Track Listing 1. No More Trouble - Marley, Bob & Erykah Badu 2. Rebel Music (3 O'clock Roadblock) - Marley, Bob & Krayzie Bone 3. Johnny Was - Marley, Bob & Guru 4. Concrete Jungle - Marley, Bob & Rakim 5. Rastaman Chant - Marley, Bob & Busta Ryhmes/Flipmode Squad 6. Guiltiness - Marley, Bob & Lost Boyz 7. Turn Your Lights Down Low - Marley, Bob & Lauryn Hill 8. Kinky Reggae - Marley, Bob & The Marley Brothers 9. Roots Rock Reggae - Marley, Bob & Steven Tyler/Joe Perry 10. Survival - Marley, Bob & Chuck D 11. Burnin' And Lootin' - Marley, Bob & Black Thoughts 12. Jammin' - Marley, Bob & MC Lyte
| Details | | Number of CDs: | 1 | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Distributor: | Universal Music | | Recording Mode: | Stereo |
Album Notes Personnel includes: Bob Marley, Erykah Badu, Guru, Rakim, Krayzie Bone, Busta Rhymes, Flipmode Squad, Lauryn Hill, Lost Boyz, Mr. Cheeks, MC Lyte, The Marley Brothers, The Ghetto Youths Crew, Steven Tyler, Joe Perry, Chuck D, The Roots, Black Thought.Producers: The Marley Boyz, Stephen Marley, Steven Tyler, Joe Perry.Engineers include: Bomzai Caruso, Error Brown, Comissioner Gordon.Includes liner notes by Harry Allen.CHANT DOWN BABYLON, which pairs Bob Marley's music with performances from a select group of urban pop stars, is strong enough to quell even the most skeptic Marley aficionado. Stephen Marley brought heavyweights from the worlds of hip-hop and R&B for this project, all of whom seem very familiar with Marley's work and bring a level of earnestness to the proceedings that demonstrate their reverence for the reggae great. Krayzie Bone offers a rendition of "Rebel Music" that is one of the album's high points, while Erykah Badu oozes fiery soul over "No More Trouble" as through she were standing right next to Bob in the studio. Other standouts include Aeorsmith's appearance on "Roots Rock Reggae" and Rakim's addition to "Concrete Jungle." The excellent CHANT DOWN BABYLON functions like a rare glimpse of what Marley's music may have been like if he were recording today.
Editorial Reviews 3 stars out of 5 - ...a giant piety party with reggae's most hallowed saint as the guest of honor....It introduces a young audience to a deserving icon and makes a pointed political connection between present-day America and Marley's Jamaican slums... Rolling Stone (12/09/1999)
...Respecting the integrity of Bob Marley's legacy, while making his music available to a contemporary audience, CHANT DOWN is truly a dream come true. The Source (11/01/1999)
4 stars out of 5 - ...when it works, it's startling. Lauryn Hill is stunning on 'Turn Your Light Down Low'....Busta Rhymes & Flipmode Squad are scarily effective on 'Rastaman Chant' and Erykah Badu takes 'No More Trouble' to all sorts of places....a fine record... Q (01/01/2000)
...There's a reggae tradition of rapping over remixes of others' records, so this actually makes sense... - Rating: B+ Entertainment Weekly (11/26/1999)
...posthumously fulfills Marley's longtime wish to reach out to African-American audiences... CMJ (12/13/1999)
4 stars out of 5 - ...when it works, it's startling. Lauryn Hill is stunning on 'Turn Your Light Down Low'....Busta Rhymes & Flipmode Squad are scarily effective on 'Rastaman Chant' and Erykah Badu takes 'No More Trouble' to all sorts of places....a fine record... Q (01/01/2000)
3 stars out of 5 - ...a giant piety party with reggae's most hallowed saint as the guest of honor....It introduces a young audience to a deserving icon and makes a pointed political connection between present-day America and Marley's Jamaican slums...The Source (11/99, p.236) - ...Respecting the integrity of Bob Marley's legacy, while making his music available to a contemporary audience, CHANT DOWN is truly a dream come true.Q (1/00, p.116) - 4 stars out of 5 - ...when it works, it's startling. Lauryn Hill is stunning on 'Turn Your Light Down Low'....Busta Rhymes & Flipmode Squad are scarily effective on 'Rastaman Chant' and Erykah Badu takes 'No More Trouble' to all sorts of places....a fine record...Entertainment Weekly (11/26/99, p.99) - ...There's a reggae tradition of rapping over remixes of others' records, so this actually makes sense... - Rating: B+CMJ (12/13/99, p.29) - ...posthumously fulfills Marley's longtime wish to reach out to African-American audiences... Rolling Stone (12/09/1999)
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