Bob's One Love and unity in the UK
Bob Marley was just 36 when he died of skin cancer in 1981 – had he lived, he would have turned 75 this year.
However, his legacy lives on. He rose from relatively humble beginnings in his native Jamaica to become a global superstar, whose music remains hugely popular all over the world. He’s considered a reggae pioneer and a Jamaican icon – when he died, he was given a state funeral.
But as the title of the documentary When Bob Marley Came to Britain (BBC2, 9.45pm) suggests, he also had a special relationship with the UK after relocating here in the 1970s. Executive Producer Mark Robinson explains: “We know that Bob Marley’s music has impacted on millions of people’s lives across the planet – but less well known are the life-changing stories of the people he met while he lived in the UK. Although Marley lived and recorded in London during the 1970s, he also toured the country extensively – from Teesside to Lancaster, Birmingham to Bristol – and helped change the culture of Britain along the way.” Narrated by Obaro Ejimiwe and featuring rare archive footage and interviews with people who met and knew him, When Bob Marley Came to Britain explores how the songwriter’s presence helped to influence politics, culture and identity, during a time of massive social and civil unrest. In particular, the documentary finds that his message of One Love helped to inspire a generation of Black British youth.
Naturally, the film explores Marley’s music. It was during his years in Britain that he truly established himself as an international artist, recording some of his most successful albums, including Exodus, which stayed on the UK album charts for 56 weeks and spawned four hit singles (Exodus, Waiting in Vain, Jamming and One Love. He also played some pivotal gigs in the UK, from early performances with his band the Wailers in small pubs and clubs, rising to a triumphant show at the Lyceum theatre in London, with a legendary acoustic performance in the gym of a Peckham school and a few secret appearances in the north of England thrown in for good measure.
But the film also offers an insight into another, lesser known side of Marley’s life in Britain, visiting the houses he lived in and unearthing memories of his kickabouts in Battersea Park.