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Saturday, October 5, 2024 |
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Bob Marley awarded English Heritage blue plaque |
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The plaque marks number 42 Oakley Street, the Chelsea house where Marley lived in 1977.
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LONDON.- Jamaican singer-songwriter Bob Marley has been honoured with an English Heritage blue today (Tuesday 1 October), joining the likes of Jimi Hendrix, John Lennon, George Frideric Handel and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. The plaque marks number 42 Oakley Street, the Chelsea house where Marley lived in 1977. It was while living here that he and the Wailers finished recording their album Exodus, which featured some of his biggest hits, including Jamming, Waiting in Vain, Three Little Birds and One Love. With this address as his Chelsea home, Marley said he regarded London as a second base, often playing football with his bandmates at the pitches in nearby Battersea Park.
Poet, writer and actor Benjamin Zephaniah, said: Its very difficult to say what Bob Marley would have said about this plaque, but he did once say, Live for yourself, you will live in vain, live for others, and you will live again. So Im quite sure he would say that this is for his people and his music.
His music came from a small island in the Caribbean and shook up the world, and his words are even more relevant today when there is so much division. But the truth is although he was at the forefront of our music, the longevity of this music and his words have shown that he was one of the best songwriters of all time. We should all be proud that he chose to live with us for a time.
Blue Plaques Panel member, David Olusoga, said: Bob Marley was the first superstar to emerge from the developing world. More than a brilliant musician, he became a cultural icon who blazed a trail for other black artists.
Its wonderful to finally be able honour him with a blue plaque here on Oakley Street today, after all the time and determination that went into proving that this was indeed Bobs house. Thanks to new testimonies there is no longer any doubt.
While the number of blue plaques to black and Asian figures from history is still unacceptably low, Bob Marleys plaque is a testament to how our scheme is changing, as English Heritage continues to work to overcome the obstacles that have led to this underrepresentation.
Currently only 4% of the 900 plus Blue Plaques across the capital are dedicated to black and Asian figures from history. This is partly explained by the low number of public nominations fulfilling the blue plaque criteria and by the all too frequent lack or relative inaccessibility of historic records establishing a definitive link between the person in question and the building in which they lived. Marley is a case in point, being absent from the sources usually used to confirm addresses, such as electoral registers and phone directories.
A year after it became an independent charity in 2015, English Heritage established a BAME working group tasked with advising on diversity in the Blue Plaques Scheme. That same year, English Heritages Blue Plaques team opened a cold-case review initiated by both our Senior Historian, Howard Spencer, and the BAME working group thanks to new and re-examined evidence, the plaque commemorating Bob Marleys house on Oakley Street was approved in 2017.
The most tantalising piece of primary evidence arose from Marleys arrest for possession of cannabis on 10 March 1977, along with his bassist Aston Family Man Barrett. On the court records, Barretts address is given as 42 Oakley Street, and though Marleys is cited as 27 Collingham Gardens, anecdotal evidence suggests that he may have given this address where his backing singers were staying in a bid to prevent the police from searching Oakley Street for drugs. The unanimous recollection of those who were contemporary witnesses is that Oakley Street was both the band headquarters and Marleys own primary address at this time.
It was during the bands residence at this four storey terraced house in Oakley Street, that the later stages of the recording and production of Exodus were carried out. According to Marleys long-time manager, Don Taylor, the musicians habit while living here was to rise late and play football in Battersea Park for what was left of the morning, before going to the studio, where he would often remain until the early hours.
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