Songwriter who penned Marley’s ‘No Woman, No Cry’ dies
KINGSTON, Jamaica — Vincent Ford, a songwriter credited with composing the Bob Marley reggae classic “No Woman, No Cry,” has died in Jamaica. He was 68.
Ford died Sunday at a hospital of complications from diabetes, said Paul Kelly, a spokesman for the Kingston-based Bob Marley Foundation.
The song, which appeared on Marley’s 1974 “Natty Dread” album, was inspired by the Kingston ghetto of Trench Town where Marley and Ford lived in the 1960s.
Ford is credited with the tune. However, some critics contend that Marley wrote it himself but gave Ford the credit to help his friend support himself with the royalties.
Ford, who ran a soup kitchen and lost both his legs to diabetes, is also credited with three songs on Marley’s 1976 album “Rastaman Vibration.”
Marley died of cancer in Miami in 1981 at age 36 and remains one of this Caribbean island’s most beloved national heroes.
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