My Roots Lucky Dube - Back To
One of the most powerful aspects of the song is its rejection of materialism. Dube suggests that in the pursuit of Western “progress,” humanity lost its moral compass. The city represents greed, crime, and alienation; the roots represent peace, wisdom, and continuity. When he asks to be taken back to where the “spirit is free,” he is identifying a universal truth: freedom is not political autonomy alone; it is spiritual autonomy. The rhythm—slow, heavy, and meditative—mimics the act of walking a long journey home. It is the cadence of a pilgrim, not a tourist. While Dube was specifically Zulu, “Back to My Roots” transcends ethnicity. The song became an anthem for the African diaspora, particularly in the Caribbean and the Americas, where millions are disconnected from their specific tribal origins due to the slave trade.
For a Rastafarian in Jamaica, “roots” means Zion (Africa). For a Black American in Detroit, it means searching for a lost surname or a specific village in Ghana. Dube bridges this gap by focusing on emotion rather than geography. He does not sing about a specific GPS coordinate; he sings about a feeling of belonging. This universality is what turned the song into a global reggae standard. It speaks to the immigrant who misses home, the exile who cannot return, and the youth who feels lost in a culture not their own. Musically, “Back to My Roots” is a masterclass in authentic reggae production. The bass line is deep and wobbling—the "heartbeat" of the earth. The organ chords are sparse and ethereal, evoking a church or a sacred gathering place. Dube’s voice, a rich tenor, glides between tenderness and authority. back to my roots lucky dube
To go back to one’s roots is not an act of regression; it is an act of restoration. It is acknowledging that the skyscraper cannot stand without the foundation. For Lucky Dube, the journey home was not about finding a place, but about finding a self that apartheid tried to erase. As the final chords of the song fade, the listener is left with a quiet challenge: Where are your roots, and when will you return to them? In answering that question, we find not only Lucky Dube’s legacy but our own humanity. One of the most powerful aspects of the