

This song is actually by guerillafinga and always has been. Im gonna smokea de ganja until I go blind.You know I smokea de ganja all a de time.Smokea de ganja when Im with friends.We gonna smokea de ganja until. Wake up and bake Comment by Kateleidoscope Nat is bob marley ignorante del cazzo Comment by Thacya Luanna Ganja ganjaaa Comment by Clifton Robison - Dready Nice track âx9D¤ðŸ™x8F😘 Comment by Clifton Robison - Dready If i add u on facebook? Thansk mine is ayaz samo Comment by Momen Frigh Installer Creator Tutorial (Razor12911's IC) Conversion Tutorials. Ganja Free song from the album Bless the Weed: Mind-Blowing Dub and Reggae for Ganja Smoking 420 Marijuana Music with Bob Marley, Lee Perry, King Tubby, Max Romeo and More is released on Apr 2014. Installer Creator all Version Razor12911. Lyrics to 'Ganja Gun' by Bob Marley: N' keep ya' very lucky you can smoke it in a bong When you smoke it in a bong You are baked all night long mista. Download Lagu Reggae Bob Marley Ganja Gunīob Marley - Ganja Gun I'm gonna smoke'a de ganja until I go blind.Soon after his birth, Bob’s father left and had little contact with him although he did. Norval was a British Marine officer and Ciddy was a native Jamaican. Anns in Nine Miles, Jamaica to Norval Sinclair Marley and Cedella ‘Ciddy’ Malcom. As firm as his association is with Jamaica, the music he made had a dialogic relationship with a variety of Black styles, including funk (“I Shot the Sheriff,” “No More Trouble”), soul (“No Woman, No Cry,” “Redemption Song”), and even disco (“Could You Be Loved,” “Exodus”)-reggae, you could say, was just his concentration.Įven as he settled into smoother, pop-oriented sounds (1978's Kaya, 1980's Uprising), he retained an urgency and sense of struggle that inspired generations of artists to recognize that music, while great for entertainment, can also be the delivery system for something bigger. Robert Nesta Marley was born on Februin the parish of St. And if his music sounded sweet and made you want to dance, it’s because, as his sometime publicist Vivien Goldman once put it, he knew that if he hooked you with the melody, you’d have to listen to what he had to say.īorn in 1945 in Nine Mile, a rural village about an hour and a half outside Kingston, Marley formed The Wailers with Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer in his late teens, thickening from cheerful R&B-based ska to the more rhythmically substantive sound of reggae. He may have been ambivalent about politics (he once said it was pretty much the same thing as church-a way to keep people ignorant), but it wasn’t because of their underlying possibilities it was the way the political system had been twisted by the tyranny and greed of people in power that troubled him. His music spoke to colonialism (“Small Axe”), poverty (“Them Belly Full ”), the necessity of achieving political agency (“Get Up, Stand Up”), and the challenge of exercising it (“Burnin’ and Lootin’”) with a righteousness and frustration that made him as much a figurehead to punk rock as to the reggae he helped export to the world. Given the image of him as a smiling, joint-smoking peacenik that has proliferated since his death in 1981, it’s easy to forget jut how angry Bob Marley was.
