In the year that Bob Marley could have retired, son Ziggy comes with his second solo album. Until the early nineties he formed The Melody Makers with his siblings, but after the split, Ziggy went on alone. For Love Is My Religion he wrote the songs, played the instruments himself and also produced the record. Ziggy has already proven that he has a great voice on previous albums, but the Jamaican is
… unable to write songs that last. Unfortunately, this album does not change that. It's too light-hearted for a reggae album and not catchy enough for a pop album. Unfortunately, the easily digestible reggae pop only evokes an unwanted longing for the magic that Bob Marley managed to capture in his records. (MH)more