The Harder They Come - Original Soundtrack

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The Harder They Come - Original Soundtrack album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 39:59

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Time and Place

rickstervc

I heard this for the first time in an old girlfriend's bedroom while watching her get dressed sometime in the early '90's. It was interesting and good enough to distract me from that sight, and though I was familiar with Bob Marley and Peter Tosh, and had heard of Jimmy Cliff, I'd never actually heard his music, which makes up the lion's share of the album. Though there is that association when I listen, it is music that has stood the test of time, and proves there is more to reggae than Bob Marley. Check it out-and get the deluxe version if you can.

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The Wellspring

MadDogM13

This was the album that first detonated the reggae explosion in the U.S. outside the music's traditional markets in Caribbean communities. The songs included in the soundtrack represented reggae's state of the art in 1972, brilliantly produced by Leslie Kong and sung by artists both famous (Toots, Jimmy Cliff) and barely known (Scotty, The Slickers). Great movie,too.

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Download it right now

BrianJF

That is all you need to know.

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They Say All Music Guide

In 1973, when the movie The Harder They Come was released, reggae was not on the radar screen of American pop culture. The soundtrack went a ways toward changing that situation. It is a collection of consistently excellent early reggae songs by artists who went on to thrive with reggae’s increased popularity, and others for whom this is the most well-known vehicle. Jimmy Cliff is both the star of the movie and the headliner on the soundtrack. He contributes three excellent songs: the hymnal “Many Rivers to Cross,” “You Can Get It If You Really Want,” and “The Harder They Come” (the latter two are repeated at the end of the album, but you probably wanted to hear them again anyway). Interestingly, the better production values of his songs actually seems to detract from them when compared to the rougher, but less sanitized, mixes of the other tracks. All the songs on this collection are excellent, but some truly stand out. Toots & the Maytals deliver two high-energy songs with “Sweet and Dandy” and “Pressure Drop” (covered by the Clash among others). Scotty develops a mellow, loping groove on “Stop That Train” (not the same as the Wailers’ song by the same name) and the Slickers prove on “Johnny Too Bad” that you don’t have to spout profanity or graphic violence to convey danger. The Harder They Come is strongly recommended both for the casual listener interested in getting a sense of reggae music and the more serious enthusiast. Collections don’t come much better than this. – Toby Ball

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