Album artwork for Equal Rights by Peter Tosh

remastered double 180 gram vinyl edition on music on vinyl with rare and unreleased dub mixes. peter tosh served as a counterpoint to the worldwide success of his former partner bob marley. their relationship is often compared to that of john lennon and paul mccartney, with tosh playing the role of the cynical lennon to marley's love-song-oriented mccartney. the analogy worked loosely at best, as both musicians simply followed different muses after the 1974 break-up of the original wailers. tosh's recorded output had as much cross-over appeal as marley's more commercial work, culminating in a duet with mick jagger on the song 'walk and don't look back.' but tosh always had the more militant stance which resulted in many beatings and arrests leading up to his murder in 1987. tosh's 1977 album, 'equal rights', is a peak in his career. it begins with a new version of 'get up, stand up,' one of marley's signature songs (co-written by tosh). tosh's version is more sinewy than marley's, with biting guitar lines snaking throughout. likewise, 'stepping razor' struts with a dangerous swagger, 'african' plays like a mirror to marley's pan-africanism, and 'apartheid' shows that tosh is not afraid to indict any enemy, no matter how large. but the most chilling song is the title track, where tosh sings, "everyone is crying out for peace / none is crying out for justice," a self-assured call-to-arms as pertinent today as it was eighteen years ago. 'equal rights' represents tosh to a tee - no-nonsense, gritty, political reggae with some of the most fully realized and best produced tracks this side of tuff gong.

Peter Tosh

Equal Rights

Music On Vinyl
Album artwork for Equal Rights by Peter Tosh
LPx2

£37.99

Black
Released 24/10/2011Catalogue Number

MOVLP341

Learn more
Peter Tosh

Equal Rights

Music On Vinyl
Album artwork for Equal Rights by Peter Tosh
LPx2

£37.99

Black
Released 24/10/2011Catalogue Number

MOVLP341

Learn more

remastered double 180 gram vinyl edition on music on vinyl with rare and unreleased dub mixes. peter tosh served as a counterpoint to the worldwide success of his former partner bob marley. their relationship is often compared to that of john lennon and paul mccartney, with tosh playing the role of the cynical lennon to marley's love-song-oriented mccartney. the analogy worked loosely at best, as both musicians simply followed different muses after the 1974 break-up of the original wailers. tosh's recorded output had as much cross-over appeal as marley's more commercial work, culminating in a duet with mick jagger on the song 'walk and don't look back.' but tosh always had the more militant stance which resulted in many beatings and arrests leading up to his murder in 1987. tosh's 1977 album, 'equal rights', is a peak in his career. it begins with a new version of 'get up, stand up,' one of marley's signature songs (co-written by tosh). tosh's version is more sinewy than marley's, with biting guitar lines snaking throughout. likewise, 'stepping razor' struts with a dangerous swagger, 'african' plays like a mirror to marley's pan-africanism, and 'apartheid' shows that tosh is not afraid to indict any enemy, no matter how large. but the most chilling song is the title track, where tosh sings, "everyone is crying out for peace / none is crying out for justice," a self-assured call-to-arms as pertinent today as it was eighteen years ago. 'equal rights' represents tosh to a tee - no-nonsense, gritty, political reggae with some of the most fully realized and best produced tracks this side of tuff gong.