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      Peter Tosh – Captured Live AT THE GREEK THEATER -AUGUST 23.1983

      Peter Tosh Music - Reggae

      About Peter Tosh

      Singer, musician, composer, and rebel Peter Tosh cut a swathe through the Jamaican musical scene, both as a founding member of the Wailers and as a solo artist. He toured with the Rolling Stones and had an international hit with a duet with Mick Jagger, then toured again to equally rapturous world audiences as the headlining act. His words would cause an uproar at the One Peace concert, but then unlike fellow Wailer Bob Marley, Tosh always made his true feelings known. He was born Winston Hubert McIntosh on October 19, 1944, in the small rural village of Grange Hill, Jamaica. Like so many young island teens searching for a better life, he left home at 15 and headed for Kingston. Once there, he made his way to Joe Higgs’ tenement yard, joining other aspiring youths eager for the vocal coaching lessons the singing star provided to local teens. Amongst these youthful wannabes were Bunny, Bob Marley, and the much younger Junior Braithwaite; the four, buttressed by backing vocalists Cherry Green and Beverley Kelso, joined forces initially as the Teenagers before eventually settling on the moniker the Wailers.

      Success was immediate; the group’s debut single, “Simmer Down,” was an instant hit, and the band’s career was off and running. Tosh’s talent didn’t end with his vocal skills as he was also an excellent guitarist; his playing was first showcased in 1963 on the Wailers’ single “I’m Going Home.” He was also a gifted songwriter, as was Bunny Livingston, which helped the band survive Marley’s hiatus from the group while he went to work in the U.S. in 1966. The Wailers, by then reduced to a trio with the departure of Braithwaite, Green, and Kelso, continued on without him. During this time, the remaining duo, with Constance “Dream” Walker filling in, continued releasing singles now credited to either the Wailers, Tosh, or Livingston alone. Thus, over the next year, Tosh’s dance-friendly “Hoot Nanny Hoot,” “The Jerk,” a cover of Sir Lancelot’s calypso hit “Shame and Scandal in the Family,” the R&B-fired “Making Love,” and “It’s Only Love,” a duet with Rita Marley, all arrived from Studio One. “Rasta Shook Them Up” celebrated Haile Selassie’s Jamaican visit, while Tosh also offered up the rudie-fueled “The Toughest.” Read more @ Apple Music

      Peter Tosh Music @ amazon


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