Reggae music to be protected by the UN
2019-01-10Usher
新世纪智能(英语备考) 2019年2期
◆Usher
Reggae has been added to a list of international cultural treasures which the United Nations has deemed worthy of protecting and promoting.
The music, which grew out of Jamaica in the 1960s thanks to artists like Toots and the Maytals, Peter Tosh and Bob Marley, was added to the collection due to its “intangible cultural heritage”.
Reggae is “cerebral, socio-political, sensual and spiritual,” said Unesco.
It has “penetrated all corners of the world,” added a Jamaican spokesperson.
Reggae followed on from the ska and rocksteady genres—other early pioneers included Lee Scratch Perry and Prince Buster.