Rihannas overt sexuality on her song Rude Boy doesnt become the original rudy not to sound prude, but straddling a pink cannon barrel during a live show? Yet, follow her reference back to its roots a rude boy is Caribbean slang for a young, poor troublemaker, not an impolite young man and you find the reggae godfather that most consider solidified the genre in the U.S.
The soundtrack to 1972s The Harder They Come (see YouTube video below) catapulted reggae and Jimmy Cliff to stardom. Cliff, who starred and sang in the film, put a hustlers tale on screen decades before Jay Z with the story of a disenfranchised rude boy devoured by the oppressing poverty of Kingstons streets.
Cliff endures today Grammy-winning Rebirth came out last year because injustice endures. The classic reggae message, from Cliff to Marley to the rest, is as overt as Rihannas sex drive: What about love now? The world and all its complicated problems are simplified to love your neighbor love the world with a backbeat.
On the KCRW Sessions, an intimate set performed in 2012 for the California radio stations Morning Becomes Eclectic, Cliff is straightforward. The Rebirth opener World Upside Down laments crime, corruption and starvation, but ends with all solved by love.
This is what I propose, and its not naive, he monologues before segueing into Wonderful World Beautiful People. I am on the side of those who believe in good over evil.
The KCRW Sessions are as simple as that message: just Cliff and an acoustic guitar. His voice crackles with age, but that only makes the hardships in his classic Many Rivers To Cross all the more real.
Yet, Cliff is unflinchingly optimistic. After finishing Many Rivers ... he says, Thats what it takes, but you know, its good when you can say and strums right into his old hit I Can See Clearly Now.
It feels like an old man has cornered a young one in a room, the way Cliff sings his fables directly at each and every listener. He has one more story to tell, Cliff sings on One More. He has no patience for the wicked let love and freedom ring.
Its like in Spike Lees film Do the Right Thing when the Mayor stops Mookie in the middle of a pizza delivery to impart some wisdom.
Doctor, always do the right thing, he said.
Dismiss the message if you will, call him naive, but its hard to say he or Jimmy Cliff are wrong. [youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q03uqIGYu3s[/youtube] Reviewer Dylan Brown is a deejay for the University of Idaho student radio station, KUOI 89.3 FM. He can be contacted at intern2@lmtribune.com or (208) 848-2278 or find him on Twitter @DylanBrown26.