Season 7 Bonus "Praise Jah in the Moonlight"

On this Season 7 Bonus Episode of Rootsland: "Praise Jah in Moonlight," We celebrate Reggae in the Springtime. The Movie Bob Marley: One Love is a #1 global box office smash. YG Marley scores the first reggae hit on the Hot 100 chart in 7 years with the song "Praise Jah in the Moonlight," and Henry K and Rootsland officially premiere the new podcast "Kingston to Cali" exploring reggae's journey West.
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Produced by Henry K in association with Voice Boxx Studio Red Hills, Jamaica
Intro by Michelle "Kim" Yamaguchi
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featured song YG Marley Praise Jah in the Moonlight
Because righteousness governs the world.
Speaker BThe Roots Land podcast stories that are music to your ears.
Speaker AThese rows of flames are catching a fire.
Speaker BNothing like reggae music in the springtime, is there?
Speaker BWelcome to another bonus episode of Roots Land, a midweek midnight Ravers edition.
Speaker BI know I'm not the only one singing along with that tune, right?
Speaker BPraise Ja in the moonlight debuted ahead of the release of the number one hit movie Bob one Love, which has now become one of the highest grossing bio picks of all time.
Speaker BNot surprising to those of us who know the power of Bob Marleys music and the love the world has for reggae.
Speaker BWhat was surprising the breakout success of the song praise Ja in the moonlight and its 22 year old singer, Yg Marley.
Speaker BJoshua Omaru Marley, known as Yungong, grandson of Bob Marley and the middle child to his son Rohan, an r and b legend, Miss Lauryn Hill.
Speaker BAfter a clip of YG performing the track alongside his famous mom circulated online, the singer and the song blew up and so did demand for its release.
Speaker BNo doubt young gangs cool, confident delivery is reminiscent of his grandfathers style.
Speaker BYG sits in the pocket and rides the rhythm that samples Bob's 1978 song crisis with an effortless flow that makes you want to hold the one you love and slow dance under the stars on a tropical beach somewhere.
Speaker BAnd please don't get me wrong, YG kills it.
Speaker BI mean, what a career debut.
Speaker BIt's the first reggae song on the Billboard Hot 100 charts in seven years since his uncle Damian junior gong Marley was featured on the Jay Z track Bamdhead.
Speaker BBut when I listen to praise Ja, the way its crafted, the quality of the songwriting, the deep message hidden within the lyrics.
Speaker BIm sorry YG, but everything about that song has your moms name, Lauryn Hill written all over it.
Speaker BLiterally.
Speaker BShes the co writer of the song, she produced it.
Speaker BShes a featured vocalist on the outro and sounds like a flippin angel.
Speaker BIf she sang lead vocals on praise Ja in the moonlight, it could have easily fit in on her multi platinum Grammy winning lp, the miseducation of Lauryn Hill.
Speaker BI mean, whatd they really think?
Speaker BThey could keep a ragamuffin soldier like Miss Lauryn Hill down forever?
Speaker BTurns out shes no longer just a soldier.
Speaker BShe re emerges into mainstream music as a general, or should I say like a queen installing her son on reggaes throne.
Speaker BHer timing impeccable.
Speaker BLike a team seal six sharpshooter, she comes out of the shadows and pops off a hit just to show everyone.
Speaker BShe may not be in the spotlight, but she didnt go anywhere.
Speaker BPraise ja in the moonlight is Lauryn Hills redemption song, two giant middle fingers to the people in an industry that she sacrificed so much for.
Speaker BPut every ounce of her being into, and when she reached out for help, needed a little time and space to produce the quality of music that she and her fans had come to expect, well, they turned their backs on her, discredited her, did everything possible to throw her right into the flames.
Speaker BAnd now, two decades later, Miss Hill returns with a vengeance, with her son by her side, acting as her proxy.
Speaker BDefiantly sings her reply.
Speaker BAnd the opening lines of the billboard hit these roads of flames are catching a fire showed you I loved you, you called me a liar yeah, it's yg singing, but to me, that's Lauryn Hill's story, the road of flames, a metaphor for the adversities and challenges she faced on her journey through the music business.
Speaker BAnd now, this time around, shes in control.
Speaker BShes the one burning the fire.
Speaker BMiss Hill was once hailed as the queen of r and b and hip hop.
Speaker BShe was an industry darling, won awards, broke records, earned her label hundreds of millions of dollars.
Speaker BYet once she decided to stand up for her rights, fight for her creative and artistic integrity, call out the music business for the double standards in the way that male and female artists were treated, Lauryn Hill lost her most favored nation status and fell from grace in the eyes of the industrys old guard patriarchy.
Speaker BThey shamed her, disrespected her, called her a problematic diva, and difficult to work with.
Speaker BBut Lauryn Hill stood her ground, ended up taking a beating for her defiance.
Speaker BShe still bears the scars she received from kicking in the doors and shattering the glass ceilings so female superstars like Beyonce and Taylor Swift, Nicki Minaj and Cardi B could all walk in unscathed.
Speaker BPraise ja in the moonlight feels like Lauryn hills light at the end of a tunnel a veiled message to the bitter insiders that dragged her name through the mud and the loyal followers who lifted it back up and never let go.
Speaker BThis wonderful song shows that Miss Lauryn Hill has finally found peace and even solace during the most challenging times.
Speaker BA spiritual grounding in wisdom that she lovingly passes to her son Joshua.
Speaker BWhen he sings the words teach them something before they lose their soul oh, no, no freedom is the road oh, no, no coming in from the cold tell them not to sell it it's worth more than gold and guiltiness will catch them in the end oh, yeah I they'll try to manipulate you through your pockets now you're caught up in a funk with the optics, with the vision, trying to control your soul and take control.
Speaker BNo, no, we don't play that game right here.
Speaker BTo win power, give ja all the thanks and praises.
Speaker BAnd speaking of thanks and praises, I really want to thank the entire roots land family for standing with me for seven seasons and many of you with me since day one.
Speaker BThis Rootsland saga is far from over.
Speaker BIn fact, the decade I spent working with twin of twins in Kingston was one of the most turbulent and unpredictable times I could ever remember.
Speaker BThere was a war between two rival camps in the music business, Gazza and Gully.
Speaker BOne side ardent supporters of popular DJ Vibes Cartel, and the other stood with a cassava piece singer named Mavato.
Speaker BThe two were locked in a lyrical battle that spilled into the streets and became so heated the prime minister had to intervene to cool things down.
Speaker BAnd if that wasnt enough, there were also escalating protests in the Tivoli Gardens garrison, a longtime Jamaican Labour party stronghold known as jungle, run by the deadly criminal Dudas.
Speaker BHe was the son of one of the islands original drug lords and founder of the notorious shower posse, Jim Brown.
Speaker BIn 2009, us marshals, alongside the FBI and the Jamaican Defense Forces, stormed into Tivoli gardens and attempted to extradite Dudas on us federal drug trafficking charges, only to meet up with strong resistance from the local tivoli gardens community, who clashed with soldiers and voluntarily became human shields to protect their donna it was a crazy time, and when I was working with the twins, we always seemed to wind up right smack in the middle of it all.
Speaker BAnd when I look back, sometimes I wonder how we even made it out.
Speaker BYou know, there's nothing I love more than telling these stories from the rolling red hills on the outskirts of Kingston, Jamaica.
Speaker BBut before we dive into season eight of roots land the road to Zion, I feel its the right time for me to step out of the studio and down from the hills, venture forth into the world and follow the path of this beloved music.
Speaker BSee how the soulful island sounds and rich melodies of reggae have taken root across the globe, influenced different types of people, uplifted various kinds of cultures, and not to worry, im taking you with me on the journey.
Speaker BAnd our first stop is California.
Speaker BSo I need everyone in the family to click the link below and subscribe to my new show.
Speaker BThere's a new feed, it's on a new day, it has a new look.
Speaker BBut I promise my commitment to bring you captivating tales that are music to your ears.
Speaker BRemains as strong as ever.
Speaker BThe stories may be new, the locations unfamiliar, but the passion behind them will always be the same.
Speaker BSo make sure you tune in Wednesday, May 1 for our very new podcast, Kingston to Cali, and our first episode, the harder they come when we dial things back to 1973, when Jamaicas new, socially conscious, budding roots reggae movement intersects with the american hippies and a counterculture that had grown disillusioned the way that rock and roll sold out the cultural revolution.
Speaker BEnter Bob Marley, stage left.
Speaker CThe following preview is rated r for roots and drop a little culture in a too choo choo.
Speaker BIn the early 1970s, the world woke up to a sound that had been rocking inner city street dances and overcrowded tenement yards in Kingston, Jamaica, a music that captured the struggles, hopes and resilience of a people.
Speaker BWith its authentic portrayal of the gritty urban landscape where it was born, roots reggae caught the attention of an international audience thanks to Jamaica's early musical pioneers like Desmond Decker, Jimmy Cliff, Bob Marley, Peter Tosh and Bunny Whaler.
Speaker BThe pulsating rhythms, socially conscious lyrics and a hypnotic one drop drumbeat resonated with music lovers far beyond the island's shores.
Speaker BAs reggae music, jamaican culture and the rastafarian lifestyle gained popularity, its influence rippled across the ocean, eventually washing up on the sun drenched shores of California.
Speaker BThe weather, the women, the weed, it was a marriage made in heaven.
Speaker BAnd after over half a century of matrimony, a love that has only grown stronger.
Speaker BIm Henry Cave, host of the number one music history podcast Rootsland, and I'm excited to announce our new show, Kingston to Cali, where we will trace Reggae's remarkable journey from the ghettos of Kingston to the west coast of the USA and explore how the genres, spirituality, defiance and positive vibration help this movement take hold.
Speaker BSo pack your bags with your flip flops and earbuds and pack your bowls with your freshly ground kind, bud.
Speaker BRootsland will be hitting the road from the rolling Red hills on the outskirts of Kingston, Jamaica, to the central coast of California's Monterey Bay to broadcast live and direct from the California Roots Music and Arts Festival.
Speaker BOn the way, we'll make a few pit stops paying homage to those who helped plant reggae seeds in the fertile California soil.
Speaker BWell explore how a caribbean music created by the descendants of west african slaves cross pollinated with rock, punk, hip hop and Callie's vibrant skate and surf culture to evolve into a dominant force in reggae, an entire subculture known as Cali roots.
Speaker BBunny Whaler said.
Speaker BWhat makes reggae so powerful is its ability to convey timeless human emotions and aspirations that everyone can relate to, the desire for peace, freedom and a better life.
Speaker BThat's why it's become a global language for the common people, and it's a language we speak fluent here at Rootsland.
Speaker BAnd it's why we believe that sometimes the story is the best song.
Speaker CRemember to click the link below and subscribe to our new podcast, Kingston to Cali.
Speaker CYou know.
Speaker AThese rows of flames are catching a fire?
Speaker AOh, no, no, no baby, tell me where you gone?
Speaker AI've been feeling for your love so long?
Speaker AWe can praise God in the moonlight baby, if you with me but I do right?
Speaker AAnd I've been going too long?
Speaker AAnd I'm hoping that you sing my song, my song I've been on this road for quite a while?
Speaker AI've been hoping that we all get along these roads of flames are catching a fire showed you I love you, call me a liardeh thanks and praises I've been on my own on, on but we ain't never left alone long?
Speaker AAnd if I'm telling you the feeling is wrong?
Speaker ARelax a little, friend this won't take too long?
Speaker AAnd when you're feeling alone you can call my phone?
Speaker AIs there a better way to go?
Speaker ATeach them something before they lose their soul?
Speaker AFreedom is the wrong oh, no, no, no coming in from the cone tell them not to sell it it's worth more than cone and kiddiness won't catch them in the end oh, yeah, oh, yeah.
Speaker AThey'll try to manipulate you through your practice?
Speaker ANow you're calling with the update try to control it.






