Bob Marley And The Wailers
Tower Theatre
Upper Darby, Pennsylvania
United States
04/23/76
Download FLAC: Amazon Drive
Dubwise Personal Notes: One of my favorite Bob shows. Its very special because its the first time his mother saw him perform.
He does some uncommon songs like Night Shift and Johnny Was and Jah Live. A lot of different talking between songs and lyrical changes.
Bob is in a great mood. Enjoy this remaster.
lineage:SBD to CDR to Flac 6
A GEMS team production
Originally shared at http://www.shnflac.net
Music Provided by John Dubwise Garage DuBois and Danny Savage
Speed Correction by Jason Chastain
Mastering by Jamie Waddell
16 bit 44.1 kHz FLAC in TLH level 8, SBE free
Band lineup Edit
Bob Marley, vocals, rhythm guitar
Aston Barrett, bass
Carlton Barrett, drums
Donald Kinsey, lead guitar
Earl “Chinna” Smith, lead guitar
Tyrone Downie, keyboards
Alvin Patterson, percussion
The I-Threes, backing vocals
- Intro
- Rastaman Chant -> Lion Of Judah -> Keep The Faith
- Roots, Rock, Reggae
- Burnin’ And Lootin’
- Them Belly Full But We Hungry
- Rebel Music 3 O’Clock Roadblock
- I Shot The Sheriff
- Johnny Was
- No More Trouble
- No Woman, No Cry
- Kinky Reggae
- Night Shift
- Lively Up Yourself
- Rat Race
- Want More
- Positive Vibration
- Get Up, Stand Up -> War
- Crazy Baldhead
- Jah Live
first show of the Rastaman Vibration Tour in 1976.
first show Marley’s mother Cedella Marley Booker attended.
all new compositions from the Rastaman Vibration album have been played, except for the songs “Who Cap The Fit” and “Cry To Me” which had been re-recorded for the album.
there’s a complete SBD source and an incomplete AUD source, both have been used for bootlegs like
“Rastaman Vibration Tour, Philadelphia 1975”. encore break after “Want More”.
band intros done by Bob Marley during “Kinky Reggae”.
“Jah Live” cuts out.
“Yeah! Are you feeling? Yeah? Good. Well, we check it out, we gonna say ´Roots, Rock, Reggaeª, and this here is reggae music.” –
Marley before “Roots, Rock, Reggae”
“So, this morning I woke up in a curfew, and oh God, I was a prisoner too. I could not recognize those uniforms and faces, as they were standing over me.
They were all dressed in uniforms of brutality. Yeah.” –
Marley before “Burnin’ And Lootin'”
“Well, yeah! Are you all doing? Then good. Yeah, Jah bless you all, you know? Well, Jah live, you know? But this time my belly full, but I’m hungry. A hungry mob is an angry mob.” –
Marley before “Them Belly Full”
“Yeah! So, after ´Roadblockª, you know, there then came the Sheriff, and reflexes did it, you know? Yeah.” – Marley before “I Shot The Sheriff”
“Do I now have to say ´thank youª? I know how, thank you! Now, this one was like, you know, this experience is that… ´Johnny Wasª.
A woman hold her head and cry, ’cause her son had been shot down in the streets and die, all because of the system. Now, the system. The system, talkin’
about the system. You know the system, what the system is? The system, the system! The system, you know? The system we’re living, the system!
Things will strive away [?], you know? So the woman hold her head and cry, ’cause her son had been shot down in the streets and die, from a stray bullet. And I [???].” –
Marley before “Johnny Was”
“Yeeh-ah!” – Marley before “Kinky Reggae”
“Yeeh-ah! So you know what? We’re working on a night shift!” – Marley before “Night Shift”
“Yeeh-ah!” – Marley before “Lively Up Yourself”
“And there’s another thing going on you might not understand you’re aware, and this one we call the ´Rat Raceª! Yeah. Are you ready? You’re ready.” –
Marley before “Rat Race”
“Yeah! There’s some less gonna [?] here that we call down there ´Want Moreª. You see, when they think it’s the end, it’s just the beginning. O.K.!” –
Marley before “Want More”
“Yeeh-ah! So we say that Rastaman Vibration is positive! Jah Rastafari itinually!” –
Marley before “Positive Vibration”