(Words and video by Steve Shafer)
I arrived a bit later to this gig than had planned, so I was bummed to find that I had missed The Scotch Bonnets' opening set, as I'm a huge fan of their ska/rocksteady/soul sound. The Scotch Bonnets' two records--the Live Ya Life album and their Quest EP with HR of Bad Brains--are two of the best releases the American ska scene has produced in recent memory. However, I did catch them backing Roddy Radiation, as he played a batch of tracks he penned for The Specials ("Rat Race," "Concrete Jungle," "Hey Little Rich Girl"--dedicated to Amy Winehouse, who covered it--and "Bonediggin'" off Guilty 'til Proved Innocent, as well as Lynval Golding's "Do Nothing," which is one of my favorite Specials' songs, hands down) and some of his terrific skabilly cuts from 2011's Blues Attack, like "Another Rusty Nail" and "Judgment Day." Roddy was in fine form, playing his guitar with dramatic rockabilly flourishes (and introducing each song with a little story about it), while the excellent Scotch Bonnets kept everything firmly grounded in bubbling and propulsive, R and B-tinged ska. While the crowd wasn't as nearly large as it should have been for such a quality pairing (what's up with that, NYC ska massive?), Roddy and the Bonnets nonetheless put on damn fine and satisfying show, one worthy of a much larger audience. (Roddy Radiation and The Scotch Bonnets are currently on a tour of the US Midwest and South for the remainder of April and first half of May--watch the videos below for a preview and make sure to catch them if they come to your town!)
While I've had to significantly dial down my participation in Rude Boy George, due to family and work commitments, I'm still partially involved in the band (and even was asked to come on stage to sing during their version of "Kids in America"). So, while I can't really review their set here, I'll let these two videos convey how amazing they were last night and why they deserve your love.
+ + + +
Sunday, April 26, 2015
Sunday, April 19, 2015
Jerry Dammers in MOJO, Rhoda Dakar in Vive Le Rock!
Even though it's a fairly unremarkable magazine shop on Madison Avenue in one of Manhattan's wealthiest neighborhoods (I've seen Donald Fagan in there a few times), it carries two music magazines essential to any self-respecting Anglophile: MOJO and Vive Le Rock! (One of the guys behind the counter told me that some record executive who lives nearby asked them to carry these publications, along with NME, so they could keep up on the British music scene.) This month, each magazine is running a feature on a key 2 Tone-era musician: MOJO has a terrific interview with Jerry Dammers (on the occasion of The Specials, More Specials, and In the Studio being reissued in deluxe CD packages), while Vive Le Rock! catches up with Rhoda Dakar (who recently performed at the 2015 London International Ska Festival and released the stellar Rhoda Dakar Sings the Bodysnatchers album--read The Duff Guide to Ska review of it here).
Here are some great excerpts from each piece:
Rhoda Dakar (reminiscing with Andy Peart about The Bodysnatchers' seaside tour with The Specials in the summer of 1980): "What was brilliant about that tour was that the Go-Gos were on it as well. So, for the first and only time in my experience, there were as many women as men on a tour. That was brilliant because it really changed the dynamics of everything. I remember there was a drinking contest, girls against boys. We put up our champion and they put up theirs and we won (laughs). It was really comfortable and we weren't marginalized. It was a crazy tour. All these old seaside venues where people fell through stages which were collapsing and there were times when you could see the sea through the floor."
Jerry Dammers (responding to the comment from Lois Wilson, "You once said your aim with The Specials was nothing short of revolution."): "I spent my time growing up in Coventry in the '60s and '70s seeing the working-class youth bashing each other up, whether it was bashing immigrants or bashing each other at football. It was only a minority, of course, but it did seem like most districts in Coventry had some sort of gang, and some of the pubs were notorious for people glassing each other. The media was winding this up all over the country, so some kids thought that was what they were supposed to do. Meanwhile, the establishment that was actually keeping them down just carried on getting richer like they always had. The hippies wanted to form a better "alternative" society, but that just alienated some people. I wanted to change all of society from within, which was a much harder and more risky thing to try and do. The amazing thing is that it worked at all, even to the small extent that some people say it did. I often meet people who tell me that if it wasn't for The Specials they would have been racists or whatever, and that they turned to more socialist ideas because of The Specials."
Jerry Dammers (responding to the question, "What initially sent you down the left-wards path politically?"): "Well, hopefully that was some sort of intelligence or common sense. The general idea that children are still starving, or dying of preventable diseases, or getting blown to pieces, is not a good thing. Even if there was such a thing as "trickle down" from capitalism, which there never has been, and never will be, what an absolutely horrible idea, that some people are only worthy of what might happen to "trickle down" from the rich."
Here are some great excerpts from each piece:
Rhoda Dakar (reminiscing with Andy Peart about The Bodysnatchers' seaside tour with The Specials in the summer of 1980): "What was brilliant about that tour was that the Go-Gos were on it as well. So, for the first and only time in my experience, there were as many women as men on a tour. That was brilliant because it really changed the dynamics of everything. I remember there was a drinking contest, girls against boys. We put up our champion and they put up theirs and we won (laughs). It was really comfortable and we weren't marginalized. It was a crazy tour. All these old seaside venues where people fell through stages which were collapsing and there were times when you could see the sea through the floor."
Jerry Dammers (responding to the comment from Lois Wilson, "You once said your aim with The Specials was nothing short of revolution."): "I spent my time growing up in Coventry in the '60s and '70s seeing the working-class youth bashing each other up, whether it was bashing immigrants or bashing each other at football. It was only a minority, of course, but it did seem like most districts in Coventry had some sort of gang, and some of the pubs were notorious for people glassing each other. The media was winding this up all over the country, so some kids thought that was what they were supposed to do. Meanwhile, the establishment that was actually keeping them down just carried on getting richer like they always had. The hippies wanted to form a better "alternative" society, but that just alienated some people. I wanted to change all of society from within, which was a much harder and more risky thing to try and do. The amazing thing is that it worked at all, even to the small extent that some people say it did. I often meet people who tell me that if it wasn't for The Specials they would have been racists or whatever, and that they turned to more socialist ideas because of The Specials."
Jerry Dammers (responding to the question, "What initially sent you down the left-wards path politically?"): "Well, hopefully that was some sort of intelligence or common sense. The general idea that children are still starving, or dying of preventable diseases, or getting blown to pieces, is not a good thing. Even if there was such a thing as "trickle down" from capitalism, which there never has been, and never will be, what an absolutely horrible idea, that some people are only worthy of what might happen to "trickle down" from the rich."
Friday, April 17, 2015
The Duff Guide to Ska Record Store Day 2015 Ska Round-Up
Legions of (mostly) older music fans will be lining-up outside of your local mom and pop record shop this Saturday morning (April 18, 2015) to partake in the twice-yearly celebration of indie record stores and vinyl known throughout the USA, UK, Germany, Belgium, Netherlands, France, Mexico, Italy, and Spain as Record Store Day.
While I may grouse a bit about the pricey-ness of these limited-edition RSD releases (and how the UK RSD releases are consistently better than those available in the USA), each year you can find me in a record store or two (or three) on this day, hoping to pick up a few of that year's crop (usually new wave or post-punk related releases) that caught my attention.
So, while I'm more likely to be able to find some of the non-ska releases on my list this year (I'd like the Johnny Marr, Kate Pierson, and Buzzcocks singles; The Pop Group EP, and Replacements 10"), I'm sharing this recap of the some of the ska RSD releases that I'd be lucky to get my mitts on (and you would be, too):
1) For their first-ever Record Store Day release, Soul Jazz Records is issuing the Down Beat Special Studio One five x 7" box set, featuring the following killer singles (this is a UK-only release, limited to 500 copies--though, I suspect import copies will be available in the USA for a pretty penny):
2) Demon Music Group is issuing The Beat's The 7" Singles Collection. This box set contains thirteen Beat vinyl 45s, from their 2 Tone debut, "Tears of a Clown," to their last Special Beat Service single, "Ackee 1-2-3"--and everything in between: "Mirror In The Bathroom," "Hands Off... She’s Mine," "Best Friend," "Too Nice To Talk To," "Doors of Your Heart," "All Out To Get You," "Hit It," "Save It For Later," "Jeanette," "I Confess," and "Can’t Get To Losing You." A 16-page booklet is included, presumably about the band and each single. Only 1,000 copies of this set are being pressed and it's a UK-only release.
3) Salvo is issuing Madness' "Lovestruck" (from 1999's Wonderful) b/w"Le Grand Pantalon" (a fantastic, reflective version of "Baggy Trousers" that was used in a 2011 Kronenbourg 1664 beer ad and was included on the 2013 A Guided Tour of Madness box set). Neither track has been available on vinyl before. Only 1,000 copies of this single will be for sale in the UK.
Happy record hunting this Saturday!
While I may grouse a bit about the pricey-ness of these limited-edition RSD releases (and how the UK RSD releases are consistently better than those available in the USA), each year you can find me in a record store or two (or three) on this day, hoping to pick up a few of that year's crop (usually new wave or post-punk related releases) that caught my attention.
So, while I'm more likely to be able to find some of the non-ska releases on my list this year (I'd like the Johnny Marr, Kate Pierson, and Buzzcocks singles; The Pop Group EP, and Replacements 10"), I'm sharing this recap of the some of the ska RSD releases that I'd be lucky to get my mitts on (and you would be, too):
1) For their first-ever Record Store Day release, Soul Jazz Records is issuing the Down Beat Special Studio One five x 7" box set, featuring the following killer singles (this is a UK-only release, limited to 500 copies--though, I suspect import copies will be available in the USA for a pretty penny):
- Willie Williams "Armagideon Time" b/w Marcia Griffiths "Feel Like Jumping"
- The Skatalites "Addis Ababa" b/w The Eternals "Queen of the Minstrels"
- Dawn Penn "No No No" b/w Dub Specialist "Hooligan (Dub)"
- The Mad Lads "Ten to One" b/w Jackie Mittoo "Totally Together"
- Michigan and Smiley "Nice Up the Dance" b/w "The Wailers "Simmer Down"
2) Demon Music Group is issuing The Beat's The 7" Singles Collection. This box set contains thirteen Beat vinyl 45s, from their 2 Tone debut, "Tears of a Clown," to their last Special Beat Service single, "Ackee 1-2-3"--and everything in between: "Mirror In The Bathroom," "Hands Off... She’s Mine," "Best Friend," "Too Nice To Talk To," "Doors of Your Heart," "All Out To Get You," "Hit It," "Save It For Later," "Jeanette," "I Confess," and "Can’t Get To Losing You." A 16-page booklet is included, presumably about the band and each single. Only 1,000 copies of this set are being pressed and it's a UK-only release.
4) Trojan Records will be releasing a 60s ska/reggae compilation with cuts from Desmond Dekker and The Aces, The Upsetters, and the like. Titled Rude Boy Rumble, this 12-track LP will feature cuts chosen by Tom "Papa" Ray AKA The Soul Selector (also the owner of Vintage Vinyl in St. Louis, MO). This release will be available in the USA.
Happy record hunting this Saturday!
Thursday, April 16, 2015
The Duff Guide to Ska NYC Spring/Summer 2015 Ska Calendar #5
Friday, April 17, 2015 @ 7:00 pm
Skarroneros, The Beatdown, The Rudie Crew, Beat Brigade
Grand Victory
245 Grand Street
Brooklyn, NY
$10/21+
+ + + +
Saturday, April 18, 2015 @ 10:00 pm
The Scofflaws (10pm), The Shanks, This Good Robot
Record Store Day 2015
Soul Sounds Records
291 West Main Street
Sayville, NY
After 6pm: $10
+ + + +
Wednesday, April 22, 2015 @ 8:00 pm
Mighty Mystic, InDaze, The Far East
Knitting Factory Brooklyn
361 Metropolitan Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$10 in advance/$12 day of show
+ + + +
Saturday, April 25, 2015 @ 7:30 pm
Roddy Radiation (of The Specials) w/The Scotch Bonnets, Rude Boy George
Fontana's Bar
105 Eldridge Street
New York, NY
$10/21+
+ + + +
Wednesday, April 29, 2015 @ 7:00 pm
The English Beat, The Rudie Crew
The Gramercy Theater
127 East 23rd Street
New York, NY
$25/16+
+ + + +
Saturday, May 2, 2015 (3 sets starting at 7:00 pm)
Rude Boy George
Toshi's Living Room
1141 Broadway
New York, NY
No cover!
+ + + +
Saturday, May 2, 2015 @ 8:00 pm
Fishbone, Easy Star Allstars, The Skints
Brooklyn Bowl
61 Wythe Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$22/21+
+ + + +
Saturday, May 9, 2015 @ 9:00 pm
Dig Deeper Presents Derrick Morgan, Crazy Baldhead, DJ Scratch Famous (of Deadly Dragon Sound System), DJ Honky and Mr. Robinson
Littlefield
622 Degraw Street
Brooklyn, NY 11217
$20 in advance/$25 day of show
21+
+ + + +
Saturday, May 9, 2015 @ 7:00 pm
The Skatalites
Brooklyn Bowl
61 Wythe Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
+ + + +
Friday, May 15, 2015, from 10:30 pm to 11:00 pm
Rude Boy George
Jersey Shore Festival
The Aztec Pool
901 Boardwalk
Seaside Heights, NJ
Skarroneros, The Beatdown, The Rudie Crew, Beat Brigade
Grand Victory
245 Grand Street
Brooklyn, NY
$10/21+
+ + + +
Saturday, April 18, 2015 @ 10:00 pm
The Scofflaws (10pm), The Shanks, This Good Robot
Record Store Day 2015
Soul Sounds Records
291 West Main Street
Sayville, NY
After 6pm: $10
+ + + +
Wednesday, April 22, 2015 @ 8:00 pm
Mighty Mystic, InDaze, The Far East
Knitting Factory Brooklyn
361 Metropolitan Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$10 in advance/$12 day of show
+ + + +
Saturday, April 25, 2015 @ 7:30 pm
Roddy Radiation (of The Specials) w/The Scotch Bonnets, Rude Boy George
Fontana's Bar
105 Eldridge Street
New York, NY
$10/21+
+ + + +
Wednesday, April 29, 2015 @ 7:00 pm
The English Beat, The Rudie Crew
The Gramercy Theater
127 East 23rd Street
New York, NY
$25/16+
+ + + +
Saturday, May 2, 2015 (3 sets starting at 7:00 pm)
Rude Boy George
Toshi's Living Room
1141 Broadway
New York, NY
No cover!
+ + + +
Saturday, May 2, 2015 @ 8:00 pm
Fishbone, Easy Star Allstars, The Skints
Brooklyn Bowl
61 Wythe Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$22/21+
+ + + +
Saturday, May 9, 2015 @ 9:00 pm
Dig Deeper Presents Derrick Morgan, Crazy Baldhead, DJ Scratch Famous (of Deadly Dragon Sound System), DJ Honky and Mr. Robinson
Littlefield
622 Degraw Street
Brooklyn, NY 11217
$20 in advance/$25 day of show
21+
+ + + +
Saturday, May 9, 2015 @ 7:00 pm
The Skatalites
Brooklyn Bowl
61 Wythe Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
+ + + +
Friday, May 15, 2015, from 10:30 pm to 11:00 pm
Rude Boy George
Jersey Shore Festival
The Aztec Pool
901 Boardwalk
Seaside Heights, NJ
Free!
+ + + +
Friday, May 15, 2015 @ 7:30 pm
Bad Manners, Dale and the Zdubs
Knitting Factory Brooklyn
361 Metropolitan Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$20 in advance/$25 day of show
+ + + +
Saturday, May 30, 2015 @ 7:00 pm
Rude Boy George
State Theatre of Boyertown
61 North Reading Avenue
Boyertown, PA
+ + + +
Friday, June 26, 2015 @ 7:00 pm
The Pietasters
Rock's Off Booze Cruise
The Jewel
Board the boat at East 23rd Street and the FDR Drive, Manhattan
Tix: $25 in advance/$30 day of show
21+
+ + + +
Friday, May 15, 2015 @ 7:30 pm
Bad Manners, Dale and the Zdubs
Knitting Factory Brooklyn
361 Metropolitan Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$20 in advance/$25 day of show
+ + + +
Saturday, May 30, 2015 @ 7:00 pm
Rude Boy George
State Theatre of Boyertown
61 North Reading Avenue
Boyertown, PA
+ + + +
Friday, June 26, 2015 @ 7:00 pm
The Pietasters
Rock's Off Booze Cruise
The Jewel
Board the boat at East 23rd Street and the FDR Drive, Manhattan
Tix: $25 in advance/$30 day of show
21+
+ + + +
Thursday, April 2, 2015
Life's Little Victories: Record Collecting #6 (UB40's "Present Arms")
I was one of the many teenage Americans who were introduced to--and became crazy about--UB40 (and reggae) through their 1983 album, Labor of Love, which, as everyone knows, was a phenomenal tribute to many of the JA reggae artists who had inspired them as they were growing up in the 70s in the UK (if I remember correctly, the tracks that WLIR played heavily in their new wave mix were UB40's covers of Eric Donaldson's "Cherry Oh Baby" and--of course--Tony Tribe's version of Neil Diamond's "Red Red Wine"). I read somewhere that UB40's homage to their musical heroes ended up significantly rewarding many of the original composers; I wish I remembered which artist it was, but he was able to buy a large house with the songwriting royalties. I have a distinct memory of first listening to Labor of Love (back when you scoured the record sleeve for clues/info about the band and music) and being kind of delighted when I figured out that each part of the album's cover illustration referred to a song therein (I wasn't always so quick on the uptake...). Perhaps most momentously, Labor of Love marked the first time I'd heard a Laurel Aitken cut, as he wrote, originally performed (as the deejay Tiger), and produced the bittersweet "Guilty" ("...of loving you"). A little over a decade later, I'd have the incredible honor and pleasure of working with Mr. Aitken while I was at Moon Records.
From 1983 through 1986, I caught UB40's fantastic live show every time they performed in NYC (usually outdoors on Manhattan's Pier 54 on the Hudson River, right next to the U.S.S. Intrepid, always in a massive cloud of cheeba, cheeba, y'all) and eagerly bought each new US release: Geffery Morgan, Little Baggariddim, and Rat in the Kitchen (all of which contained great material and received strong airplay on WLIR). But, in the first half of the 80s, Signing Off and Present Arms hadn't been given proper US releases and I never came across imports of them at that time. I did pick up the North American-only compilation UB40 1980-83 right after buying Labor of Love, but only some of the songs connected ("King," "One in Ten," "I Won't Close My Eyes," and "Dubmobile"). Overall, UB40 1980-83 seemed disappointingly gray and dour (at the time, I didn't fully appreciate just how bad things were for the working class and poor in the UK under Thatcher after she privatized many government services, made deep cuts to the social safety net, and waged war on the unions), and not all of the songs included were winners (particularly in contrast to the ace material they covered on Labor of Love). So, in my adolescent rush to judgement, I wrote off UB40's first two albums as hit-or-miss affairs.
Listening to Present Arms today, I'm struck by how much the band had progressed since Signing Off. The songs, performances, and production on Present Arms are much improved--and it's as politically incisive as their debut, if not more so. When Geffery Morgan and Rat in the Kitchen were released, I loved finding that UB40 were writing sharp and catchy songs about political, social, and economic injustice that, like the music of 2 Tone, made you want to dance. But after this period, the fire in UB40's collective gut seemed to go out and they mostly produced albums of reggae pop covers (which did bring them many hits and financial success--over the years, they've sold over 70 million records!). Having said that, 2005's Who You Fighting For? (the anti-Iraq war title track is one of the best songs they've ever written) and 2008's TwentyFourSeven (see "Middle of the Night," which may be an anti-extraordinary rendition song) contained a lot of good-to-terrific original material and showed that the band hadn't completely abandoned their original mission statement or forsaken their concern for the wider world. Sadly, after much internal strife, UB40 recently fragmented into two versions of the band...(which may be the the reason the re-issue of Present Arms is delayed).
Present Arms' angry/mournful title track was certainly not an attack on British soldiers, but decried the terrible lack of opportunity--brought about by Thatcher's policies--that left many young men with no other way to earn a living than to join the army, become dehumanized in the process of learning to obey and kill, and not necessarily being used to defend England, but to shield the interests and do the bidding of the rich and politically-connected.
"You got no job, you got no pay
Join the military, sign today
They'll take you off to fight on foreign shores
Be your mother's pride and joy
Her armed and dangerous golden boy
They're paying to protect what isn't yours
Be your mother's pride and joy
Her armed and dangerous golden boy
A uniformed hero shows no fear
The khaki ranks of flesh and steel
Learning how to smile and kill
They'll teach you to ignore the screams and tears
Be your mother's pride and joy
Her armed and dangerous golden boy
A uniformed hero shows no fear
The khaki ranks of flesh and steel
Learning how to smile and kill
They'll teach you to ignore the screams and tears"
The character of Sardonicus comes from the 1961 William Castle B-horror film, "Mr. Saronicus," whose face becomes frozen in a "horrifying grin" after he robs his father's grave for the lottery ticket that was buried with him ("sardonicus" comes from the Latin medical term Risus sardonicus, a symptom of untreated tetanus manifesting itself through involuntary muscle spasms in the face, which can result in a rictus or "sardonic smile"). In January of 1981, a few months before Present Arms was recorded, Ronald Reagan was sworn in as the 40th President of the United States and his hard-line stance against the Soviets (several neo-cons in his administration--including Dick Cheney--who were disdainful of detente, increased defense spending to such a degree and implemented provocative polices that ended up re-igniting the arms race with the Soviets, since they were convinced that America was preparing for a nuclear first strike against them), his use of end-of-days evangelical language (Reagan told TV preacher Jim Bakker in 1980, "We may be the generation that sees Armageddon"), and itchy-trigger gunslinger image exacerbated Cold War relations between the nuclear superpowers to such a degree that millions of people throughout Western Europe and the U.S. (and one had to imagine the Soviet Union) were very worried that they might die in a nuclear war (I was one of them). At the time, the caricature of Reagan was of this perpetually sunny and smiling actor-cowboy-madman who blindly believed his anti-Soviet/Commie rhetoric and would take all of us with him to oblivion in WWIII. Like many new wave and post-punk bands of this era, UB40 expressed this Cold War dread in the taut, tense, and somewhat spooky "Sardonicus"--Reagan as all cheery exterior distracting everyone from the perniciousness within:
"A human statue made of living stone
A paradox etched in human bone
If you could see behind the thin disguise
There's a hidden glint of madness in his eyes
Many men are fooled by his smile
His superficial grace, his charm, his style
Sardonicus is everybody's friend
Sardonicus keeps smiling to the end
A human statue made of living stone
A paradox etched in human bone
If you could see behind the thin disguise
There's a hidden glint of madness in his eyes
Many men are fooled by his smile
His superficial grace, his charm, his style
Sardonicus is everybody's friend
Sardonicus keeps smiling to the end"
The powerful and insistent "One in Ten" was directed at Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and her policies that favored the rich and powerful at the expense of the working class and poor. It's a potent protest song that gives voice to the disenfranchised and conveniently forgotten and, in doing so, reminds the more fortunate of us that we're not off the hook. But it's also a pointed commentary on how the process of categorizing people by the problems they're experiencing and tallying them up can numb/distance us from the real lives and horrific suffering behind the figures. This, in turn, can allow policymakers and those with power to think of large groups of people in great need as abstract construct--which can be more easily ignored while the resources that could help them can be diverted elsewhere.
I am the one in ten
A number on a list
I am the one in ten
Even though I don't exist
Nobody knows me
But I'm always there
A statistic, a reminder
of a world that doesn't care
My arms enfold the dole queue
Malnutrition dulls my hair
My eyes are black and lifeless
With an underprivileged stare
I'm the beggar on the corner
Will no one spare a dime?
I'm the child that never learns to read
Because no one spared the time
I am the one in ten
A number on a list
I am the one in ten
Even though I don't exist
Nobody knows me
But I'm always there
A statistic, a reminder
of a world that doesn't care
I'm the murderer, the victim
The license with the gun
I'm the sad and bruised old lady
In an alley in a slum
I'm a middle-aged businessman
With chronic heart disease
I'm another teenage suicide
In a street that has no trees
I am the one in ten
A number on a list
I am the one in ten
Even though I don't exist
Nobody knows me
But I'm always there
A statistic, a reminder
of a world that doesn't care
I'm a starving Third World mother
A refugee without a home
I'm a housewife hooked on Valium
I'm a pensioner alone
I'm a cancer-ridden specter
Covering the earth
I'm another hungry baby
I'm an accident of birth
I am the one in ten
A number on a list
I am the one in ten
Even though I don't exist
Nobody knows me
But I'm always there
A statistic, a reminder
of a world that doesn't care
Even though it was a charting single in the UK (#16), I'd never before heard the fantastic "Don't Let It Pass You By," which is a reality check/sympathetic and urgent call to action: you've only got one life to lead and a limited amount of time to live it, so don't be passive and complacent--particularly if you find yourself downtrodden and feeling powerless. (The track then segues into a fantastic dub with toasting that suggests that one should "burn two spliff, play Ital riddim" to help get in the right frame of mind to accomplish this...)
There's no one coming with that freedom train
There's nowhere you can go where you feel no pain
Take the blinkers off your eyes
The power's in your hand
Stop waiting for your ticket to the promised land
Don't let it pass you by!
Don't let it pass you by!
Don't let it pass you by!
There ain't no heaven and there ain't no hell
Except the one we're in and you know too well
There's no one waiting on
Waiting on a higher high
Don't let the only world you're ever gonna live in
Pass you by
"Don't Slow Down" (the flip side to the "Don't Let It Pass You By" single) is cut from the same cloth, but explicitly concerned with mortality--you have an expiration date ("Impatience is a virtue/Catch me if you can/The seconds have been ticking by/Since your life began"). Despite the song's beauty, "Silent Witness" documents the bleak life on Maggie's farm--things are so bad that the mannequins--who "see" everything that goes down on the street--would flee if they could:
"The neon haze of city lights
The tribal sound of marching feet
Cuts through the gloom on cold dark nights
The tired and homeless roam the streets
The sirens wail, engines roar
A shadowed man just glances around
A victim of life's mindless toil
Lies cold and helpless on the ground
The window dummies' silent stare
Bears witness on the nights
If they could move, what it would prove
To see them all take flight
The neon haze of city lights
The tribal sound of marching feet
Cuts through the gloom on cold dark nights
The tired and homeless roam the streets
The walls shout loud with angry words
The people air their views
The poor can scream but no one hears
The concrete jungle sings the blues
The window dummies' silent stare
Bears witness on the nights
If they could move, what it would prove
To see them all take flight"
The irresistibly cheery, singsongy "Lambs Bread" is a plea of sorts for the legalization of marijuana (and elimination of the criminal drug trade) and the excellent "Don't Walk on the Grass" presumably makes the same case. The mysterious "Dr. X" (named after this movie?) is another incredible, bubbly, and lushly melodic instrumental reggae cut.
Maybe you can't stay angry and young (and poor) forever--the road to success is full of compromise that can eat away at one's mission and subtly corrupt one's noble ideals--the pursuit and acquisition of money absolutely has this effect. (I certainly struggle with being a good and decent person in a society that doesn't necessarily value these qualities.) But I miss this hungry and pissed-off version of UB40 and believe that we need these kind of catchy, socially-aware protest songs more than ever...
+ + + +
Next on my list to (hopefully) find in the bins: Present Arms in Dub!
+ + + +