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Jimmy Cliff: 10 Essential Songs

The reggae legend played a crucial role in bringing the music of Jamaica to a worldwide audience with his joyful, socially conscious songs

Jimmy Cliff

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In 2020, Jimmy Cliff explained his view of the afterlife to Rolling Stone. “From our religious background, our concept of when someone cross over — we don’t say they ‘pass away,’ we say ‘cross over,’ they just go to the other side of existence, there’s no such thing as death — and then they go out there and they vibrate for however many days before they go to a higher height.”

He was speaking then about his friend and fellow reggae icon Toots Hibbert; five years later, Cliff has crossed over, too, and few would question that he’s on his way to a higher height indeed. He was one of the first acts to take reggae music from Jamaica to the world, playing an irreplaceable role in introducing countless listeners to the sounds that moved his soul. Here are 10 of the best songs from his legendary career.

‘You Can Get It If You Really Want’

A maxim as profound as the Stones’ “You Can’t Always Get What You Want,” but far more hopeful, the jaunty 1970 single “You Can Get It If You Really Want” perfectly set up Jimmy Cliff’s career: Here is a man with a positive mental attitude and the willpower to rise above adversity, and he had a golden voice to match. The song didn’t chart anywhere, unlike his Cat Stevens cover “Wild World” or his own “Vietnam” and “Wonderful World, Beautiful People,” but it got a second life as the opening music in The Harder They Come, introducing the world to Cliff’s Jamaica. As the soundtrack’s lead single, the song became one of the artist’s career touchpoints. —K.G.

‘Vietnam’

Jimmy Cliff’s profound statement about Vietnam was inspired by his own grief over seeing a childhood friend changed by the war: “When he came back, he didn’t know me,” Cliff once said. “We met up in Somerton where they have aeroplanes that fly low to spray the banana trees, and I remember he started running for cover.” Over a disarmingly bouncy beat and melody (and a repeated chanting of the word “Vietnam” as the song’s ghostly refrain), Cliff tells a devastating tale of the war through a series of letters and telegrams sent back home. No less than Bob Dylan called it the best protest song ever written. —Jonathan Bernstein

‘Wonderful World, Beautiful People’

On classics like “The Harder They Come,” Jimmy Cliff injected a rich sense of bright exuberance into songs about struggle and hardship. But his 1969 cut “Wonderful World, Beautiful People” was pure world-hugging anthemic joy, tapping into the Aquarian spirit of that year with a song about the universal power of human togetherness — he even extends the good vibes to U.S. President Richard Nixon and British Prime Minister Harold Wilson. Released on Jamaica’s iconic Trojan label, it brilliantly mixed a reggae groove with a stirring string arrangement, showing off Cliff’s unique ability to record reggae with an eye to the wider pop world. Fittingly, the song made the pop charts in the U.S. and the U.K. —Jon Dolan

‘Trapped’

Sometimes it’s worth playing the B side. “Trapped,” another song of spiritual resolve that Jimmy Cliff wrote around the time he starred in The Harder They Come, initially came out in 1972 as the flip side to both “The Harder They Come” and “Struggling Man.” But despite its bona fides (Cat Stevens produced the tune, and orchestrater extraordinaire Del Newman arranged the backing track), the song languished in obscurity for almost a decade, until Bruce Springsteen started adding “a scintillating new song” to his set lists in 1981, as Rolling Stone put it: “‘Trapped,’ reportedly a Jimmy Cliff number reworked in the searing mode of Darkness on the Edge of Town.” The cover song stayed in Springsteen’s set, and a few years later, his live recording became a standout on the We Are the World compilation. Cliff rerecorded the song for 1989’s Images, this time releasing it as an A side. —K.G.

‘Treat the Youths Right’

Reggae was a popular sound worldwide by the early Eighties, and Jimmy Cliff was one of its elder statesmen. In 1982, he released a concert film affirming his connection to the music’s roots — and an album called Special, where he gamely embraced its present and future. The brightly produced single “Treat the Youths Right” brings his signature sunny demeanor to an anthem of encouragement for a new generation of Jamaicans. As often in Cliff’s music, there’s a hint of social commentary underneath the radiant chorus, as he nods to rising unemployment and issues a friendly warning: “Treat the youths right, or you’ll be playing with dynamite.” —Simon Vozick-Levinson

‘Reggae Night’

Jimmy Cliff’s biggest hit of the Eighties is a feel-good jam about jamming ’til the morning light on a reggae night. Cowritten by La Toya Jackson and Kool and the Gang’s Amir Bayyan, the song bears all the hallmarks of Eighties pop hits (soft-baked synths, a heavy backbeat, and bright brass filigrees), but Cliff makes it his own with his silky-smooth vocals and the conviction in his voice about just how important it is to let loose and embrace a night of good music and great vibes. The song, which appeared on Cliff’s album The Power and the Glory (1983), became an international hit (Number One in New Zealand!) and a concert staple for him until his final tour in 2019. —K.G.

‘I Can See Clearly Now’

Texas-born singer Johnny Nash’s 1972 tune “I Can See Clearly Now” was the first song with a distinct reggae influence to become a major hit in America, eventually reaching Number One on the Hot 100 and selling a million copies. The song mixed cloud-clearing optimism and gentle realism (when “the rain is gone,” Nash sings that he “can see all obstacles in my way”). Two decades later, another essential early Seventies reggae ambassador, Jimmy Cliff, covered the song for the soundtrack to the 1993 movie Cool Runnings. With a new, hip-hop-tinged groove, Cliff’s gorgeously sung version returned “I Can See Clearly Now” to the Top 20. —J.D.

‘One More’

The 2010s were a decade of joyful renewal for Cliff, who started the party at his Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction and kept it going through the aptly titled 2012 album Rebirth, produced by Rancid’s Tim Armstrong. Nearing 70, he sang about his commitment to his craft with a vigor that transcended age: “I got one more song I must sing.” Live performances from that year showed his undiminished energy onstage. “He just loves performing,” Armstrong told Rolling Stone. “Whether it’s playing in front of three people or 30,000, he’s bringin’ it.” —S.V.L.