NEW YORK
By HILLEL ITALIEAP National Writer
The story of Jimmy Cliff, who has died at age 81, is in part the story of reggae itself. He moved to Kingston in the early 1960s and joined a rising musical movement that would help give voice to the country’s independence from Great Britain. A decade later, he helped reggae ascend to the international stage with his starring role in the cult favorite โThe Harder They Comeโ and his featured place on the film’s classic soundtrack. In the years following, his songs were covered by everyone from Bruce Springsteen to UB40 and confirmed the music’s power to inspire or just get you dancing.
NEW YORK (AP) โ The story of Jimmy Cliff, who has died at age 81, is in part the story of reggae itself.
Like so many Jamaican teens of his time, he moved to Kingston in the early 1960s and joined a rising musical movement that would help give voice to the country's independence from Great Britain. A decade later, he helped reggae ascend to the international stage with his starring role in the cult favorite โThe Harder They Comeโ and his featured place on the film's classic soundtrack. In the years following, his songs were covered by everyone from Bruce Springsteen to UB40 and confirmed the music's power to inspire or just get you dancing.
Here are a few songs that trace the arc of his career, and of reggae.
Singing along to an easy, bluesy groove, Cliff had a way of sounding both relaxed and fully committed, and could make a nursery rhyme sound like an anthem: โRoses are red / violets are blue / Believe me / I love you.โ He also joined a long popular tradition, most famously expressed in such 1970s standards as Billy Joel's โJust the Way You Areโ and Springsteen's โThunder Road,โ of offering praise to a very personal kind of beauty: โAlthough you may not have such a fabulous shape / To suit the rest of the world / But you do suit me and thatโs all I want to know.โ
Like Marvin Gaye's โWhat's Going Onโ and other anti-war songs, Cliff's โVietnamโ was drawn from the horrors of those who had served overseas. โVietnamโ was a seething, mid-tempo chant โ โVi-et-nam, Vi-et-nam,โ the very name an indictment, in this song for the death of a soldier who had written home to say he would soon be returning, only for his mother to receive a telegram the next day announcing his death.
One of Cliff's many talents was looking clear-eyed at life as it is, and imagining so well what it could be โ a paradise made real by the melody, the feel and lyrics of โWonderful World, Beautiful People,โ a vision so inevitable even the likes of President Richard Nixon and British Prime Minister Harold Wilson can't get in the way. โThis is our world, canโt you see? / Everybody wants to live and be free.โ
Onstage, he sometimes literally jumped for joy, but Cliff also could call out the deepest notes of despair. The somber, gospel-style โMany Rivers to Crossโ was inspired by the racism he encountered in England in the 1960s and tells a story of displacement, longing, fatigue and gathering rage โ but never defeat. โI merely survive because of my pride,โ he tells us, a variation of the old saying that hopes dies last.
Cliffโs political songs were so enduring in part because they were so catchy, and because they offered hope without the promise of easy success. Kicked off by a spare horn riff, โYou Can Get It If You Really Wantโ has a lighter mood than โVietnam,โ but just as determined a spirit. โYou must try, try and try, try and try,โ Cliff warns. โPersecution you must fear / Win or lose you got to get your share.โ
The title track to the movie which would mark the high point of his success, โThe Harder They Comeโ has a spiky, muscular rhythm, the kind you could set to the forward march of a mass protest. Itโs a sermon of retribution for oppressors โ โthe harder they fall, one and allโ โ and of earthly rewards for those who have been robbed: โSo as sure as the sun will shine / Iโm gonna get my share now, whatโs mine.โ