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Ziggy Marley Concert Tickets

David Nesta "Ziggy" Marley (born October 17, 1968, Trenchtown) is a Grammy-winning jamaican musician. He is the oldest son of Rita and Bob Marley, the legendary roots reggae singer. His mother Rita called and baptised him David, but his father Bob nicknamed him "Ziggy" in reference to his childhood nickname. Check our available Ziggy Marley concert ticket inventory and get your tickets here at ConcertBank now. Sign up for an email alert to be notified the moment we have tickets!


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Ziggy Marley Reviews

Avg. Customer Rating:
5.0 (based on 9 reviews)

Like any other musical genre, reggae music has gone through plenty of changes over the last decade or so--most of them due to leaps in technology and an ever-shrinking world of interconnectivity and influence. Meanwhile, Ziggy Marley has grown into a zen master of rolling with the punches, and not just because his famous father prepared him for it...
- www.relix.com
Buy it from Buy the CDDownload as MP3Ziggy MarleyFly RastaTuff Gong Worldwide2014 Tell us what you think: Rate and review this album Bob Marley is justly celebrated for bringing...
- www.theguardian.com
Unlike younger brother Damian - the harder dancehall/hip-hop/reggae star - Bob's eldest son, Ziggy, makes sweet, singable reggae that translates well around a campfire. He's the kind of artist a morning show like Canada AM will invite to perform, even if he's singing about marijuana trees blowing in our breeze. On his fifth studio album, Marley's going funky and futuristic...
- nowtoronto.com
The eldest of the Marley siblings, Ziggy has had a career that stretches over three decades. Arguably the Marley whose voice is the closest facsimile to his dad's, Ziggy can always be counted on to craft conscious one drop reggae with memorable melodies and the right amount of laidback bass. This is on show here, but there's more. With , Marley presents wide-ranging knowledge of roots and culture, as well as some funk, soul, rock and pop know-how...
- exclaim.ca
It can't be easy being . As the first-born son of , the reggae icon hailed as "the first Third World Superstar" who remains very much a worldwide phenomenon more than 30 years after his death, Ziggy inevitably suffers from the same syndrome as and : being the son of someone so famous that forging your own musical identity is a terribly daunting challenge...
- www.bbc.co.uk
The title song, which opens this matchbook-shaped album, has Bob Marley's oldest son doing a duet with Woody Harrelson - yes, that Woody Harrelson! We know the actor loves his weed, but it's still a bit silly to hear him singing about "marijuana trees blowing in the breeze" and "hemp fields forever growing wild and free." More successful are the appearances by rapper Heavy D on It and by Ziggy's son Daniel on Changes - the Marley legacy shall live on for another generation, it seems...
- hour.ca
God forbid Frances Bean Cobain ever dons a flannel shirt and picks up a Fender Stratocaster, and heaven help Blanket Jackson if he ever decides to slip on a white glove and start moonwalking. For the many children of late reggae icon Bob Marley, though, following so closely in their famous father's footsteps doesn't seem to have been much of a problem...
- www.slantmagazine.com
Ziggy left his siblings in the Melody Makers a couple years ago to record his disappointing solo debut, Dragonfly. This sophomore outing isn't much better and sounds, quite frankly, like Ziggy has too much time on his hands. Yeah, the lead-off African-styled Into the Groove is groovy, and no one can resist the ska riddims of Black Cat. But the rest is unmitigated filler, with extra padding from an additional acoustic version of the title track, plus a dub version of Be Free. Enough already...
- www.hour.ca
Ziggy has broken away from the Melody Makers after his old band's last two albums pretty well stiffed. Ziggy continues to explore and create music further and further away from the reggae he and his siblings are best known for. There's little reggae on this folksy album of acoustic grooves highlighted by True to Myself. At least Ziggy hasn't abandoned his conscious lyrics. (Bugs Burnett)
- www.hour.ca
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