Behind the Hits
The following article is from Uncle John’s Factastic Bathroom Reader.
Another edition of a longtime Bathroom Reader favorite— the secret stories and hidden factoids behind popular songs.
The Song: “I Shot the Sheriff” (1973)
The Artist: Bob Marley
The Story: Reggae superstar Marley had an international hit with this song about a man and his feud with a sheriff (but not the deputy). But according to Jamaican filmmaker Esther Anderson, who played a big part in Marley’s early success— and who was having an affair with Marley at the time he wrote the song— the song has a secret meaning few people would ever suspect. In her award-winning 2011 documentary Bob Marley: The Making of a Legend, Anderson claims Marley wanted her to have his child and was unhappy that she was using birth control. According to Anderson, the “sheriff” in the song was the doctor who prescribed birth control, which would explain the song’s cryptic “seed” lyric: “Sheriff John Brown always hated me / For what, I don’t know / Every time I plant a seed / He said kill it before it grow.” Whether or not Anderson’s claim is true is anyone’s guess. (Marley, it should be noted, had eleven kids with seven different women.)













































(Image credit: Winslow Taft)






















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