A native of Kingston,
Jamaica,
Ziggy Marley first sat in on recording sessions with his father's
band, legendary reggae troupe Bob Marley and the Wailers, when he was
ten years old. Joining with his three siblings to become The Melody
Makers, Ziggy crafted his own soulful sound blending blues, R&B, hip-hop
and roots reggae.
After
their first two albums, Play The Game Right (1985) and Hey World!
(1986), The Melody Makers earned their first Grammy (Best Reggae
Recording) for Conscious Party (1988), an album produced by Talking
Heads Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth which included the hit songs
"Tomorrow People" and "Tumbling Down."
Subsequent albums included the Grammy-winning One
Bright Day (1989), Jamekya (1991), Joy and Blues (1993), Free Like We
Want 2 B (1995), their third Grammy winner Fallen is Babylon (1997),
Spirit of Music (1999) and Ziggy Marley & the Melody Makers Live, Vol 1
(2000), which featured some of their biggest hits as well as a cover of
Bob Marley's "Could You Be Loved."
While selling records by the millions and selling out
countless concerts with the Melody Makers, including a recent European
tour, Ziggy Marley has never lost sight of his foundation of faith,
fellowship and family.
After two decades as the driving creative force behind
The Melody Makers, Ziggy stepped out on his own with his first solo
album,
Dragonfly (2003). Never content to rehash the success of his past,
Ziggy uses Dragonfly to explore new ground and create his own
distinctive musical identity as a solo artist.
"Working on my own gave me a chance to take my time
and experiment a lot," Ziggy says of the material on Dragonfly." It took
one year to finish this record. It's the longest I've ever worked on a
album. It's different when you on your own. At some point it's scary and
then at another it's a drive that makes you focus more."
Although the members of the most close-knit musical
families often yearn to step out on their own, for Ziggy, a solo debut
was not a long-awaited goal. "It's not something that I wished for since
I began doing music," he says. "It was just the circumstances, and I
wanted to be true to myself and what I feel. The record has strong
messages and it feels good."
In addition to being Ziggy's first album of solo
material, for Dragonfly he felt it was time for a change of scene.
"Usually we record in Kingston. These songs were written in Jamaica and
recorded in America. I did the first set of recordings in a house in
Miami and then went to L.A. rented a house, set up my equipment and
basically did the rest there. I left Jamaica for a while, because as an
artist I need to experience different things, to see the world and have
different energies. Living in one place is not good for me and I was
tired of making music in a studio setting. I wanted it to be more like
everyday life a part of me.
"As an individual, I've opened up more by traveling
outside Jamaica, and I've been more able to be open to people and ideas.
It helps me to grow as a person to be outside of my element; to be on my
own in a strange place meeting people. That's good for me not to be in
my secure domain."
The evidence of that growth is everywhere on
Dragonfly. For more on Ziggy's exciting debut album, see
Dragonfly: Album Notes.