Ky-Mani and Christopher Garvey (no relation to Marcus Garvey)
produced the first single "Warriors," a street anthem blending
reggae and hip hop, with a wailing siren in the chorus. It features
Ky-Mani rhyming capably and singing the hook, "One time for all my
warriors/my la smugglers/ and all my buffalo soldiers." The single
will be released within the month, as soon as a remix is
completed.
The album is a collection of folksy, roots reggae numbers that
blendsdancehall and hip-hop and features production from Fugees
producer Salaam Remi and dancehall heavyweight Clifton "Specialist"
Dillon.
Having Marley as a father gives Ky-Mani a sense of responsibility
to the public. "Right now the slackness [dirty lyrics] has gotten
to the extreme,"he says. "We need something to educate the youths.
These songs are killing the dancehalls, but where's the potency? We
[reggae artists] sing about guns. That's OK, but don't make a whole
album about that; it don't make no sense."
This is not Ky-Mani's first musical venture. As a youth he played
guitar and piano, and was a trumpeter with the school band. Like
his half-brother Rohan, who played football for the University of
Miami, Ky-Mani also played soccer and football. But his formal
education stopped after high school.
"After school it was just music," he remembers. "I did a little
recording and my family members thought it was good. I was doing it
with [engineer] Carl Peterson who did some recording with my
father. I also did something recording with my [half]-brothers
[Stephen and Damien Marley].
"Luther McKenzie, [vice president of Shang Records], heard it and
told me that I should come down to the office." McKenzie wrote up a
contract and that was the beginning of his career.
Ky-Mani began formally recording on his manager Dillon's label,
ShangRecords, with a single called "Judge Not," featuring another
of Dillon's acts, dancehall queen Patra. He also recorded a remix
of his father's classic "Who The Cap Fit," and appeared on the 1997
cover of Eddie Grant's "Electric Avenue" with Pras.
The 23-year-old Miami resident moved from Jamaica at age 9. Unlike
Ziggy, he is not the son of Bob Marley's widow Rita Marley. While
comparisons to his dad are inevitable, he is very clear on his
role. "There is a respect there," he says, carefully choosing his
words. "People do look for you to bring that back. To me, there
won't be another one. All we can do is try and keep it positive."
- Adam Matthews
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.