Eric Clapton's chart-topping cover of Bob Marley's biggest hit song sparked a debate about race and representation in music.
Bob Marley's music is beloved all over the world, and songs like "I Shot the Sheriff" and "No Woman, No Cry" are among his very best.
The album Throw Down Your Arms by Irish singer Sinead O’Connor, which was produced by Sly and Robbie and recorded at Anchor ...
From childhood hymns to anti-apartheid songs, teenage reggae and modern concerts with his sons, the author explores how music has shaped love, politics and memory.
A profile of Leslie Kong, the Chinese-Jamaican producer behind Beverley’s Records, with a comprehensive list of songs he produced for ska, rocksteady and early reggae greats.
From damaged studios to museums transformed into relief centers, the reggae world copes with the fallout of a monster hurricane ...
Wops & Hooligans has just entered one of music’s most exclusive clubs, spending a jaw-dropping 750 weeks on the Billboard 200 ...
Vermont Business Magazine Ian B. Baucom was installed as the 18th president of Middlebury College on November 2 at an inauguration ceremony at Virtue Field House marking the beginning of a new era—one ...
Bruno Mars has officially joined music royalty despite publicly admitting he can’t stand one of the songs that got him there.
Dylan took the Greyhound Bus from Hibbing to St. Paul, where his cousin Howard Rutman and their summer camp friend Larry ...
The British reggae band UB40 has announced the re-release of ‘Red, Red Wine: The Collection,’ a compilation including their biggest hits.
Historian Sean Wilentz dishes on Bob Dylan's formative years in 'The Bootleg Series Vol. 18: Through The Open Window 1956–1963'.
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