Blackheart Man

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (6 ratings)
Blackheart Man album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 46:03

Write a Review 1 Member Review

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Quiet Armagideon

MadDogM13

This is generally considered one of the classics from Reggae's late-70s golden age. Bunny had lain low for a few years after leaving The Wailers and emerged with this rich, gentle, powerful statement. You can listen for days and hear new instrumental details in the mix. And while the songs lack Bob Marley's militance and menace, they eloquently express both Rastas' pre-Apocalyptic warnings to Babylon and the celebration of Jah's love that binds the community in sharing and endurance. Perfect Saturday morning music.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

After leaving the Wailers behind, Bunny Wailer (born Neville Livingston) wasted no time establishing himself as a highly original and visionary singer and songwriter on his own. His solo debut remains one of the most extraordinary albums of the roots period, a complex but instantly attractive and occasionally heartbreaking record that never rises above a whisper in tone but packs as much political and spiritual wallop as the best of Bob Marley’s work. Critics have been praising this album for more than 25 years, and they generally (and quite rightly) focus on the quality of such songs as the quietly ferocious “Fighting Against Conviction” (aka “Battering Down Sentence”), the classic repatriation anthem “Dreamland,” and the apocalyptic “Amagideon,” but the song that pulls you into Bunny Wailer’s magical web of mystical Rastafarianism is the first one, in which Wailer recalls being warned by his mother to avoid Rastas (“even the lions fear him”) and then describes his eventual conversion, all in a tone of infinite gentleness and sadness at the hardhearted blindness of Babylon. Are there missteps? Maybe one or two: The bluesy “Oppressed Song” never quite gets off the ground, for example. But taken as a whole, Blackheart Man is an astounding achievement by an artist who was, at the time, only at the beginning of what would be a distinguished career. – Rick Anderson

more »