Jimmy Cliff onstage on the Montreux Jazz Pageant in Switzerland in July 2011.
Fabrice Coffrini/AFP through Getty Pictures
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Fabrice Coffrini/AFP through Getty Pictures
Jimmy Cliff, the Jamaican musician and actor who helped propel reggae into the worldwide highlight, has died at 81 years previous. The singer-songwriter was identified for hits similar to “Many Rivers to Cross,” “You Can Get It if You Actually Need” and the title monitor within the 1972 crime movie The More durable They Come, through which he additionally starred as the primary character.
In keeping with his spouse, Latifa Chambers, Cliff died as a consequence of a seizure adopted by pneumonia. In an announcement on social media, Chambers wrote, “To all his followers world wide, please know that your assist was his power all through his complete profession.”
Born James Chambers in 1944, Cliff grew up in a rural village in Jamaica, and started singing at school and in church. His father labored as a tailor, and hoped his son would examine medication. After being uncovered to American music from New Orleans and Florida by means of the radio, a teenaged James moved to Kingston to pursue a creative profession.
His first main hit in Jamaica, “Hurricane Hattie,” referenced a 1961 storm that wreaked havoc within the Caribbean. In 1964, Cliff was chosen to carry out on the World’s Honest in New York Metropolis as a consultant for the island. The next 12 months, British-born producer Chris Blackwell signed Cliff to his label, Island Information, and persuaded him to maneuver to England.
Although he initially struggled to seek out his footing with audiences overseas, Cliff earned important and business success for songs similar to “Fantastic World, Lovely Folks” and the protest anthem “Vietnam.” Regardless of addressing struggle and tragedy in his music, the artist infused his lyrics with a hopeful outlook.
“I grew up economically poor, spiritually wealthy,” Cliff advised NPR in 2010. “So despite the fact that I had this situation, that form of steadiness made me all the time take the draw back and form of put an as much as it.”
Cliff’s profession reached new heights when he was forged within the lead function of Ivanhoe “Ivan” Martin within the seminal Jamaican movie The More durable They Come, directed by Perry Henzell. In it, Ivan is an aspiring reggae musician who strikes to Kingston from the countryside, faces poverty and exploitation within the metropolis and descends into a lifetime of crime, finally turning into a violent fugitive with a chart-topping single. The movie options a number of of Cliff’s songs, which helped flip The More durable They Come right into a nationwide sensation in Jamaica and a world cult traditional.
“That film actually had an amazing impact on bringing the Jamaican world, music and tradition and every part, to the forefront,” Chris Blackwell, who additionally served as govt producer for the movie, advised Contemporary Air‘s Terry Gross in 2022.
Cliff continued to carry out and file for many years, collaborating with artists together with Elvis Costello, Annie Lennox and Wyclef Jean. In 1985, he was one of many dozens of artists featured on the all-star anti-apartheid tune “Solar Metropolis.” The next 12 months, Cliff received a Grammy Award for finest reggae recording for his album Cliff Hanger.
In 2010, he grew to become the second reggae artist, after Bob Marley, to be inducted into the Rock & Roll Corridor of Fame. Two years later, Cliff reintroduced himself — and reggae — to the world together with his album Rebirth, which might go on to win a Grammy for finest reggae album in 2013.
In an interview with NPR, Cliff described that album as a revitalization of his inventive imaginative and prescient, which necessitated going again to the sound that first launched his profession from the studios of Kingston — taking part in with the identical devices and following the identical live-to-tape recording methods that he’d employed within the style’s beginnings. The album included a canopy of “The Weapons of Brixton” by The Conflict, which references Ivanhoe Martin in its lyrics.
“One of many causes for masking that tune was to indicate and remind individuals the affect that reggae music had on punk music,” Cliff advised NPR. “As a result of reggae and punk deal with the identical points — political, social points. I believe that’s the essence of the connection.”

