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Rebirth (Jimmy Cliff album)

Rebirth
JimmyCliff-Rebirth.jpg
Studio album by Jimmy Cliff
Released 16 July 2012 (2012-07-16)
Recorded The Sound Factory, May/June/November 2011, Canyon Hut, December 2011
Genre Reggae
Length 46:06
Label Universal/Sunpower/Hip-O
Producer Tim Armstrong
Jimmy Cliff chronology
Black Magic
(2004)
Rebirth
(2012)

Rebirth is an album by reggae artist Jimmy Cliff released in July 2012. It won the Grammy Award for Best Reggae Album and was included in Rolling Stone's '50 Best Albums of 2012'.

Rebirth was Cliff's first new album in eight years. The album was recorded at The Sound Factory and Canyon Hut in California, and produced by Tim Armstrong of Rancid and featured backing band The Engine Room. Some of the songs were written by Cliff before the recordings sessions, while others were written by Cliff and Armstrong in the studio.Rebirth also includes cover versions of The Clash's "Guns of Brixton" (the lyric of which refers to Cliff's role in The Harder They Come), Joe Higgs' "World Upside Down", and Rancid's "Ruby Soho". The album was mastered by Joe LaPorta.

Rebirth was released in July 2012.

Cliff said of the album: "It is a rebirth of my career at this time. I have goals yet to accomplish, and I think this album is the stepping stone toward those goals.". He also said that the title referred to the rebirth of the planet. It also reflected a return to the music from earlier in his career, with Cliff saying:

"As a rebirth one has to go back to point zero to move forward again. We recorded the music with the same instruments that we had used back in the days, the same style that we used to record, which is everyone recording at the same time."

Rolling Stone gave the album four stars out of five, with Will Hermes describing it as "the strongest case for the vitality of West Indian roots music that anyone has made in decades" and calling it "the sound of history circling in wondrous ways". The BBC commented on his return to the sound of his recordings from the 1960s and 1970s, describing the album as "remarkably consistent".Alternative Press gave it 4.5/5, picking out "Cry No More" and "Children's Bread" as sounding like "lost classic[s] of late-'60s/early-'70s Jamaica", going on to call it "a flawless album".The Independent gave it four stars out of five, saying "the spirit of the music is vivid".


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