Reggae
One of the few aspects of reggae that was purely a British invention. Although incredibly popular, the lovers rock scene was largely underground. The day after Janet Kay was on Top Of The Pops with Silly Games at Number Two, she was late for work.Luckily her boss was sympathetic. […]
In the late-60s/early-70s sections of the British music press and BBC radio actively campaigned to keep Reggae off the airwaves Millie Small’s “My Boy Lollipop” stunned the music industry by being a huge hit in UK & US (1964). When Bob & Marcia had their big UK hits, they came here […]
No toasting… no rap! Jamaican deejay style is the founding father of American rap. In 1970 the top five positions in the Jamaican hit parade were held by deejay records and producers of singers complained so loudly, deejay records were banned from the Top 20. Jamaican deejay culture is the driving force behind […]
Reggae music stripped back to the bass ‘n’ drum foundation and rebuilt to reveal tunes you never knew existed. No dub… no remix culture… no Fatboy Slim… no Zero 7… in fact not much at all 25 years on King Tubby remains dub’s rightful ruler. In cyberpunk novel “Neuromancer” Rastafarian […]
Sound systems are the heartbeat at the centre of all meaningful Jamaican music. During the last forty years, sound system culture has spread all over the world essentially unchanged. They appear in a pure Jamaican form for the Notting Hill Carnival with systems such as Aba Shanti-I and Good Times being huge crowd […]
Imagine Jamaica at the end of the 1950s, already gripped by Independence fever as the new nation prepares for the lowering of the flag in 1962. In downtown Kingston the sound systems are booming and competition for the freshest tunes is ferocious. Of course the imported sounds of American rhythm & blues won’t satisfy these […]
-
Pages