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‘Wanted Dread And Alive’: Peter Tosh’s Greatest Artistic Triumph
Warner Music
In Depth

‘Wanted Dread And Alive’: Peter Tosh’s Greatest Artistic Triumph

Featuring one of the most haunted performances in reggae, the ‘Wanted Dread And Alive’ album should have made Peter Tosh as big as Bob Marley.

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Peter Tosh’s third outing for Rolling Stones Records is not one album, but two, with different tracklists. One version was intended for the Americas and Jamaica, the other for the rest of the world. The advent of the CD united the twin variants for the first time, and they sit comfortably together on Wanted Dread And Alive, mixing their shared tracks with the smoother offerings of the US release and the slightly fiercer tunes that graced European and Antipodean editions.

Listen to ‘Wanted Dread And Alive’ here.

A critical moment

Tosh had everything to play for in the summer of 1981. Bob Marley, reggae’s figurehead and Tosh’s former partner in The Wailers, had passed away in May that year, leaving a gaping chasm at the top of Jamaican music. Though the third member of the Wailers triumvirate, Bunny Wailer, was also highly active at the time, Tosh’s personality was far more forceful; while Bunny remained stately and dignified, Tosh could be fierce and forthright, sometimes sarcastically funny, and unpredictable. He was never to be ignored. Could Wanted Dread And Alive thrust him to the lofty echelons of stardom his departed ally had conquered?

There’s no point pretending it could: no Peter Tosh album matches Marley’s Legend for commercial impact. But that doesn’t mean Wanted Dread And Alive didn’t deserve more attention than it drew. It’s packed with interesting, biting and entertaining material, some of which is also ladled with commercial potential.

Buy classic Peter Tosh albums on vinyl.

First among these (and not a stereotypical Tosh track – as much as such a thing could exist) is Nothing But Love, a soulful chunk of reggae-disco in which Tosh’s voice melds beautifully with that of Gwen Guthrie (of future Ain’t Nothin’ Goin’ On But The Rent fame) in the best male-female reggae vocal combo since Bob Andy and Marcia Griffiths. Rok With Me, an update of The Wailers’ mid-60s ska obscurity Sweetest Rocker In Town, is a gloriously relaxed affair that could have been as big as Inner Circle’s later Sweat (A La La La La Long) and which uses the same four-chord structure. And the album’s title track, which briefly quotes from The Impressions’ Keep On Moving, is a ticking, head-nodding tale of persecution that locks into your mind and stays there.

Oh Bumbo Klaat, a single on Tosh’s local label, Intel Diplo HIM, freely dispenses dialect cussing, yet these words, which still had the power to shock middle-class Jamaicans, were used to make a point about the lives of the poor. Coming In Hot and Reggae-Mylitis are more obvious fare, one offering a metaphorical musical war and the other transposing the sentiment of Huey “Piano” Smith’s Rocking Pneumonia And The Boogie Woogie Flu to a feverish Caribbean rhythm. All decent enough, but Tosh had some far more powerful bombs to drop.

Wise and worldly

Cold Blood opens as a courtroom drama – a common reggae strategy – but Tosh lifts it beyond the usual amusing parody, recalling police harassment and the beatings he suffered at their Babylonian hands. Rastafari Is marches relentlessly, its spiritual vibe somewhere between Christmas carol and battle hymn. Guide Me From My Friends is the sort of cautionary song about “frenemies” that resonated through reggae: an advisory from the wise and worldly delivered from a personal standpoint.

Best of all is the album’s closing track, Fools Die. A tear-stain-wiping lament, it finds Tosh alone with an electric piano and Pee Wee Walters’ lyrical flute. Largely adapted from The Wailers’ 1970 single Wisdom, it’s one of the most haunting performances in classic reggae. It’s breathtaking – yet Tosh barely extends himself in delivering it, allowing the soul in his solid gold voice and the impactful lyrics to speak for themselves.

Undying beauty

Wanted Dread And Alive made No.91 on the US chart; one disappointment among many for the singer, who always seemed to be teetering on the verge of a major breakthrough which never came. You can hear the belief and hope he has invested in each song. But the album was an artistic triumph in many ways, not least in the beautiful Fools Die, which should be regarded as highly as Bob Marley’s contemporary Redemption Song, though comparatively few wised-up souls are aware of it. The track is worth the price of admission alone, yet is by no means the only gem here. Wanted? You bet.

Buy classic Peter Tosh albums on vinyl.

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