Album Reviews

Review: Bob Marley… With Strings Attached…

Bob Marley & the Chineke! Orchestra
Bob Marley & the Chineke! Orchestra
(Island/UMe)

3 1/2 out of 5 stars

Videos by American Songwriter

Itโ€™s got to be a challenge for the marketing suits at UMe to keep devising innovative ways to re-sell Bob Marleyโ€™s durable and timeless catalog. After all, the albums have already been remastered and expanded, there is a definitive box set plus other compilations, the outtakes and vault live concerts are available and the music has been remixed and twisted into every imaginable structure. What could possibly be left?ย 

โ€œHow about bringing in classical instrumentation to enhance those tracks?โ€ suggested the famed cellist with the Chineke! Orchestra. It probably took record company management and the Marley family that controls his legacy about five minutes to realize this was a viable new source of hawking the reggae iconโ€™s catalogโ€ฆ again. Cha-ching!ย 

Thankfully, getting the European Chineke! Orchestra involved was a clever move. The aggregation, formed in 2015 and comprised of ethnically diverse musicians, is the first of its kind to only include artists of color in a classical configuration. Most of their catalog also features new music composed by others of color, which in itself places the outfit in a powerful and unique position. 

Infusing orchestration to pop, or in this case pop-reggae, is nothing new. In the recent past, the concept has been applied to artists like Elvis, Buddy Holly, Roy Orbison, Aretha Franklin, Rod Stewart, and Yes, among others. Those results can be generously described as erratically effective.

This is much better.

The producers wisely use Marleyโ€™s original recordings with the Wailers, then layer on the strings. Predictably, this works better on some of the ten tracks than others. Kicking off with โ€œExodus,โ€ the scoring previewing the songโ€™s riff is apparent even before Marley sings. As it progresses, the strings float in and around, underlining some moments, augmenting others, and occasionally injecting additional drama to a tune that already had plenty.

No one stayed up late choosing the tunes. Between โ€œStir It Up,โ€ โ€œOne Love/People Get Ready,โ€ โ€œI Shot the Sheriff,โ€ โ€œIs This Love,โ€ and โ€œGet Up, Stand Up,โ€ there arenโ€™t many surprises here. A few less obvious selections such as โ€œTop Rankinโ€™โ€ and โ€œTurn Your Lights Down Lowโ€ also appear. Generally, the Chineke! Orchestra avoids the overblown, sugary, slick sound other ensembles have employed in similar projects. They also lay back, letting Marleyโ€™s voice and band take the spotlight on โ€œSatisfy My Soulโ€ where the strings are barely present.

There are highlights too. The cello that opens Marleyโ€™s โ€œRedemption Songโ€ is a wonderfully evocative overture and the alternately throbbing and flowing strings that follow help focus the listener on the lyrics. Since the initial recording was so sparse, the enhancements bring another viewpoint to the already mesmerizing performance. The strings also interact and mesh well with the horns and the I-Threes vocals on โ€œTop Rankinโ€™.โ€

Exactly who this is meant for is difficult to ascertain though. Existing fans probably wonโ€™t appreciate anyone messing with Marleyโ€™s classics and itโ€™s unlikely that those who, for whatever reason, werenโ€™t interested in his music before, will suddenly change their minds hearing these rejiggered versions.

Regardless, even if the โ€œcash grabโ€ notion canโ€™t be ignored, the Chineke! Orchestraโ€™s playing and innovative arrangements of these Marley gems are worth hearingโ€ฆ at least once. Your mileage may vary.ย  ย ย ย 

Photo Credit: The Marley Family/Island Records/UMe