Reggae legend Jimmy Cliff is reflecting on The Harder They Come, as the film marks its 50th anniversary, and he has recalled that the director told him he was a better actor than he was a singer.
On Sitting in Limbo, released in 1971, Cliff explains: “Well, that was an autobiographical song at one moment in my life, when I was feeling kind of low and I had to uplift myself. Give myself, so to speak, hope, and that’s where that song’s coming from.”
Another of his songs on the album was Many Rivers to Cross and it similarly drew on times of turmoil, as he explained to Estelle.
“That song (Many Rivers To Cross) was a picture and the emotions of all different things that people go through in this life; as an African descendant man, I thought that was an essential part of the song; As people in general, people go through that, and I was thinking of all of those emotions packed into one,” he said.
Unlike his acting career, music was a no-brainer for Cliff. He revealed that as early as his post-toddler days, he recognized his niche for the industry—thanks to his family.
“My family, everyone sang. We were a singing family, and there was always music for everything. Music for dinner. Music for breakfast. Music for funerals. Jamaica is like that. So, yes, I grew up in a musical family. I sang in the church. There was music around all the time. So, yeah, at about age of six, I decided I want to do music… I sang folk songs, and I sang Calypso, and I sang what we call foreign songs, which is mainly American music. You know? Whether it be Sam Cooke, Fats Domino, Ray Charles, R&B, especially from New Orleans.”
The Harder They Come soundtrack was released in 1972 in the UK by Island Records and issued in February 1973 in North America as Mango Records.
It went on to peak at No. 140 on the Billboard 200.
In 2021, the album was deemed “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant” by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Recording Registry.
Other Reggae icons who were part of the soundtrack were Toots and the Maytals, who had two songs, Pressure Drop and Sweet and Dandy; Desmond Dekker with Shanty Town, and The Melodians who recorded Rivers of Babylon; The Slickers with Johnny Too Bad and Scotty with Draw Your Brakes.