Premium Only Content
![Official YouTube Live Reggae Music: Burning Spear at Reggae Land Festival 2024](https://1a-1791.com/video/s8/6/K/8/p/u/K8put.qR4e.jpg)
Official YouTube Live Reggae Music: Burning Spear at Reggae Land Festival 2024
Official YouTube Live Reggae Music: Burning Spear at Reggae Land Festival 2024
Don't forget to secure your tickets for the UK's biggest reggae festival in 2025 via ReggaeLand.com!
Reggae Land is a vibrant reggae festival held in Milton Keynes National Bowl. The festival features a diverse lineup of international and local artists across multiple stages, covering various reggae sub-genres such as roots reggae, dancehall, ska, and dub.
Winston Rodney (born March 1, 1945), also known as Burning Spear, is a Jamaican roots reggae singer and musician. Like many famous Jamaican reggae artists, Burning Spear is known for his Rastafari movement messages.
Rodney was born in Saint Ann's Bay, St. Ann, Jamaica, as were Bob Marley and Marcus Garvey; who both had a great influence on Rodney's life. Garvey in his philosophy, which Burning Spear greatly took to, and Marley in directly helping Burning Spear get started in the music industry. Burning Spear was originally Rodney's group, named after Jomo Kenyatta, the first Prime Minister and President of an independent Kenya. As fame took hold the name of the group gradually became synonymous with Rodney.
Burning Spear is one of the strongest proponents of Marcus Garvey's self-determination and self-reliance for all African descendants, thus leading to several album releases in commemoration of the African activist.
In 2002, Burning Spear and his wife, Sonia Rodney who has produced a number of his albums, founded Burning Spear Records.
Burning Spear advocates messages of honesty, peace, and love, which tie in with his religious and political messages of Rasta and black unity.
For more than 35 years, Burning Spear's music-thus, his life-has inspired people on numerous continents. Since the beginning, his songs have implored listeners to fight oppression in all its forms, to work at improving their own condition and to consider the social impact of their actions.
OUR MUSIC builds upon the Jamaican native's legacy of musical activism. With its inimitable dancing groove, the album percolates and bubbles rhythmically in its call for unity between races, between nations, between individuals and even between business associates.
OUR MUSIC is the second album released on his Burning Spear label, following 2003's Grammy-nominated FREEMAN. In the midst of its expected messages about love, oppression and African history is the title track, a public confirmation that his brand of positivity is tempered with a strong sense of self. "Our Music" is Burning Spear's reclamation of his own artistry-a justification for establishing his record company and a challenge to all artists to commandeer their own future.
"A lot of artists just have no time to really look within the business section of the music business," Burning Spear reasons. "There's no one to really sit them down and give them some of that business understanding before they get into what they get into. So then people walk all over these artists and do things where it's not appropriate and it's not right. It's not in the artist's love."
With his art and his business now firmly in his own control, Burning Spear's OUR MUSIC stands among the most joyful albums of his career. Bolstered by its throbbing basslines, bright horn parts and slinky female background singers, the songs embrace persistence ("Try Again"), self-analysis ("Friends"), love ("Fix Me") and community ("Together") through deceptively simple lyrics that point to deeper issues. It is, in effect, smart music you can dance to.
"It's like art," he says. "You're gonna paint this thing, and people are gonna look at this art and say that it looks like a tree, looks like a car, some people it looks like a flower. People are gonna say different things according to what they see. It's very different, what it looks like to them."
No matter who looks at Burning Spear's career, they have to be impressed. Of his more than 25 albums, nine have earned Grammy nominations, with one of them - 1999's CALLING RASTAFRI - receiving the Academy's Best Reggae Album honor. And he remains one of the few reggae pioneers still working and influencing the people today.
Born Winston Rodney in St. Ann, Jamaica, he was an early fan of Bob Marley. As the legend goes, Rodney bumped into Marley while walking through a field, and the two began talking about music. Marley encouraged him to visit Jamaica's Studio One, where Rodney and a fellow musician recorded "Door Peep." By the time of its release, Rodney had branded the duo Burning Spear, taking the nickname of Jomo Kenyatta, who was jailed by a colonial British government in Africa but rose to become the first president of Kenya.
❤️💛💚
-
LIVE
Game On!
12 hours ago $0.02 earnedPresident Trump TAKES OVER the Daytona 500!
981 watching -
21:35
DeVory Darkins
3 days ago $10.62 earnedMitch McConnell TORCHED as Secretary of HHS is sworn in
55.5K138 -
1:20:04
Tim Pool
4 days agoGame of Money
128K11 -
4:48
Cooking with Gruel
13 hours agoThe Perfect Bacon
7342 -
11:49
Reforge Gaming
1 hour agoXbox - Next Game on PlayStation?
1 -
27:46
ArturRehi
1 day agoSurprise Counter-Attack in Kursk Advanced 3 Miles | French Jets Arrive | Ukraine Update
48 -
11:51
Alabama Arsenal
12 hours agoThe Silent Sledgehammer | GQ Armory 8.6BLK Paladin
152 -
2:21:11
Nerdrotic
15 hours ago $32.44 earnedDown the Rabbit Hole with Kurt Metzger | Forbidden Frontier #090
157K25 -
2:41:13
vivafrei
21 hours agoEp. 251: Bogus Social Security Payments? DOGE Lawsduit W's! Maddow Defamation! & MORE! Viva & Barnes
271K296 -
1:19:23
Josh Pate's College Football Show
14 hours ago $4.85 earnedBig Ten Program Rankings | What Is College Football? | Clemson Rage| Stadiums I Haven’t Experienced
76.4K1