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Entries associated with the tag "reggae":September 7th - 3:52 p.m.
When people think of dancehall these days they tend to think of the DJ-style of rapping that caught fire in the mid-80s and continues to enjoy wide popularity. The guy who helped break that style wide open was Barrington Levy, a deeply soulful singer who churned one out classic record after another for a good decade. In 1979 he hooked up with what become the dominant dancehall band, the Roots Radics, and with production from the likes of Henry “Jungo” Lawes and Jah Screw he went on to build a monster discography that still sounds killer. In the mid-90s he was embraced by the current generation of dancehall stars, collaborating with folks like Beenie Man, Cutty Ranks, and Lady Sawon on Barrington Levy’s DJ Counteraction, and he later made records with everyone from Snoop Dogg to the Long Beach Dub All-Stars. Although Levy's productive days seem long behind him, his golden voice remains something special. He headlines the Caribbean Festival in Union Park on Saturday.
Today’s playlist: Secos & Molhados, 73/74 (Continental) The Four Levels of Existence, s/t (Lion) Lura, M’bem Di Fora (Times Square) Torbjörn Zetterberg, Krissvit (Moserobie) Various Artists, Echoes of Africa—Early Recordings (Wergo) July 6th - 11:10 a.m.
Joseph Hill was convinced that Marcus Garvey's prophecy of cataclysm on July 7, 1977 was certain, and his song about it, "Two Sevens Clash," convinced much of Jamaica's population as well. On that day the streets of Kingston were desolate. Of course, life went on, but the song has endured. Recorded by Hill's vocal trio, Culture, it's one of ten brilliant jams on Two Sevens Clash, one of the greatest albums of the roots-reggae explosion of the 70s. Shanachie Records has just issued the album in a deluxe 30th anniversary edition, appending the original album with five stellar dub and 12” versions of its tunes. The band that played behind the harmony group was strong—it included drummer Sly Dunbar, saxophonist Tommy McCook, and guitarist Earl “Bingy Bunny” Lamont—and producer Joe Gibbs brought depth and richness to the arrangements. But it was all about the singing. Culture emerged from a dynamic scene, where groups like Burning Spear, the Congos, the Gladiators, and the Mighty Diamonds were all thriving, but this album set them apart. Despite the heavily spiritual, largely apocalyptic lyrics, the music bristles with a hopeful soul and beauty, with Albert Walker and Kenneth Dayes shadowing Hill’s leads with a rough ghostliness. Hill established his most enduring characteristic, answering each line of the verse with an aside or elaboration that broke from the fixed melody. He wasn’t exactly ad-libbing, as each of these embroideries were the same in a given tune, but the effect was powerful and original. The DJ verses courtesy of Prince Weedy and I-Roy are also excellent, and it’s mighty nice to have them all in one place. The CD is packaged in a DVD case and the expanded liner notes include original essays by Gibbs (from the first Jamaican pressing), Shanachie honcho Randall Grass (from the first U.S. edition), musings from a 1982 interview with Hill, who died last August while touring in Germany, and a new, somewhat pompous piece by Lenny Kaye that strains in its comparison of reggae to punk. The reissue was scheduled for release on 7/7/07—a bit of hokey razzle-dazzle, since records aren't actually released on Saturdays. |
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