is the backbone,” Barrett once said. “If the bass is not right, the music is gonna have a bad back, so it would be crippled.” Barrett was deeply attuned

The Liquidator,

I’ll Take You There to the storytelli­ng of his Wailers bandleader, paying close attention to Marley’s songwritin­g before he came up with his own bass lines. “It’s like I am singing baritone,” he once said of his bass work. “I create a melodic line each time.”

Among Barrett’s many admirers is fellow ‘bassy’ Jackie Jackson, who played on several of The Wailers early reggae songs.

“Family Man is the quiet storm.

His memorable bass lines enhanced

Bob’s music and anchored his songs perfectly,” Jackson told the

He added that his favourite bass line by Barrett is a song from the 1979 album by Marley.

“That’s a wicked line...beautiful. Beyond words,” said Jackson.

From east Kingston, Barrett began playing as a session musician in the late 1960s for producers Lee “Scratch” Perry and Bunny Lee. He was a member of several session aggregatio­ns such as The Hippy Boys and The Upsetters.

He and Carly’s early recording gigs with The Wailers (which also included Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer) were for Perry. Some of the songs they played on included

and

Observer.

Survival,

Zimbabwe,

Brown, Duppy Conqueror, Rebel.

Jamaica

Man

Garvey

Tubbys Meet Rockers Uptown

Mr Soul

In the 1970s Barrett also played organ and functioned as recording engineer on some of Marley’s Island Records albums. He played bass on seminal albums such as by Bunny Wailer, by Burning Spear, and

by Augustus Pablo and King Tubby.

After Marley died on May 11, 1981 at age 36, Barrett assumed the role as leader of The Wailers. Carlton Barrett was murdered in 1987 at age 36.

The band remains one of the best touring units in reggae and were nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Reggae Album this year with

One World.

Blackheart Marcus

King

Aston “Family Man” Barrett – who has never received a national award in Jamaica – called it a day from touring three years ago after suffering a stroke.

 ??  ?? Bob Marley
Bob Marley
 ??  ?? Bob Marley and Aston “Family Man” Barrett
Bob Marley and Aston “Family Man” Barrett
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