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Length: 4:30
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A hungry mob is a angry mob
A rain a-fall, but the dirt it tough
A pot a-cook, but the food no 'nough
You're gonna dance to Jah music, dance
We're gonna dance to Jah music, dance
Forget your troubles and dance!
Forget your sorrows and dance!
Forget your sickness and dance!
Forget your weakness and dance!
Cost of livin' get so high
Rich and poor, they start to cry
Now the weak must get strong
They say, "Oh, what a tribulation!"
Them belly full, but we hungry
A hungry mob is a angry mob
A fain a-fall, but the dirt it tough
A pot a-cook, but the food no 'nough
We're gonna chuck to Jah Music- chuckin'
We're chuckin' to Jah music- we're chuckin'
A belly full, but them hungry
A hungry mob is a angry mob
A rain a-fall, but the dirt it tough
A pot a-cook, but the food no 'nough
A hungry man is a angry man
A rain a-fall but the dirt it tough
A pot a-cook, but the food no 'nough
A hungry mob is a angry mob
A hungry mob is a angry mob
i've been listening to this song for years, but just the other day I thought I heard Bob and the back up singers singing "Hangry". Am I just hearing things? Am I too influenced by Snickers commercials?
yup, he needed a Snickers
Ummm...Bill...
The last couple hours have been very old playlists (in the same order) from, like,10 years ago
khardog145 wrote:
SO??What's your point.
I think their point is that -- since RP is 24 hours a day and listened to worldwide -- Bill and Rebecca are never allowed to sleep, rest, eat, use the bathroom, catch a movie, take a walk... Just cater to me, the devotee!
Blind and messed up, methinks.
Dude, really!
1. Marley was one very rich guy. Much richer than I will likely ever be by an order of magnitude or two.
2. Many of his tunes are about poverty and how the poor, down trodden, and etc. need to rise up against all those bad people.
3. Most reggae tunes use pretty much the same cord progression and beat.
4. If I'm going to be insulted I prefer to be entertained.
Did I say anything that wasn't true? Please find a place to begin and do be succinct.
Do you get as heated about rich, white dudes playing the blues?? They are likely happy ensconced in their mansions, with their trophy wives, telling me about how hard life is...
And, just to be succinct...the blues demonstrates just as little variation as reggae...just more easily co-opted by white folks...
A hungry mob is an angry mob. Witness dinnertime at my house.
hangry mob
If the rich are going to lecture the rest of us about poverty perhaps they could vary the beat and chord progression some. Boredom with insults is a poor combination.
Be careful your ignorance, lack of humanity and bigotry is showing!
Bob came from challenging if not impoverished beginnings.
In the few years of his short life when he finally reached financial independence and freedom he was very generous with his monetary wealth!
Respecting it but not worshiping it ,he gave freely!
Just like his music professes .
Of all musicians integrity to challenge you foolishly picked Marley!
"Know your History /know your destiny"
The last couple hours have been very old playlists (in the same order) from, like,10 years ago
A post so full of all kinds of wrong, I don't know where to begin.
It's good you began.....by commenting. It's a start...
Salsa. (But I do love this song.)
MOVING YEP MOVING!!!
Thanks and praises R.P
Great Sunday tune
ALL Rastas of RP unite
an ad holmium argument
Geez, I really hate arguments based on a rare-earth, trivalent element found in gadolinite. When will people learn?
This songs rocks, reggae is good for both the soul and the ears, and Bob Marley was an amazing human being.
That's funny, Spot_69....at least we know YOU know what HO is ;-)
I've got this track rated at 8, would have loved to attended the concert although I wasn't even conceived yet. I say Long Live RP!!
Let's have some reggae diversity please
The last couple hours have been very old playlists (in the same order) from, like,10 years ago
Geez, I really hate arguments based on a rare-earth, trivalent element found in gadolinite. When will people learn?
This songs rocks, reggae is good for both the soul and the ears, and Bob Marley was an amazing human being.
an ad holmium argument
Geez, I really hate arguments based on a rare-earth, trivalent element found in gadolinite. When will people learn?
This songs rocks, reggae is good for both the soul and the ears, and Bob Marley was an amazing human being.
bitbanger wrote:
SquiddlyDiddly wrote:
A post so full of all kinds of wrong, I don't know where to begin.
Dude, really!
1. Marley was one very rich guy. Much richer than I will likely ever be by an order of magnitude or two.
2. Many of his tunes are about poverty and how the poor, down trodden, and etc. need to rise up against all those bad people.
3. Most reggae tunes use pretty much the same cord progression and beat.
4. If I'm going to be insulted I prefer to be entertained.
Did I say anything that wasn't true? Please find a place to begin and do be succinct.
A post so full of all kinds of wrong, I don't know where to begin.
A hungry man is an angry man...a hungry mob is an angry mob...yeah...that's not worth listening to.
A hungry man is an angry man...a hungry mob is an angry mob...yeah...that's not worth listening to.
And why not? Painfully obvious though it is, no one should be surprised that some folks just don't get the angry man/mob message, or they don't much fucking care. In which case, play, sing, repeat.
chrispmcd wrote:
These songs of boredom? -
A hungry man is an angry man...a hungry mob is an angry mob...yeah...that's not worth listening to.
Marley as the Master of the Obvious! Gets a yawn at best.
A hungry man is an angry man...a hungry mob is an angry mob...yeah...that's not worth listening to.
Hello KellBean,
Listen to the poetry! And yes, Reggae, like Blues, Rock, Swing (most forms of music) has a similar groove, time signature, style. You might love it (as I do) or not care for it all. BUT with Bob Marley it is all in the poetry: social justice, deep spirit, questions for humanity, and well Jah LOVE.
Happy listening to it all.
Magikal1act
Here is one of my favorites:
Redemption Song ~ 1979
Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery;
None but ourselves can free our mind.
Wo! Have no fear for atomic energy,
'Cause none of them-a can-a stop-a the time.
How long shall they kill our prophets,
While we stand aside and look?
Yes, some say it's just a part of it:
We've got to fulfill the book.
Won't you help to sing
These songs of freedom? -
'Cause all I ever had:
Redemption songs -
All I ever had:
Redemption songs:
These songs of freedom,
Songs of freedom
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redemption_Song
a hungry mob is a angry mob
a rain a fall but the dirt it tough
a pot a cook but the food no 'nough
Is everyone not hearing what I'm not hearing?
I'm getting no audio right now, even though Winamp seems to think RP is playing...
what's going on?
Take a look at this thread:
https://www.radioparadise.com/#name=Forums&file=showtopic&topic_id=23031&x=3381712
Where Bill notes:
Still not quite sure what happened there. Some kind of glitch in our playlist database.Likely the issue returned. As tech support I can assure you that large volumes of email to Bill won't speed fixes up. I'm sure RP is *very* interested in resolving this, and are doing all they can to figure it out.
Is everyone not hearing what I'm not hearing?
I'm getting no audio right now, even though Winamp seems to think RP is playing...
what's going on?
Hear that? That's the sound of children not playing at the old merry go round abandoned lo these many years ago. - Kent Brockman
Yet another strong set from Bill -n- 'Becca. (Rebbecca never gets her due here — maybe she should start DJing a bit!)
. . . Maybe she does already. . .
Yet another strong set from Bill -n- 'Becca. (Rebbecca never gets her due here — maybe she should start DJing a bit!)
Fantastic sequence, Bill! Who -> Midnight Oil -> Bob.... Flawless blending. As if they were meant to be together.
Too bad your facts 1 through 4 are based on a deliberate misreading of what the other poster meant...
Therein lies the danger of a Government who wants to do everything for the people and remove personal responsibility. When people don't have the need to function for survival, they are toast when Government can't or won't react. ...
Not a fan of this preachy, violence oriented song. Yeah, I have a clue, just differ in my approach to affecting change.
...and your approach is reproach for the sufferers, regardless of the source of their suffering, either because of government policy or individual shortcoming...
I think Bob is not endorsing violence, but predicting and bemoaning it when hunger and suffering occur
Therein lies the danger of a Government who wants to do everything for the people and remove personal responsibility. When people don't have the need to function for survival, they are toast when Government can't or won't react. The Times-Picayune had published a huge color section detailing exactly what would happen in the event of a storm surge and levee failure years before the Katrina post-storm incident. Everybody knew what could happen, some chose not to do anything about it, a few were not able to do anything about it. Blaming Government for not wiping people's butts for them is ridiculous, blaming Government for trading entitlement for votes for so long that it rendered the voters unable to wipe their own butts has merit.
Not a fan of this preachy, violence oriented song. Yeah, I have a clue, just differ in my approach to affecting change.
It's not that surprising, surely. Marley was a highly political man and wrote political songs designed to inspire, educate and agitate. I suspect that he would have been pleased that his songs polarised opinion and led to contention. I never got into his music much myself, but I do admire his songwriting and his very active commitment to social justice and fighting on behalf of the oppressed, from whose ranks he came.
Gee, those are my sentiments exactly.
houston,
Say 20 gazillion Hail Marys and, no, you are not forgiven.
kids but a 90min drive away. My 17yr old son was keener than keen, I was tuckered at the thought of an all-nighter and the scary
drive. (hanging head in shame) I went to bed instead. Ouch.
An objective person would have pointed out that natural crisis first response is at a local and state level, yet I don't see you mention anything about the culpability of Kathleen Blanco and Ray Nagin, which leads me to think you are a sufferer of BDS.
BDS? What is that? Yes, there were many mistakes made, but when I was stealing water from a hotel swimming pool because we had nothing to drink, camping out at the national guard armory for nine days but getting no help, all I could think about was how the US had relief for the tsunami in 24 hours. New Orleans was bad, I had evacuated to Mississippi which was absolutely devastated. When state and local responders are overwhelmed or destroyed we expected more from the government.
Bob Marley's lyrics to this song deal with the rich getting richer and the poor poorer, but the poor get angry when they can't get their basic needs met. That's what the song is about. During Katrina, the poor were left hungry to die for days. That was a policy decision, never happened before in my lifetime in this country, ever. McCain was celebrating his birthday cake with Bush when this was going down. So Marley's song applies to what happened those days completely.
An objective person would have pointed out that natural crisis first response is at a local and state level, yet I don't see you mention anything about the culpability of Kathleen Blanco and Ray Nagin, which leads me to think you are a sufferer of BDS.
Indeed, me too. I especially like this one
Give Thanks and Praise!
It's not that surprising, surely. Marley was a highly political man and wrote political songs designed to inspire, educate and agitate. I suspect that he would have been pleased that his songs polarised opinion and led to contention. I never got into his music much myself, but I do admire his songwriting and his very active commitment to social justice and fighting on behalf of the oppressed, from whose ranks he came.
His belly full too. Your point?
My point:
"Cost of livin' gets so high,
Rich and poor they start to cry:
Now the weak must get strong;
They say, "Oh, what a tribulation!"
Them belly full, but we hungry;
A hungry mob is a angry mob.
A rain is fall, but the dirt it tough;
A pot is cook, but the food no 'nough."
Bob Marley's lyrics to this song deal with the rich getting richer and the poor poorer, but the poor get angry when they can't get their basic needs met. That's what the song is about. During Katrina, the poor were left hungry to die for days. That was a policy decision, never happened before in my lifetime in this country, ever. McCain was celebrating his birthday cake with Bush when this was going down. So Marley's song applies to what happened those days completely.
So you can say that Ted Kennedy let a woman drown 30 years ago but to compare it to thousands of people drowning, starving, and/or losing their homes due to a deliberate policy is a fascinating stretch. Because it's quite clear that we have all become expendable, and that is something that never happened before in my lifetime either.
The only apt comparison of Bush/McCain with Kennedy is that all of them are rich and well fed, while the poor go hungry. And there I would agree with you. And there Marley's song would still apply.
And the irony is that those who ignore that a hungry mob is an angry mob, well that is a very dangerous thing to ignore. Yes, it's much wiser to make sure the people are fed and can afford to buy their bread, see their doctor and live in their home, to build the levees high enough and rescue the people and feed them in a disaster. I really wouldn't want to be around when that angry mob suddenly explodes, and I don't plan to be. I'd rather be somewhere far away, listening to Bob Marley in a hammock on a sunny day sipping a nice cold ice tea or a margarita.
A hungry man is an angry man.
His belly full too. Your point?
A hungry man is an angry man.
yup, he needed a Snickers
That's how one talks after a spliff.