Exodus Reviews



Amazon.com Customer Reviews

Exodus Lives - Review written on November 23, 2007
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5

This set includes the great songs that helped Bob Marley officially cross over to mainstream, and bring reggae with him. Although reggae music is still not as prominent as it could be, this set certainly helped it along. It has some of each type of music. Jah reggae, dance and rock. If you are a reggae fan this is a stable for your library.
Definitive Bob Marley - Review written on August 06, 2007
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5

Time Magazine's Album Of The Century. Need I say more?

If you want one Bob Marley studio album that represents everything he believes in, this is it. Don't hesitate. You should own this already.
Iconic! Simply unmissable! - Review written on June 07, 2007
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
10 customers found this review helpful, 2 did not.

I watched a TV documentary the other night about the making of this album and it was a spellbinding hour and a half. Apparently, Bob had to flee Jamaica for the UK after an assassination attempt and ended up living in London for a year. It was during this year that this phenomenal album was recorded. I've owned it for over 20 years now - first on cassette, then on vinyl and finally on CD - and I had no clue that this was so.

The album was released in 1977. It was the year of the Queen's Silver Jubilee but Britain was in a very bad place, the seeds of Thatcherism and the heartless 80s had already been sown and Punk ruled the airwaves. I lived a very sheltered life as a teenager and so it wasn't until 1979 when I went away to boarding school, that I finally get to hear the album in its entirety. It was a true revelation. I heard it on (what was then) a new invention my peers and I called a "hi-fi system" owned by an older student and I remember hearing the percussion on "Jamming" and being transfixed. No exaggeration; I was literally hypnotised.

The album is faultless with pristine production by Bob and The Wailers. From the minute the first strains of "Natural Mystic" fade in, through the accusatory "Guiltiness", on to the revolutionary title track, the slow jams "Waiting In Vain" & "Turn Your Lights Down Low", on to the optimitic "Three Little Birds" and right to the end of "One Love/People Get Ready", there is not a single note out of place. Each song, a potential hit single, (7 of the 10 songs on the original album were actually hits here in the UK) has a vibrant, totally relevant message - especially for a black teenager living in 70s UK, and Bob's primary ethos of peace & love have stayed with me ever since. That being said, this is the album that began to open my young eyes to the oppression and injustice that already surrounded me. The idea that music wasn't simply for entertainment or escapism but could inspire thought, behaviour and attitude change as well as activism, was new and very appealing.

And this was also the album that turned Bob from an international reggae star into a global prophet. Setting everything about Rastafarianism (respectfully) to one side, Bob the man and the music he made, the message he spread, have always educated and enthralled me in equal measure and always will. When I think about what are for me, consummately iconic, influential and superb recordings and I think about such albums as Miles Davis' Kind of Blue, John Coltane's A Love Supreme, Stevie Wonder's Songs in the Key of Life, Michael Jackson's Off the Wall, Pink Floyd's The Wall (Deluxe Packaging Digitally Remastered) and Radiohead's OK Computer, I also, immediately, think of Bob Marley's "Exodus". My life was definitely not the same after listening to it and now that I fully understand the story behind it, I hold the album in even higher esteem.

Whether this is Marley's best piece of work or not is, I guess, a matter of personal opinion and will always be open to debate. What is beyond doubt, is that it is my favourite Bob Marley album and I am proud and honoured to make this my 200th review on amazon.com. I'm a bit of a purist so I prefer the version I have which does not have the two extra tracks (though I have both on 12" single) but they are definitely worth having. As such, this is the version to get. There'll no doubt be a '30th anniversary edition' knocking around before too long as well.
Excellent album! - Review written on May 30, 2007
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5

I'm not really a reggae fan, but I love Stevie Wonder. I thus decided to give Bob Marley a chance. I must say this album can really get you hooked on this kind of music. Songs are witty, rhythmic and memorable. It is one of the best albums to jog along with. Bob Marley is definitely one of the more interesting artists of recent times.
Bob Marley on TOP!! - Review written on March 26, 2007
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
1 customer found this review helpful.

I was living on the island of St. Thomas in 1977 when I first heard this recording. I was on a beautiful beach, drinking those powerful rum punch drinks. Someone played the first song, "Natural Mystic" and for me, it was like being transported to another time dimension. The musical cadence and beauty of the song just captured me. I was instantly hooked to Bob Marley's music. The entire album has a quality to it that has made it one of the true classics in music. Not one bad track on the entire set. Played with passion and love by one of the greats, the main "rude boy" himself, Robert "Bob" Marley.
My First Marley Album and Arguably the Best One! - Review written on January 14, 2007
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5

From personal experience, I can say that if you are trying to get into Bob Marley, start with this album! Let me start out with this: A lot of people(and I used to be one of them) say that all of Bob's songs sound the same. I have learned, from actually listening to his songs thoroughly, that that is an ignorant statement. Yes, the guitar does sound the same on 98% of the songs. But I have come to learn that the guitar in Reggae is just like the drums are in others genres of music; it keeps the beat. If it didn't sound like it does in every song, then it WOULDN'T be Reggae. The appreciation comes when you listen to how the song is built up around the guitar part; the horns, the keys/piano, and especially the BASS.
Now that I've said my part, I'll talk about the album. This is, from start to finish, an excellent album. If I were to be completely honest, it took a long time for it to grow on me. But once it did, it became my favorite Bob album. It is so emotional, and it contains my second favorite Bob song "Waiting in Vain." This album is also special because I believe that this was the first recording on which Marley knew he had cancer and was dying. To make music with this much passion and make your 5 best albums(Exodus-Confrontation) AFTER you know that you have cancer deserves a hell of a lot of admiration if you ask me. Anyway, don't take my word for it, buy this album. If you don't like this one, chances are you won't really like any other Bob Marley. But if you do like this, every recording after this one is also excellent. This is not to say that all the pre-Exodus albums aren't good, but they are very different than this one.
In short, if you are trying to get to know Bob Marley's music, you should:
1)Know how to appreciate Reggae music
2)Start with this album, and if you like it, then
3)Buy any/all albums AFTER this one (Kaya-Confrontation)
4)Then move on to the ealier albums
One of Marley's best - Review written on November 20, 2006
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
1 customer found this review helpful, 1 did not.

You'll need this album, along with Burnin' it's Bob Marley's best. So Much Things to Say is a throwaway. The rest? Natural Mystic; the Heathen and Guiltiness are all good. But everything from the militant-yet-danceable title track on is pure gold. As I have mentioned, I love the title song; Jammin' is a classic, and possibly my favorite Bob Marley song; though Waiting in Vain, the perfect love song, gives it a run for its money. You don't hear much about the sexy slow jam Turn Your Down Lights Low, a damn shame since it alone is worth the price of the disc even if you have a greatest hits. And if you can resist smiling after hearing Three Little Birds and One Love/People Get Ready, you're obviously jaded, cynical and have lost all faith in humanity (I'm not QUITE there yet). It's too bad they didn't include Punky Reggae Party on the normal album, instead sticking it on as a bonus track, since it's arguably better than any songs on the normal album - no mean feat, let me add! Make sure to buy this ASAP.
His Best Ever Album Has Just Gotten Even Better! - Review written on October 14, 2006
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
2 customers found this review helpful.

This has to be Bob Marley's best studio album ever; the tracks are all great and indeed every one of them would not sound out of place on a greatest hits compilation. In addition to the brilliant title track, we get "Three Little Birds", "Waiting in Vain", "Jammin", "One Love" and "Turn Your Lights Down Low." That's 60% of the original album track listing already and yet here we also get 2 bonus tracks as well.

The mini-lp sleeve design is a work of art and comes with a sheet with all the English and Japanese lyrics to each song included. Although, this disc has not been remastered, the sound quality is very, very good and even beats that of some other albums I have that claim to have been accorded the remastered treatment.

Great tracks, great packaging and great sound quality make this an excellent value for money.

Very highly recommended!
Remastered Version Has Great Sound - Review written on September 09, 2006
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
1 customer found this review helpful.

This new re-mastered version of the classic "Exodus" by Bob Marley boasts truly improved sonics over the original. If you like Reggae, you can't go wrong with this release of the classic Reggae masterpiece. On the other hand,Time magazine called this record " the most important LP release of the 20th century." Give me a break. The writer must have been smoking some pretty good reefer when she wrote that. For a while it was considered ultra-chic for white people to listen to Reggae, hence the hyperbolic Time review of this record. I'll skip the Reggae "deep philosophy" and the seriously spaced out and comic book Rastafarian religion ( I mean honestly, these guys claim that the late Ethiopian dictator Haile Selassie, was God, the Creator of the Universe...now, isn't that silly?) please, and just listen to the music. And on that level, this is good stuff when the mood is right, and the sound is excellent, tight, bright, good bass, all around a great, maybe even timeless, Reggae record.
Exodus - true album of the century - Review written on June 07, 2006
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
4 customers found this review helpful.

The story behind Exodus is worthy of a book - in fact there is a book on the making of Exodus. This and the follow-up 'Kaya' were recorded and assembled in London in the 18 months following the attempted assassination of Marley in December 1976. The first side of the album (old-school vinyl fans know what I mean) is pure revolutionary reggae rock: Natural Mystic, So Much Things to Say, Heathen, Guiltiness, and Exodus. Drop-dead master reggae powered by the brother team of Aston 'Family Man' Barrett on bass and Carlton Barrett on drums.

In the book 'Exodus' author Vivien Goldman takes you inside the studio in some very intimate recollections. Bob, for instance, worked the band from mid-afternoon til the wee hours of the morning. Generally speaking the band would record basic tracks for a song, and keep working on it until it was deemed 'finished,' when they'd then move on to the next track.

On several occasions he came in alone to record vocals for songs by himself, and at one point spent several hours working to get the right 'take' for a song. Of course this was before the days of digital mixing where you could drop in a word or phrase at a time, so Bob was singing each time all the way through. He would work until his voice warmed up and finally nail a take.

On to side two: Jammin', Waiting in Vain, Turn Your Lights Down Low, Three Little Birds, One Love/People Get Ready. Some of the sweetest and most intimate love songs I've ever heard, as well as the spirited Jammin' - one of the most uplifting songs ever to grace my earbuds.

Exodus is one of those rarities - a coming together of great songwriting, stellar performances, ground-breaking recording methods (read the book!), and timeliness. As a historical document of the best that Bob Marley and the Wailers had to offer, as well as a kick-ass soulful album to crank up, Exodus has it all.
Overated but yes good. - Review written on April 18, 2006
* * * *
Rating: 4 out of 5
4 customers found this review helpful, 1 did not.

I am a huge Bob Marley fan and always have been for about 20 years now, but listening to Exodus doesn't give me the same thrill as of the over albums such as Uprising, Natty Dread and Survival.
Yes this album was called the most important album of the century by Time Magazine and holds many classics, but I feel that maybe Coming In From The Cold or Wake Up And Live should had more credit than it did.
An excellant album though but I would consider Uprising or Survival to your starting path of Bob Marley.
Deserving of the title: "Most important album of the 20th Century" - Review written on February 26, 2006
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
5 customers found this review helpful.

This album is simply perfect. The tempo and mood flows throughout the album at an excellent pace. Every song has a messeage or meaning that is universal, anybody could and should be able to relate to it. I recommend everyone to listen to it, even if you have declared that you hate reggae give this a listen. Bob Marley was one of those unique artists who never recorded a bad song, and this is one of those rare albums where everysong is a classic in every sense of the word.
One Love
My personal fav from Bob - Review written on October 20, 2005
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
3 customers found this review helpful, 1 did not.

Excellent record! This music is timeless and will never get old. It's def. feel good music that will uplift you and set a peaceful vibe!
King Bob - Review written on May 06, 2005
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
3 customers found this review helpful, 3 did not.

Exodus is pure genius. Bob was most definitely anointed and touched by God.
Marley's Finest - Review written on April 21, 2005
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
11 customers found this review helpful, 2 did not.

It is always interesting to follow Bob Marley's career from his early rude boy years, to the rock steady years, to the ska years, to reggae, to the roots, rock, reggae which this set shows itself. As so many other reviewers have said this has to be Bob Marley and the Wailers at their absolute tightest. Tight because of how tightly compacted and densely thick the drum lines are, delivered with startling accuracy. Tight because the guitars, and organs, and instruments have never sounded so heavy and so right before. Tight because there's no longer the dense weed smoke hanging in the air that clouded up some parts of Catch a Fire and earlier recordings. Instead now, now Marley is clear on, leaving no lyric to chance, and leaving no sound to the inspiration of the atmosphere: rather he's MAKING the atmosphere with his sound. Tight because his vocals have never been so right on before. If I had to stack all the records Bob and the Wailers (Peter Tosh and Bunny included) ever made, this would be the singular one I would choose. This is the best album Robert Nesta Marley, O.M. ever made, uniting world styles of music with the dreams of a little boy from St. Ann's Parish who on this record, has become a man of startling musical and lyrical power.

The album opens with Natural Mystic, a remake. Many times you will find that Bob remade some of the hits that he, Bunny Wailer and Peter Tosh recorded back in their ska and rude boy years. This is one of them. Natural Mystic was recorded in a ska (a folkish jazzy sort of form of reggae) a few years earlier completely with trumpets, and orchestraic instruments. This time, Marley choose a more straight-forward and blunt delivery, his voice quiet, more mournful than it was in the ska version. While the trumpets are still here their last boastful as they were in the earlier version. Marley gives the song a hint of fatality that makes it quite profound.

So Much Things to Say follows next. This song was redone by his daughter-in-law, Grammy winning singer/songstress/philosopher Lauryn Hill some years later on her classic Unplugged 2.0 collection, and one can see why a songwriter of her caliber chose to do this as a remake. It has a classical no b.s. attitute towards the things people say. Marley acknowldeges that old axiom "Sticks and stones can break my bones but words can never hurt me" is a complete lie. He says that words can hurt you, but only if you stop to listen. But if you know who you are, you know what you believe, and you know what you represent, it doesn't matter. This message is delivered over a rapturous accompaniment with joyful doo-wop style of vocals by the I-Threes

Guiltiness is next. He talks about hypocrites, liars, and backstabbers in this song, aknowledging that even they have a heart, but that that heart is filled with guiltiness. Unless they turn from their ways "Woe to the downpressers, for they shall eat the bread of sorry" he cries over a darker background than the earlier music.

Heathen is a sort of chanting kind of mantra against the Spiritual Enemy, as Marley and the I-Threes cry: Jah put dah heathen back deh, pon deh wall, or in American english: God, put the heathen back there against the wall, requesting that God help him fight the battle against the Heathen both spiritual, mental, and physical.

The album's title track comes in next. It's called Exodus. It's suprisingly long. In the Wailers (Bob, Peter, and Neville "Bunny") ska years they usually wrote songs that were about 2 minutes long, so it's a big jump to see him writing a 7-plus minute track. This is a very politically minded song, and it's not entirely catchy except for it's chorus Exodus movement of Jah people, which itself is not that catchy. It's more a political dictation that you really have to listen to. It fit well in the 70's, but now, it's more something you'll want to listen, and because of how heavy he made the beat and instruments it's more something you march to than dance to.

Next has got to be one of Marley's tightest dance tracks, Jammin. The beat says it all. This is Carlton Barret at his best, proving himself one of the most exceptional drummers in the known world with tight dense delivery and transcendent ability in regards to reggae. The way he switches rhythms in the middle of the drum line without ever disrupting the flow, constantly back and forth to some three to five different rhythms is absolutely amazing. Marley delivers lyrics about dancing in the name of the Lord, a righteous party here.

Waiting in Vain is a sweet love song over a sweeter accompaniment. Here the Wailers, usually hard up on rhythm and power, deliver a sweet as honey background to Marley's declaration that he will knock on her door for as long as she wants, and he'll wait for her love for as long as she says, but he just wants to know that he isn't waiting in vain. He'll wait forever, but he needs a promise that one days he'll get some reciprocity. It's a beautiful sentiment, and Bob as usual delivers it with shocking honesty and sentiment.

Next is one of Bob's, or maybe it IS Bob's best love song. For me it's his best, and what he brings to it is emotional. It has the feeling of new love, young love, passionate, full of light and emotion. His daughter-in-law, Grammy winning singer Lauryn Hill did a duet of this song with his voice, using computer technolongy. The duet made Natalie Cole and Nat King Cole's technology-aided duet seem tame, and makes you believe that if she had married his son while he was still alive, they might have actually done this duet together. They have the same views, and their voices so well together, his Marley's rough, and Hill's so smooth that it works. Check Chant Down Babylon, an album made by Marley's son Stephen, for this duet. But the original version is by far the best. The accompaniment is trance like and Marley's vocals are admirable. Here that feeing of smoke hanging in the air returns, but this time it's a more organic, natural vibe, and sensual sort of trance-like rapture, that transcends time and space, titanic yet captured at the same time. It's a great love song.

Three Little Birds is nice feel good song, and it works well. Enjoyable.

The monster hit One Love is next. This song has been played so much that it's self explanatory.

The two bonus tracks are great. The long version of Jammin lets Carlton Barrett give a transcendental execution of drumplay. If you don't marvel at how Barrett handles those drums, and how ridiculously wonderful that bass line is, then hand over your heart and your musical taste, because you have no need for them in regards to modern music. The next track Punky Reggae Party is insatiable and irrepressable. I dare you not to start jumping around your bedroom or living room as if you're in a Jamaican basement party. If your feet are not at least tapping uncontrollably, then again, hand over your heart and musical taste.

This is Bob at his ABSOLUTE FINEST. THe ska years saw Bob discovering his style. The ska years have their own feeling and are just as enjoyable as the reggae years, this is back when folk and jazz music from New Orleans pervaded Jamaica, and the Wailers (who were then Bob Marley, Peter McIntosh (Peter Tosh) and Neville "Bunny Wailer" Livingston) were ample exponents of that style, brilliantly delivering it. The rude boy years saw a young teenage Bob ascending from the ghetto's of Trenchtown with a fierce attitude, a courageous heart, and a raw talent as he was discovering his voice. The early Island recordings saw Bob consumating it. But it is Exodus that pushes Bob into a realm of superstardom so spectacular that Time was forced to declare this the album of the Century. That decision has got to be unanimous.

-Terrence Craft
Amazing - Review written on March 05, 2005
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
2 customers found this review helpful, 3 did not.

Abosolutly amazing! In my opinon Bob's best. I havent found anything better. Ever song is amazing, atleast on the orginal release (without bonus tracks).
so much things to say right now... - Review written on February 21, 2005
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
5 customers found this review helpful.

Exodus (the movement of JAH People) was time magazine's album of the century, that should say enough right there. But if you are not convinced buy it and you will be for sure. This album was released in 1977, and was recorded in London England. Bob Marley and members of the band survived an attempted assination in December of 1976, and went into self imposed exile in London. Here the creativity of the band is quite good, and many of the Songs that you know by Bob Marley and the Wailers appear on this disc. Jamming, Exodus, One Love, Three Little Birds, and Waiting In Vain. All the tracks are great on this disc and you can hear for the first time in all of the Wailers recordings that the quality of the recording equipment here is much better. The dummer's (Carlton Barrett) high hat never came through so clear. This album marks the intro of Junior Marvin (lead guitar)to the band. The band was about to gain superstar status and this album marks the beginning. If you crave more Jamming, check out the Exodus Deluxe Edition, it offers a second disc with part of a concert from the Rainbow Theater, and some rare Lee Perry tracks that will surely move you. This album is the album of the cetury, and you should own it for yourself, reguardless of you liking reggae or not.
Bear Witness - Review written on May 28, 2004
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5

Exodus has to be one of the most important albums of all time. Bob Marley & the Wailers were on top of their game for their 5th album, and the material here is mind blowing. `Jammin', `Waiting In Vain', `Three Little Birds', `One Love'... So many classic songs in one spot. The opening `Natural Mystic' brings a menacing air and is just as good as any of the singles here. `Exodus' is a great & important album, any serious music fan should own this.
Great but not his best. - Review written on May 25, 2004
* * * *
Rating: 4 out of 5
2 customers found this review helpful, 2 did not.

I love Bob Marley, his lyrics and delivery. But, I listen to him alot mainly because of his band The Wailers. Aston Familyman, Carlton, Wya, Anderson etc. Superb musicians who do not get enough credit yet they were 'holding it down' for Bob. He knew their value which is good. Try getting Survival & Rastaman Vibration. Now, that's Roots Reggae!
MOVEMENT OF JAH PEOPLE!! - Review written on May 15, 2004
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5

This is another good album from the king of reggae. All the songs are good , but Natural Mystic, Jamming, and Waiting in Vain are the best. The only problem is, if you already own Legend, you have over half the songs from here.
listen - Review written on December 31, 2003
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
1 customer found this review not to be helpful.
This album is all about romance reggae style, so cuddle up close to a loved one, light some incense and sing along. This man knows what he is talking about. Enjoy.
Classic!! - Review written on October 19, 2003
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
2 customers found this review not to be helpful.
Exodus could be called "Bob Marley's Greatest Hits"!
Exodus - Review written on August 17, 2003
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
1 customer found this review helpful.

this album which was declared album of the century by time magazine is an essential for any avid music listener each song has a meaning and a placee I guranntee you'll love it
Marley's Best Studio Album - Review written on August 11, 2003
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
30 customers found this review helpful, 1 did not.

"Exodus" is Bob Marley's best studio album, period. Tight and focused (10 tracks, 37 min.), Marley brings forth the best reggae you will find anywhere. (The 2001 remaster adds 2 "long versions" of "Jamming" and "Punky Reggae Party", the latter not even being on the original album).

Opener "Natural Mystic" sets the tone: easy-flowing reggae sounds, with Bob's never-absent comments on the way things are, or should be. The album's title track is, at 7+ min, the "monster" track on the album, and one of Bob's best ever. The album also contains the well-known (and hits in the US) "Jamming", "Waiting in Vain", and "One Love".

One can argue that Marley was never as good in the studio as he was live (check out the live album "Babylon by Bus"), but as far as his studio output is concerned, it never got any better than this. Essential for any Marley fan.

Fun fact: Marley was always bigger in Europe than he was in the US. Of the original 10 tracks, 7 were issued as a single in the UK, a feat not repeated until Michael Jackson's "Thriller" album, just to give you a sense of "Exodus" impact in 1977.

Exodus, top quality reggae - Review written on July 26, 2003
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
1 customer found this review helpful.

While i am an avid Bob Marley fan i feel that this is one of his most under-rated albums that he never really got the re-cognition he deserved at least with alot of the British people at the time as every release was regarded as legendry in Jamiaca by Bob Marley fans and i could'nt agree more. As with most Bob Marley releases (avoid the scratchy recordings) they make great beach music along with the ranks or latin etc and really make you feel good so if your a fan of reggae then i would get Exodus or legend by Bob Marley and would recommened Reason or Roots by King Django.
Absoulutely Brilliant - Review written on June 21, 2003
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
3 customers found this review helpful, 2 did not.

The prophet's music and words simply wash over you. You feel Jah's love all over with every song on this album. If you do not own this, I feel sorry for you. If you find that you don't enjoy this album, you made need professional help to remove the pudding from your brain.
Consistent - Review written on May 27, 2003
* * * *
Rating: 4 out of 5
1 customer found this review helpful, 3 did not.

Many pleasing tunes abound on Bob Marley's Exodus CD. Three Little Birds and One Love/People Get Ready truly grab me with such pleasing tones and captivating melodies. However some of the less familiar tunes like Turn Your Lights Down Low and Natural Mystic stand fairly tall as well.

The style does not vary too much and a few songs are a little long. Nonetheless, like Catch A Fire or the Legend compilation you cannot deny the soothing effects of Mr. Marley. Put it on and don't worry because the music is just allright.

Ultimate Marley. - Review written on April 14, 2003
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
3 customers found this review helpful.

Many reviewers (myself included) use the word "classic" probably more often than they should when examining great albums, but Bob Marley's thunderous "Exodus" rightfully earns the title. Its influence is incomparable, and its brilliance makes it second to none. You wanna talk about a record that has the word "genius" written all over it? This is it. And even after all these years since I first listened to it as a child, it has lost none of its urgency. Marley croons with pain and longing in the popular "Waiting in Vain;" delivers a strong message of empowerment in the title song, and another favorite of mine is the suave "Jamming." And while Lauryn Hill's version of "Turn Your Lights Down Low" is fine, it can't measure up to the smokin' original that appears here. The remastering on "Exodus" is superb, making the recording even more crisp and tight than what we've heard on previous editions. In a way, "Exodus" is to Marley what "Kind of Blue" is to Miles Davis: a great beginner's album. If you own none of his stuff, this is a pretty good place to start, as it contains many of his more popular songs. And even those who are already familiar with this album should get this reissue for the remastering. Across the board, "Exodus" is indispensable.
Man you gettin' tipsy - Review written on March 27, 2003
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5

A great album made better with the additional live and jam tracks. Hard to believe that this album is now more than 20 years old! Given that the Marley estate has not really put out
much live material, the Exodus tour tracks are welcome to collectors of Bob's live legacy.
we jammin! i wanna jam with u! - Review written on January 16, 2003
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
2 customers found this review not to be helpful.
"Singin sweet songs, melody's pure & true..." (three little birds) i think this album has the sweetest song & the purest & truest melodies of pretty much any roots reggae album ever. Exodus is well deserving of Time Magazine's "Album of the Century" award. every song is amazing (like all wailers songs are). this is what i think of the songs:
1. natural mystic - 5/5 great song with great lyrics
2. so much things to say - 5/5 a very underrated song. its soooooooooo much better than what most people think. the i-threes (the wailers back-up singers) are really good
3. guiltiness - 5/5 amazing
4. the heathen - 5/5 great song. i like the electric guitar in the background
5. exodus - 5/5 the albums theme song. great riddim. a bit too long
6. jamming - 5/5 probably the most well know and popular reggae song EVER! an instant classic
7. waiting in vain - 4/5 pretty good
8. turn your lights down low - 4.5/5 very good song. a bit too slow. check out the remix with lauryn hill (chant down babylon)
9. three little birds - 5/5 great song with a good riddim, backing vocals, and lyrics
10. one love - 5/5 chosen as the anthem off the millenium by some magasine. great song
11. punky reggae party (bonus track) - 5/5 really good song made either for "smile jamaica" or "one love peace concert", im not sure which one. very catchy
Jammin' . - Review written on December 23, 2002
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
2 customers found this review helpful.

With Time magazine having awarded this album the distinction of Album of the (last) Century, it would be a bit contrarian to give it less than 5 stars, even though it is not my favorite Marley album--Kaya is.

What is it that made this skinny, half white, soccer and ganja loving Jamaican such a beloved figure? Well, of course dying young always helps, and like his near contemporary John Lennon, Marley didn't make it into middle age. But Marley was truly one of a kind. His voice is not the kind of voice that you say is a good voice or a bad voice. Like Dylan's it is instantly recognizable as his voice and that is all that counts. The songs are brilliant, all self penned, and rarely covered by other artists. Marley, as far as I know, never performs cover versions of songs by other composers.

Marley is seen by many as a quasi religious figure, and I have to confess that though I am no Rastafarian (though I have smoked ganja) nor Christian (though I have taken communion), I find this album spiritually uplifting in a way that I do not find, say, contemporary Christian music uplifting. Marley's songs are replete with Biblical references and echoes, but to compare someone like Amy Grant with Marley would be absurd. However the fact that it IS so absurd is a measure of his status, which is head and shoulders above all but the very greatest artists. You have to put him up there in the pantheon of greats along with the Beatles, Stones, Miles Davis, Hendrix etc.

So like all of Marley's recordings, you cannot measure it simply in musical terms, because it is more than just music, it is inspiration too.

This album goes from strength to strength. Many albums start with the best track and then go downhill, but this one saves the best for later. Jammin' is probably my favorite Marley track, and you get two versions here. The first sounds very much as if it would fit right in on Kaya, with the booming bass, guitar lines adding a little color, and that voice, ah, that voice with the unique Marley lyrics. The second is a longer jazzier, more instrumental version.

Then come Waiting in Vain, Turn Your Lights Down Low, Three Little Birds, and One Love/People Get Ready, before the reprise of Jammin' and Punky Reggae Party.

Really, if you like Marley's music, you can't go wrong with this.

Since writing the above I have been listening to this album in my car almost every day from weeks and I have revised my opinion. It probably IS the greatest album of the twentieth century. Everything else I listen to now seems to pale by comparison.

Bob Marley IS a Legend - Review written on December 11, 2002
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5

This is my favorite Marley album. The pulsating grooves of "Natural Mistic" and "Heathen" are minimalist simplicity at its most powerful. Bob was a rebel, a mistic figure. I only recently learned of his powerful influence in Jamaica's social and political life. He was their guru, their guiding light, and rightly so. His mere presence brought calm amid the turmoil of his country. His music is a perfect expression of his beliefs - the lyrics, the steady and hypnotic riddims, the melodies - every element in perfect accord with the others. The most amazing thing is, these guys were basically inventing this new music at the time they were coming out. To those who don't know (?) who Bob Marley was, this cd would be a perfect introduction, because it is not too heavy with political content and there are some "accesible" songs, such as "So Much things to say." A great and joyful work by the most important figure in Jamaican music, and one of the most important EVER. Period.
Pure Genius - Review written on June 16, 2002
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
2 customers found this review helpful.

Bob Marley is the master of reggae music. Reggae music since Bob has been gone is just not as good. Bob Marley's music is real special. This is meaningful, honest, breathtaking music. Songs like Jamming and One Love prove that. Get this album right now! As you read my review all you are doing is wasting time. You NEED to listen to this. Music is my religion and Bob Marley is part of my religion.
A man for all eternity - Review written on June 05, 2002
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
5 customers found this review helpful, 2 did not.

This magnum opus of reggae albums is of such stature most of all because of the resonance, rather than the ever-evident catchiness, of its songs. Reggae music's compactness and choppiness combined with its rich texture and seemingly instrinsic depth turned out to be a most suitable avenue for Bob Marley's social, political, and spiritual commentary, and his talent in the genre and earnest, forceful singing blended admirably. Song titles and lyrics in Exodus demonstrate Bob's focus on Biblical metaphors as a means to galvanize people for action and self-examination, but he also sings about ordinary experiences in life and love. Most of the songs are instantly recognizable classics, especially the title cut, "Jamming," and "One Love." Bob's wringing declaration "Let's get together and feel alright" seems to be a musical parallel to the final line of Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, with a universal aura, like something you heard in a previous life. But you didn't, nor was this the case with any of the other songs, which are the unique genius of Bob Marley.
Marley's Best - Review written on March 01, 2002
* * * * *
Rating: 5 out of 5
1 customer found this review helpful, 1 did not.

Easily his best recording, and now that it's been remastered it's even better than before. A must, along with The Clash's "London Calling" remaster.