Listen To Bob Marley – Redemption Song
As the CEO of www.taxconnections.com, we do not promote war of any kind and pray for peace for all. Our tax community promotes peace. Bob Marley is a legend I was fortunate to grow up listening to his music during my baby boomer generation. God Bless that Angel in the sky…Bob Marley. TaxConnections stands for bringing people together to support each other and respected all people and religions. He had a belief in something bigger than himself. He understood that God lives within us.
Listen To Bob Marley Sing The Redemption Song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ZpxaeICYyg
Listen To Bob Marley Sing Get Up, Stand Up: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RhJ0q7X3DLM
Listen To Bob Marley Sing War/No More Trouble: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vPZydAotVOY
Interpretation Of Get Up, Stand Up From uDiscoverMusic site:
“Get Up, Stand Up” was apparently written in response to a visit to Haiti, when Bob saw the poverty of the island’s people. It is not easy to find concrete evidence about the details of Bob’s trip there, and he was no stranger to poverty, having grown up in the Trenchtown ghetto of Kingston, Jamaica, so chances are Bob might have been moved to write the song anyway.
Whatever inspired it, Bob’s message is clear. For the first two verses, he tells the people not to wait until the next life to find fulfillment; it’s their right to be free and happy on this planet. The lines denying that God will come down from the sky to sort out the world’s problems may seem strange coming from a singer who was deeply religious, but it’s perfectly in keeping with Bob’s Rasta faith: Bob’s God was not above the clouds, but living with the rest of us as Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia.”
Interpretation Of The Redemption Song From UDiscoverMusic site:
“The idea that songs can bring redemption has echoed down the centuries. The wretch that was saved in “Amazing Grace” was rescued from Hell by a song – “how sweet the sound.” The appalling crime he’d committed was the same crime that afflicted Bob Marley in his “Redemption Song”: the writer of “Amazing Grace” was a slaver; Bob Marley was a descendant of slaves. Marley’s songs set him free, made him somebody – though he was well aware of the mental slavery that can still exist even when you are said to be free.”
Interpretation Of War/No More Trouble From UDiscoverMusic site:
“As a Rastafarian, Marley worshipped the religion’s living God, Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia. “War,” a mighty, Biblically thunderous call for peace, dignity, and the end of oppression, is built around a speech His Imperial Majesty gave at the United Nations General Assembly in New York City on October 4, 1963, and directly quotes his words, according The Wailers’ 1976 Rastaman Vibration album considerable gravitas.”
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If you have music you know will bring people together to pray for peace, become an advisor praying for peace, please send to us at kat@taxconnections.com.
We hope you enjoyed this much needed music to hear and be reminded of peace we the people want. Each Friday we will post our members favorite songs promoting PEACE around the world.
God Bless The World,
Kat Jennings, CEO
858.999.0053 X100
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