The Ultimate Guide to the Best of the Best Bob Marley Albums

She’d found it buried in a box of his things: faded concert tees, a chipped ashtray from Negril, and this. The tracklist was a fierce, impossible mixtape: “Redemption Song” straight into “War,” then “Concrete Jungle,” then “No Woman, No Cry” (the live ’75 version, where the crowd’s hum becomes a second choir). It skipped the radio hits for the raw cuts. Best of the best , he’d written. Not the most famous. The ones that saved him.

Marley’s final studio album before his death in 1981 is hauntingly prophetic. It contains "Redemption Song," an acoustic masterpiece where Bob strips away the band and asks a deeply personal question about mental emancipation. Tracks like "Forever Loving Jah" and "Could You Be Loved" show a mature artist at peace with his mortality.

This isn’t just an album; it’s a global phenomenon. It is the best-selling reggae album of all time. A "greatest hits" primer.