Reggae icon Bunny Wailer, co-founder of famed group the Wailers, dies at 73

By Randall Roberts

Los Angeles Times

Bunny Wailer, one of the most influential singers in reggae music history, died Tuesday at age 73.

Along with young Bob Marley and Peter Tosh, the artist born Neville O’Riley Livingston co-founded vocal trio the Wailers, who played a crucial role in transforming early 1960s ska music into rocksteady and ultimately reggae.

Wailer’s death was confirmed by his manager. The cause of the death was not immediately known. Jamaican newspapers reported that he had a stroke about a year ago.

Best known for his work in songs including “Simmer Down,” “Rude Boy,” “Get Up, Stand Up,” “I Shot the Sheriff,” “Stir It Up,” “Blackheart Man” and dozens more, Wailer’s Zen-like approach to music creation helped manifest a whole new language, one focused on groove and vibe. After leaving the Wailers in 1973, Wailer carried on as a solo artist, releasing more than two dozen studio albums.

An epochal moment in Caribbean cultural history occurred by happenstance when in 1963, Wailer moved into the same Kingston apartment complex as a young Marley. By 1965 the Wailers had pared down to the trio of Wailer, Marley and Tosh and continued to make hits.

In 1969, the Wailers entered Lee “Scratch” Perry’s Black Art studio. The albums that followed, “Catch a Fire” and “Burnin’,” blew up in Jamaica, then in England, Europe and America.

Wailer left the Wailers not long after, citing frustration with touring and Marley’s increasingly prominent role. A longtime Rastafarian who put his religion above all else, he spent his creative life in a vast compound and received callers when he desired.

Wailer was the last of the original Wailers. He was preceded in death by Marley, who died of complications from cancer in 1981; and Tosh, who was murdered in Kingston in 1987.