good irreligious reggae?

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Chino

Re: good irreligious reggae?

Post by Chino »

Check LKJ. A conscious atheist reggae artist...
david2

Re: good irreligious reggae?

Post by david2 »

what about this? lots of reggae artist that were deeply religious in the seventies than turned to slackness in the eighties....beeing religios was rather a trend than a real spiritual thing I guess. Lots of DJs for example just repeated to same religious statemtens that everybody else did. I dont see a lot of personal religous experience in that.
Prince Pud Pud
Posts: 42
Joined: Wed Mar 31, 2010 9:46 pm

Re: good irreligious reggae?

Post by Prince Pud Pud »

this is true,a trend and opposition and expression. after all anyone with a brain and a level of introspection will qn faith.
the words are musical alone, jah rastafari, praise jah and so on.
slack style is something i deplore,nothing there for me
love of a man is a sign of art
love of a woman is a sign of a dollar bill
sean
Posts: 1031
Joined: Thu Aug 24, 2006 4:24 pm

Re: good irreligious reggae?

Post by sean »

Wise words pudpud, so wise.
Iron_Spire
Posts: 56
Joined: Sun Mar 27, 2011 7:23 am

Re: good irreligious reggae?

Post by Iron_Spire »

In real life I am probably closest to what can be defined as "Atheist", meaning that I do not presume to have some knowledge of God/Gods or afterlife, or divine order of the cosmos.

To me, I enjoy the spiritual message of roots reggae. I identify with the themes of struggle, and overcoming adversity.

I do not believe that Selassie is Jesus, or that he is still alive. I do not believe that anyone will not die. I do not believe that Jesus was black, or Moses, or even that they existed, or even that they are significant outside the context of reggae music.

To me these are all metaphors. I believe in a Righteousness that comes from within. To me Roots reggae is a vehicle to promote those positive attitudes for living, though fleeting as life may be. I prefer to live as though I will always live, rather than cower from the prospect of death as a weak heart man.

There are some details within the movement of Rastafari that to me are nothing more than modern day scholasticism, such as how to pronounce certain words, or where precisely Zion is located. To me, this is the "religious" part that I can do without.

Even so, the spiritual part does resonate with me, and I find it important to realize that no particular religion has a copyright on goodness.
Rocky VIII
Posts: 151
Joined: Tue Dec 29, 2009 4:06 pm

Re: good irreligious reggae?

Post by Rocky VIII »

I recall Vybz Kartel saying in an interview, years ago, that he doesn't believe in God. That raised my eyebrow as it was the first time i ever heard of a Jamaican saying such a thing.
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Gabranth
Posts: 511
Joined: Fri Jan 11, 2008 1:23 pm

Re: good irreligious reggae?

Post by Gabranth »

Although it's quite possible he only said it to piss off Mavado and Bounty Killer. Cause it pissed them off big time.
unorthodoxconqueror
Posts: 158
Joined: Sun Aug 12, 2012 5:18 pm

Re: good irreligious reggae?

Post by unorthodoxconqueror »

SonofMan
Posts: 1
Joined: Sun Aug 25, 2013 12:40 pm

Re: good irreligious reggae?

Post by SonofMan »

I am an irreligious reggfae artist, find my music at http://soundcloud.com/son-of-man-2
sean
Posts: 1031
Joined: Thu Aug 24, 2006 4:24 pm

Re: good irreligious reggae?

Post by sean »

I find Peter Tosh somewhat irreligious, at times, and quite a socialist too overall.
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