Roger Steffens (born June 17, 1942) is an American actor, author, lecturer, editor, reggae archivist, photographer, and producer.[1] Six rooms of his home in Los Angeles house reggae archives, which include the world's largest collection of Bob Marley material. Based on these archives Steffens lectures internationally with a multi-media presentation called The Life of Bob Marley. His radio career began in New York City in 1961, and he co-hosted Reggae Beat on KCRW in Los Angeles and was syndicated on 130 stations worldwide in the 1980s.[2][3]
Steffens served in Vietnam and spent a year in Morocco before visiting Jamaica for the first time in 1976. He has a large collection of photographs covering his Vietnam service and Jamaican musicians, including many slides which were digitized and released via Instagram in 2013.[3]
In early 2015 he published his first collection of photographs, The Family Acid.[6][7][8][9] "The Family Acid presents his often transcendent vision and life as a psychedelic pioneer on the order of Timothy Leary and Hunter S. Thompson beginning with his work in Vietnam and moving through his ever revolving circle of friends and characters made up of Rastas, beatniks, musicians, artists, gonzo journalists, his family, and himself. The portraits, scenes, and freewheeling experimentation with the medium of photography coalesce into a body of work that both parallels and defines the countercultural ethos of Steffens' generation."[10]
Steffens co-hosted Reggae Beat on KCRW from 1979 to 1987, and Reggae Beat International from 1983 to 1987, which was syndicated internationally to 130 stations.[3]
He served as a syndicated weekly contributor from 1993 to 1997 for Planet Reggae on the radio station Groove Radio 103 in Los Angeles. Steffens also worked on several other radio shows, including Offbeat: The Roger Steffens Show (Host, 1987–89), Sound of the Sixties (Host, 1984–1986), Morning Goes Makossa (co-host, 1980–84), Future Forward (ethnic music commentator, 1985–86), and Poetry For People Who Hate Poetry (1983, 1987).
Steffens was named "Most Popular Reggae DJ in the World" by Martin's International Awards in Chicago, 1985, and "One of the Forty Who Matter in L.A." by the Los Angeles Reader.[citation needed]
Music anthologies
Steffens has contributed to many music anthologies as a writer and photographer. With his French partner Bruno Blum he contributed to the ten-CD series The Complete Bob Marley & the Wailers 1967 to 1972. Released between 1998 and 2003, this 220-track series included over a hundred rare Bob Marley & the Wailers recordings, including Selassie Is the Chapel, and many of them previously unreleased, such as Rock to the Rock. He also produced several reissues of Coxsone Dodd-produced early Bob Marley recordings for Heartbeat Records.
Audio books
Steffens was a reader for the audiobooks Bill Gates' Business @ the Speed of Thought (Time Warner), The Man From St. Petersburg (Warner Audio), Big Two Hearted River: The Short Stories of Ernest Hemingway (North Star), and Mother Earth Father Sky (North Star). He also provided the corporate voice (all wrap-arounds) for Time Warner Audio Books from 1996 until 2003.
Stage
Steffens' stage experience includes work with the Pittsburgh Playhouse, Milwaukee Repertory Theater, Berkeley Repertory Theatre, and his one-man show, Poetry for People Who Hate Poetry, which was performed to more than two million people from 1966 to 1976, and was used as the basis of the 1968/69 TV series Armed Forces Vietnam Network.
Bob Marley and The Wailers: The Definitive Discography (first place award for Best Research in Folk, Ethnic or World Music from the Association of Recorded Sound Collections, 2006)
The World of Reggae featuring Bob Marley: Treasures from Roger Steffens' Reggae Archives
One Love: Life with Bob Marley and the Wailers
Roger Steffens and Peter Simon's Reggae Scrapbook (winner, ForeWord Magazine Silver Medal for Best Music Book of 2007)
So Much Things to Say: The Oral History of Bob Marley (2017)[13][14][15][16]
Contributing writer
A Magio do Reggae, São Paulo: Martin Claret, 1997
"Bob Marley: Rasta Warrior" in Chanting Down Babylon: The Rastafari Reader, Temple University Press, 1998
Dictionnaire des chansons de Bob Marley, Paris: Tournon, 2005
"Reggae in the Seventies" in Rolling Stone's The Seventies
Introduction to Bob Marley Reader (DaCapo, 2004);
"Nine Meditations on Jimi and Nam" in The Ultimate Hendrix, NYC: Macmillan
Bob Marley: The Complete Annotated Bibliography with Joe Jurgensen, Haras, Prospect, 2009