* En anglais uniquement
Damian Marley was only two when his father died, but the youngest of the Marley sons had music deeply imprinted in his DNA. At the age of 13, he formed his first band,
the Shepherds, which also included the son of
Third World's
Cat Coore and the daughter of
Freddie McGregor; the group even opened up the 1992 Reggae Sunsplash festival. His debut solo release, School Controversy, faltered, although his lineage led to the track being featured on Epic Records' Positively Reggae: An All Family Musical Celebration. In 1993, performing as
Damian "Junior Gong" Marley, he toured alongside
Shabba Ranks on the ragga DJ's World Unity Concert. In 1995, the Marley genealogy led to a partnership with
Julian Marley, who joined him at performances on the Reggae Sunsplash and Sumfest festivals. The success of their performance led to an international tour supporting Ziggy Marley & the Melody Makers that covered South, Central, and North America and culminated in the Marley Magic: A Marley Family Reunion in New York's Central Park.
Thanks to his success as a live performer, Tuff Gong subsidiary Ghetto Youths International signed him and in 1996, released his first solo album,
Mr. Marley. The sessions were co-produced by his brother
Stephen and featured
Damian's unique dancehall-meets-hip-hop DJ style. His next album, 2001's Halfway Tree, earned a Grammy nomination, but the public generally overlooked the ambitious effort. Not so for the reggae-meets-hip-hop single "Welcome to Jamrock," which became an urban phenomenon soon after its summer 2005 release. Street-level mixtapes began featuring it, radio couldn't get enough of it, and remixes -- both legal and not so legal -- began appearing at a fast pace. The well-rounded album
Welcome to Jamrock delivered on the promise of the single that same year, reaching the Top Ten and eventually winning a Best Reggae album Grammy. It featured a wide range of guests, from
Bobby Brown to
Bunny Wailer, as it blended hip-hop, classic reggae, dancehall, and modern R&B.
In the years that followed, Marley kept up a busy schedule of guest appearances on albums by the likes of
Snoop Dogg,
Gwen Stefani,
Mariah Carey and his brother
Stephen. In 2010, he teamed with
Nas on the Africa-themed album
Distant Relatives, that made even more clear Marley's link to the hip-hop community. The next few years found Marley back as a featured player on albums by
Bruno Mars,
Joss Stone,
Sean Paul, and
Shaggy, and releasing a single with
Skrillex in 2012, all while touring and working on a new album. The long-awaited
Stony Hill, which featured the
Stephen Marley-assisted single "Medication," was issued by Island Records in 2017, the same year he guested on
Jay Z's
4:44 album. April 2018 saw the release of a remixed version of "Medication" featuring
Wiz Khalifa and
Ty Dolla $ign. ~ John Bush