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Jamaican reggae band From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Wailers Band is a Jamaican reggae band formed by former members of Bob Marley and the Wailers after Marley's death in 1981. It was led by bassist Aston "Familyman" Barrett until 2016, when he passed the role onto his son, Aston Barrett Jr.
The Wailers Band | |
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Background information | |
Origin | Kingston, Jamaica |
Genres | Reggae |
Years active | 1981–present |
Labels | Sony Latin, Island Records, Atlantic Records, Tabu Records, RAS Records |
Spinoffs | The Original Wailers |
Spinoff of | Bob Marley & the Wailers |
Members | Aston Barrett Jr. Owen "Dreadie" Reid Josh David Barrett Glen DaCosta Andres Lopez Junior Jazz |
Past members | Aston "Familyman" Barrett Donald Kinsey Junior Marvin Carlton Barrett Alvin "Seeco" Patterson Tyrone Downie Earl "Wire" Lindo Al Anderson Gary "Nesta" Pine Joe Yamanaka Elan Atias Anthony Watson Chico Chin Everald Gayle Irvin "Carrot" Jarrett Brady Walters Basil Creary Keith Sterling Kevin "Yvad" Davy Ras Mel Glover "Drummie Zeb" Williams Audley Chisholm Koolant Brown Dwayne Anglin Ceegee Victory Javaughn Bond Shema McGregor |
Website | www |
After the death of Bob Marley in 1981, the Wailers continued, led by bassist Aston "Familyman" Barrett and guitarist Junior Marvin. The band played a heavy worldwide touring schedule and recorded as backing band with several singers. Drummer Carlton "Carly" Barrett, 36, was murdered at his Jamaica home in 1987; despite this, and with a majority of the original musician lineup, they released their first album after Marley's death, I.D., in 1989. They followed up with an additional two studio albums, Majestic Warriors in 1991 and Jah Message in 1994. In addition to these three studio albums, a live album consisting of live performances of the band between the years of 1995 and 1997 was released as My Friends in 1997. Marvin departed the band to pursue solo work after this album and what was described as a disappointing 1997 tour.[1]
In 1998, Gary Pine joined the band's lineup as lead singer after Marvin's departure. In 2003 the band released a live DVD titled The Wailers - Live and followed it up in 2006 with the live album Legend - Live.
In 2008, Junior Marvin joined fellow former Wailer Al Anderson to form another spinoff known as The Original Wailers. That same year the Wailers Band were guests on the Kenny Chesney single "Everybody Wants to Go to Heaven"; the single proved successful, topping the US Country charts and peaking at #41 on the Billboard Hot 100. Barrett's son, Aston Barrett Jr., began performing with the group in 2009.[2] In 2011, Marvin left The Original Wailers to form The Legendary Wailers.
In 2014, The Wailers Band embarked on a worldwide tour marking the 30th anniversary of the release of the Legend compilation.
In 2015, Barrett began the process of reuniting past members of the Wailers, using the name the Wailers Reunited. Shows occurred in South America which included former members such as Marvin, Anderson, and Tyrone Downie. That year, the Wailers Band performed in India for the first time.[3] A US and UK tour took place in 2016, after which Barrett retired from the group; despite this, he would be included as an official member well into 2020. His son and drummer, Aston Barrett Jr., took over as leader of the Wailers Band,[2] while his student, Owen "Dreadie" Reid, took over on bass.[4]
On August 21, 2020, the group released the album One World, their first studio album in twenty-six years.[5] This was the first studio album released that contained a lineup without any of the original musicians in the band's lineup. It did, however, receive contributions from the trio the I Threes, Marley's backing vocalists.
Aston "Family Man" Barrett died on 3 February 2024.[6]
The Wailers album *Evolution* received a 2025 Grammy Awards nomination for Best Reggae Album.[7]
Year | Single | Artist | Peak chart positions | Certifications (sales threshold) |
Album | ||
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US Country | US | CAN | |||||
2008 | "Everybody Wants to Go to Heaven" | Kenny Chesney | 1 | 41 | 49 |
|
Lucky Old Sun |
2012 | "Al Leila Ya Samra" | Mohamed Mounir | — | — | — | Arabiac Studio | |
"—" denotes releases that did not chart. | |||||||
Year | Video | Director |
---|---|---|
2008 | "Everybody Wants to Go to Heaven" (with Kenny Chesney) | Shaun Silva |
2010 | "A Step for Mankind" (feat. Duane Stephenson & Bishop Lamont) | Luke Archer[8] |
2013 | "Spread The Love" (with Kenny Chesney) | Shaun Silva |
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