Music and Revolution: Songs That Changed the World
Most listeners recognize “Get Up, Stand Up” as a classic Bob Marley anthem, long before they hear it as a fierce challenge to colonialism, poverty, and the kind of religion that tells people to wait quietly for heaven. In this episode of Music and Revolution, host Rolf Straubhaar returns to post‑independence Jamaica, where political freedom had arrived but economic inequality and foreign control still shaped everyday life. Against that backdrop, Bob Marley and Peter Tosh rewired the language of God and salvation into a demand for justice right now—insisting that faith should embolden people to fight Babylon, not accept it. We follow the Wailers from Kingston’s yards and studios into the global spotlight, unpacking how Rastafari ideas of Babylon, Zion, and Jah’s presence in the oppressed power songs like “Slave Driver,” “Small Axe,” and ultimately “Get Up, Stand Up.” Verse by verse, the episode traces Marley’s and Tosh’s contrasting voices—one sermonic, one militant—as they reject “pie in the sky” promises and insist that human dignity belongs on earth, not just in the afterlife. Along the way, we track the song’s journey through solo versions, live performances, protest movements, hip‑hop samples, and global covers, showing how its simple hook—“stand up for your rights”—has become a portable slogan for struggles from Kingston to Beijing and beyond. In this episode: * How post‑independence Jamaica shaped Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, and the Wailers * Rastafari concepts like Babylon, Zion, and Jah, and how they fuel “Get Up, Stand Up” * Why the song attacks “pie in the sky” theology while defending a different vision of faith * The distinct voices of Marley and Tosh inside the song—and what they each demand * The track’s role in global anti‑colonial and anti‑authoritarian movements * Covers, samples, and reworks that carry its message into hip‑hop, jazz, choral music, and beyond Sometimes, the songs that make you move are the same ones asking if you’re ready to fight. Subscribe to Music and Revolution for weekly episodes exploring the songs that didn’t just reflect history—they helped shape it. Keywords * Bob Marley * Get Up Stand Up * The Wailers * reggae history * Rastafari * postcolonial Jamaica * liberation theology * anti‑colonial music * protest songs * political reggae * Black history * global protest movements * music and social change * American history podcast
16 episodes
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