News
March 25, 2008

Check out this great interview with Elan about the Wailers life on the road and their upcoming album!

“Well, the one thing is that we would love to announce is that we’re working on a new album, that’s basically on the same concept as the Carlos Santana “Supernatural” album. All the original Wailers, even Aston’s brother, Carlie, who died in the early 70s. We have old, unreleased, 2 inch tracks that we transferred to wave files, you know, digitized. So we made all these new tracks. All new songs. All new tracks. And we brought in all these great contemporary artists from all different genres to record new songs, who have been inspired by the band and they’re going to add their own element and writing their own songs and their own instruments but it’s not going to take away the integrity of the foundation that’s the sound of the Wailers. So, yeah. It’s very exciting right now that we’ve got a bunch of artists. I can’t name any names, because none of them are confirmed, but, we’ve already got like 4 artists done. There’s going to be 12 songs. Each side’s like 22 artists from everywhere. From all different genres. Pop, hip-hop, rock. No reggae. We’re the reggae artists, so, it’s all those type of artists.”

Read It Here! OR Download the PDF here!

March 17, 2008

Check out this review of the Wailers from Langerado Festival 2008:

CMJ Review

Excerpt: “Any Bob Marley song you could ever want to hear was played for this set. Matisyahu joined them on stage for a special remediation of “No Woman, No Cry” and the crowd of tree-hugging hippies went ape-shit.”

March 13, 2008

(Photo by: Jeff Widener) Raggamuffin: UB40 / The Wailers / Maxi Priest / Arrested Development / Katchafire (February 2008 - Touring Australia)

Opening with an impressive guitar driven instrumental, The Wailers temper the crowd in mixing certified classics with brand newbies, offering a delicate rendition of Natural Mystic before singer Elan announces newer track Nothing Is Worse Than Losing You. The crowd sparks during No Woman No Cry, singing out-loud lyrics to a variety of versions, before finishing with a solo diversion during the Bob Marley epic Exodus.

 

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