Equal Rights

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (54 ratings)
Equal Rights album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 51:44

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You can have Marley ... I'll take Tosh

DM

If the Wailers were Jamaica's Beatles, then Bob Marley was Paul McCartney to Peter Tosh's John Lennon. No surprise that the less threatening black man (Marley) became reggae's face to the white world. He wrote pretty music. He sang about One Love ... Peter talked about revolution and injustice and doing something about it. Give me music that MEANS something. Equal Rights does. Good to see it available here.

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classic collection of great songs

JazzyBlue

I really enjoyed this album with an number of great songs. Downpressor Man and Stepping Razor are two of my favorites

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this one's still in heavy rotation 30 years later

ojalvo

one of my top 10 reggae albums of all time. great songwriting. and the musicianship! sly and robbie really create a mood and sustain it throughout the record. it captures the laidback vibe of reggae, of course... but with an intesity and seriousness not heard on most other popular reggae albums.

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Best Best Best

shantij

He's the man fa sure! Get it now!

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Simply the Best

genebean

The best record from an underrated reggae artist. For me, this is the definitive version of "Get Up, Stand Up" and there are many other crucial cuts, including "African" and the chilling "Stepping Razor." His murder was a great loss for roots reggae.

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They Say All Music Guide

Equal Rights was to be the album that propelled Peter Tosh to the top of the reggae world — the rival to onetime fellow Wailer Bob Marley. Time has shown that this lofty aspiration was not borne out, but Equal Rights remains among the handful of best, and most influential, reggae albums ever recorded. Tosh was always the most militant of the original Wailers and this album reflects that outlook. Whether it is preaching about the unity of the African diaspora (“African”), protesting conditions in South Africa (“Apartheid”), or giving a more general call to arms (“Get Up, Stand Up”), Equal Rights is a political album. This is at times crippling, as some tracks are more effective as political statements than they are as songs. This, in fact, is a primary difference between Tosh and Marley — Marley’s political statements never overwhelmed his songs. Unfortunately, this is not always the case with Tosh. That being said, “Downpresser Man” (based on a folk standard), “Stepping Razor,” and his definitive version of “Get Up, Stand Up” are as good a trio of songs as you will find on any album, reggae or not. Tosh’s singing is angry and forceful and the music is intricate and distinctive. On these three tracks you can see why people thought that Tosh could become a transcendent international star. The rest of the album, however, shows why he never quite lived up to that potential. [Columbia/Legacy reissued the album in 1999 with a pair of live, previously unreleased bonus tracks.] – Toby Ball

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