By Our CorrespondentĀ
Bunny Wailer, the co-founder and last living member of Jamaican reggae group, the Wailers, who took the late reggae star Bob Marley to global stardom, has died aged 73.
His manager Maxine Stowe confirmed his death to the Jamaica Observer. Wailer had been frequently hospitalized since suffering a stroke in July 2020.
The International Reggae artist and three-time Grammy winner found worldwide fame alongside Bob Marley in the early 1970s.
Andrew Holness, Jamaicaās prime minister, was among those who paid tribute, and offered ādeep condolencesā to his family, friends and fans, and called his death āa great loss for Jamaica and reggae Musicā.
Born Neville Livingston in 1947 in Kingston, he and Bob Marley became friends as toddlers and formed the Wailers in 1963, which settled into a core trio of the pair alongside Peter Tosh. They released their debut album, The Wailing Wailers, in 1965 (which included their Jamaican chart-topper Simmer Down), before going on hiatus when Marley moved to Delaware in the US.
Wailer was convicted for marijuana possession in 1967 āand served a 14-month sentence.
They later reconvened after Marleyās return and Wailerās release, teaming with producer Lee āScratchā Perry and his group the Upsetters, and began recording tracks in the new, slower reggae style that had emerged out of ska. Wailer penned a number of the groupās songs, including what would become his signature song, Dreamland.
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By the early 70s, the Wailers had added new members and signed to Island Records, which aided by the popularity of other new reggae stars such as Jimmy Cliff, helped bring them to international audiences. They had a global breakthrough with the fifth album Catch a Fire (1973) and its follow-up, Burninā, which featured what would become one of Marleyās signature songs, I Shot the Sheriff.
The original trio split in 1974 when Wailer left alongside Tosh. He began a solo career, beginning with 1976ās acclaimed Blackheart Man, and maintained a steady release schedule for 40 years. He won the Grammy award for best reggae album three times, in 1991, 1995, and 1997. RIP Soldier.