Bob Marley exhibit opens on anniversary of death

LOS ANGELES, (Reuters Life!) – Bob Marley’s battle  with cancer ended in a Miami hospital 30 years ago on  Wednesday, bringing to a premature close the life of reggae  music’s most important standard-bearer.

Bob Marley

His son, David “Ziggy” Marley, who was 12 at the time and  has gone on to reggae stardom in his own right, considers the  anniversary a day for celebration rather than mourning.

“It’s not the happiest day, but we’ve learned to live with  it,” he told Reuters on Wednesday. “The actual day is a day of  journey. It’s a day of movement. We accept it as that. We’re  not here to cry or to be sad. We’re here to celebrate and be  happy.”

Marley was on hand at the Grammy Museum where an exhibit  about his father opened on Wednesday and runs through Oct. 2.  The Marley family worked closely with the museum’s curators,  lending memorabilia from its personal collection.

Perhaps the most significant item in the display is  Marley’s primary guitar, a modified mahogany Gibson Les Paul.  The curators said it has never been displayed in the United  States. The guitar is part of the permanent collection at the  Bob Marley Museum in Kingston, Jamaica.

“That was his baby,” Marley said. “That was his weapon.  That’s what he held closest to him onstage, offstage. It’s made  of wood, it’s natural. Some of Bob’s sweat, whatever, is in  that wood, that guitar.”

He recalled that he used to play the guitar himself on  stage until he was told it should be placed in the museum.

“I was very sad about that,” he said with a laugh. “I wish  I could still be jammin’ on it.”

The exhibit also includes an embroidered blue denim stage  jacket worn by Marley, as well as candid photographs, old  concert posters and records. Music clips and video footage are  also displayed, and drum machines allow visitors to try and  play along with Marley’s songs.