GrenadianConnection.com -- Grenada -- SpiceIsle
Home  ◊  About  ◊ Mission  ◊  Sign Guestbk  ◊ Contact us  ◊
Our News
General News - 04   |   Health    |   Immigration   |   Sports   |   Local News   |    Inside Gda
<< Prev Next >>
5/27/2004 
JAMAICAN BILLIONAIRE BUYS MARLEY MEMORABILIA  
TORONTO: - Once again, Canadian mutual fund tycoon Michael Lee-Chin is putting his money where his roots are. The Jamaican-born entrepreneur has agreed to purchase the world's largest collection of Bob Marley memorabilia and donate the more than 200,000 items to a yet-to-be-established National Museum of Jamaican Music. "The Government of Jamaica is pleased with this singular act of the repatriation of the Marley legacy and looks forward to sharing it with the world," Jamaica's culture minister, Maxine Henry-Wilson, said in an e-mail. "We hail Mr. Lee Chin ... (the acquisition) has offered the Jamaican people another opportunity to revel in the achievement of this cultural icon." She said Marley created an identity for Jamaicans that has helped "increase their perception of themselves and pride in their heritage." Selling the collection is California musicologist Roger Steffens. Reached in Australia where he is promoting Catch A Fire, a Marley film and video biography, Steffens told the Star he will serve as the new museum's curator emeritus. He declined to say how much Lee-Chin paid for his archives, except to say it was "a figure commensurate with 31 years of work." The collection, which Steffens started in 1973, fills six rooms in his L.A. home and includes 12,000 records and CDs, 10,000 posters and flyers and 12,000 hours of tapes. Marley, who died of cancer in 1981, formed the Wailers with friends Bunny Livingston and Peter Tosh in the mid-'60s, and the band popularized reggae around the world with inspiring songs about love, spirituality, unity and liberation. The group split up in the early '70s to pursue solo careers and Marley became an international star. Steffens said it took him three months to computerize his Marley inventory, to facilitate negotiations with Lee-Chin's foundation. "I imagine by the end of the summer things will start leaving. My wife says it will probably be the closest I'll come as a man to post-partum depression," he said. Lee-Chin, Burlington-based chair of AIC Ltd., one of Canada's largest mutual fund companies, was not available for comment yesterday. Dubbed Canada's buy-and-hold billionaire for his company credo of "Buy, hold and prosper," he was recently ranked the world's 216th wealthiest person with a net worth of $2.4 billion (U.S.) by Forbes magazine. SOURCE: CARIBUPDATE.COM
 

 


<< Prev Next >>  
JAMAICAN BILLIONAIRE BUYS MARLEY MEMORABILIA