Originally posted by The Vinyl Factory.

13 reels of water-damaged live recordings brought back to life.

A treasure trove of lost Bob Marley recordings discovered in the cellar of a run-down hotel in West London has been restored.

The 13 reel-to-reel analog master tapes were found in boxes under a hotel where Bob Marley and the Wailers stayed during their European tours in the ‘70s but were initially believed to be unplayable, largely due to serious water damage.

Now, after 12 months of painstaking restoration by sound technician specialist Martin Nichols of White House studios in Weston-super-Mare, the tapes have been rescued, and described as able to “send shivers down one’s spine”.

Among the reels are recordings of Bob Marley and The Wailers in London at the Lyceum (1975), the Hammersmith Odeon (1976), the Rainbow (1977), and the Pavilion de Paris (1978) in France. They were recorded live on the only mobile 24-track studio vehicle available in the UK at the time, loaned to Marley and the Wailers by the Rolling Stones.

As Nichols told The Guardian, “They really were in such an appalling condition they should have been binned, but I spent hours on hours, inch by inch, painstakingly cleaning all the gunge off until they were ready for a process called ‘baking’, to allow them to be played safely.”

Of the 13 tapes discovered, 10 have been restored, two were blank and one was too damaged.

Read next: 13 essential records by Joe Gibbs, the record producer who brought reggae to the punks

Latest

Latest



		
	
Share Tweet