* En anglais uniquement
The role of the bass guitar in reggae was established by bassist, producer, arranger, and engineer
Aston "Family Man" Barrett. With his brother,
Carlton "Carlie" Barrett, on drums,
Barrett provided the essential rhythmic foundation for the recordings and performances by
Bob Marley from 1969 until
Marley's death in 1981. The undistorted but melodic, baritone tones of
Barrett's bass has also been heard on recordings by artists who range from
Alpha Blondy and
Burning Spear to late pop singer
John Denver.
Barrett launched his career in the Kingston nightclubs, playing guitar in a group,
the Hippy Boys, that he shared with his brother. In the late '60s, the
Barrett brothers recorded with
Lee "Scratch" Perry as
the Upsetters. The high point of the group came in 1969 when their instrumental single, "Return of Django," became an international hit. The same year, the brothers recorded several singles by
the Wailers including "Duppy Conquerer," "Soul Rebel," and "Small Axe." They continued to collaborate with
the Wailers, remaining with
Marley after the departure of
Peter Tosh and
Bunny Livingston. In addition to co-writing the tune, "Rebel Music (3 O'clock Roadblock),"
Barrett co-produced 11 albums with
Marley.
Barrett also became one of the first to incorporate a drum machine on a reggae tune when he and
the Wailers recorded "No Woman No Cry," "So Jah Seh," and "Johnny Was." On February 26, 1997,
Barrett performed with
Al Anderson, the
Marley family and
the Fugees at the internationally televised Grammy Award ceremonies at Madison Square Garden.
In 1999, PGD/Heartbeat released two albums of material spanning
Barrett's musical career -- Cobra Style: Lost Productions from the Wailers Musical Director and an instrumental dub version, Family Man in Dub. Tracks included one of the earliest tunes that
Barrett recorded with
the Wailers, "Distant Drums," an instrumental interpretation of
Yabba You's "Love Thy Neighbor." ~ Craig Harris