(By Steve Shafer)
Since he appeared on both the label's first (The Special AKA "Gangsters" b/w The Selecter "The Selecter" in 1979) and last singles (the J.B's Allstars socialist view of/support for teachers and uniformly effective public education, "The Alphabet Army" in 1986), ska drummer, songwriter, and producer extraordinaire John "Prince Rimshot" Bradbury could be considered as the alpha and omega of 2 Tone--and he went on to keep the faith with ska music up to his very end, many decades after 2 Tone had closed up shop.
In the late 70s (read about his pre-Specials life in the Guardian's excellent obituary; take note that his mother was fiercely anti-racist and pro-immigrant), Bradbury traveled in the Coventry music circles of both Neol Davies and Jerry Dammers--he was the drummer for Davies' The Transposed Men (which contained another future Selecter, Desmond Brown) and was a housemate of Dammers'. When The Specials' first drummer Silverton Hutchinson quit the band, Dammers (who had some reservations that were overridden by Specials' rhythm guitarist Lynval Golding) recruited Bradbury to The Specials and they soon recorded their first song "Gangsters" with Bradbury behind the kit (along with early versions of "Nite Klub" and "Too Much Too Young" that the band didn't think were in any shape to be released). With their borrowed recording funds exhausted and without a flip side for "Gangsters," Dammers approached friend Neol Davies, who--months earlier--had recorded a demo instrumental track he had written with Bradbury (initially titled "Kingston Affair"), which had been produced by Roger Lomas with Bradbury on drums and Barry Jones on trombone. The track was renamed "The Selecter" (by a then non-existent band called The Selecter) and pressed up as part of the first double A-sided split single from the pre-Chrysalis 2 Tone Records--which ignited the feverish late 70s ska craze in the UK (and forced Davies to quickly assemble his new band).
Bradbury, of course, quickly settled in and served as the brilliant, crisply precise, and wonderfully versatile propulsive force--the heartbeat--that gave life to all of The Specials' incredible songs (for reminders of Bradbury's fantastic drumming skills, check out "Too Much Too Young," "Nite Klub," "Blank Expression," or "Man at C and A") on their two albums, related singles, and two EPs, which continue to captivate and inspire legions of ska fans and musicians worldwide to this very day. According to Specials' bassist Horace Panter in his book "Ska'd for Life," "Brad had the reggae groove down. With the exception of Jim Brown from UB40, I don't know of any other white drummer who could get that authentic feel. He didn't just play reggae, he could change tempo seamlessly from a 'one-drop' reggae beat to a 'four-on-the-floor' rock section, as can be heard on 'It's Up to You'..." (which Bradbury helped co-write, along with "Nite Klub" and "Blank Expression.") He set the bar very high for all 2 Tone-influenced drummers to come...
After The Specials disintegrated in 1981, Bradbury followed Dammers into the next iteration of the band--The Special AKA--and co-wrote several songs ("Bright Lights," "Housebound," and "Break Down the Door") on their amazing reggae/no-wave jazz/soul-filled In the Studio LP. During this period, Bradbury also explored his love of Northern Soul (previously revealed via The Specials' cover of "Sock It To 'Em, J.B!" on More Specials, which he produced) by forming his own soul group, J.B's Allstars that signed with RCA Victor and released four singles on that label--the final, fifth one on 2 Tone.
(In the early 80s, Bradbury also founded his own short-lived label, Race Records, which released five reggae and soul singles, including one from The People, which featured a post-Selecter Charley Anderson and Desmond Brown.)
As the first (white hot) post-2 Tone UK ska scene (The Trojans, Potato 5, Laurel Aitken, Bad Manners, The Deltones, The Hotknives, The Riffs, The Forest Hillbillies, etc.) emerged in the late 80s, Bradbury was drafted to produce key albums for The Loafers (Contagious) and Maroon Town (High and Dry).
In the early 90s, Bradbury was presuaded to assemble an all-star 2 Tone road band after an encounter with Ian Copeland (brother of Stewart of The Police and Miles of IRS Records), owner of Frontier Booking International. Copeland had told Bradbury how the US ska scene (particularly in Southern California) was on the verge of (finally) breaking big and that a touring 2 Tone act would be very enthusiastically received (much more than any of these bands had experienced during their challenging visits to the USA in the early 80s). The result was The Special Beat (comprised, at various points, of Bradbury, Horace Panter, Lynval Golding, Neville Staple, Ranking Roger, Saxa, The Loafers' Sean Flowerdew, and others), which performed--obviously--Specials and Beat hits and embarked on several massively successful tours of the US (including the groundbreaking 1993 Skavoovee Tour with The Skatalites, The Selecter, and The Toasters) and Japan. When the Special Beat had run its course, Bradbury drummed for a few years for a version of The Selecter (with Pauline Black, Arthur "Gaps" Hendrickson, and Nick Welsh of Bad Manners and King Hammond fame), as well as Welsh's and Jennie (Belle Stars) Matthais's Big 5.
During the late 1990s and much of the 2000s--up until The Specials reformed with all members except Jerry Dammers in 2008 to perform at Bestival (billed as Terry Hall and Friends)--Bradbury worked on computers as an information technology (IT) specialist. The Bestival appearance (and their reception from the fans) convinced all involved to make a go of it again for a series of sold-out 30th anniversary reunion dates in 2009 in the UK, Japan, and Australia. Bradbury eagerly participated in every highly successful Specials reunion tour (that followed in 2011, 2013, and 2015), which brought the band to venues and festivals in the UK, US, Europe, Japan, Mexico, and Chile. At a recent BBC 6 Music songwriter's panel in Birmingham on December 7, 2016, Terry Hall was quoted as stating that The Specials were planning to tour the US and UK in 2016 with new material.
John Bradbury died of undisclosed causes on December 28, 2016.
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My sincere condolences go out to Bradbury's family, friends, and fans.
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(This post was greatly informed by selections from Paul "Willo" Williams' biography of The Specials, "You're Wondering Now: The Specials from Conception to Reunion." Thanks to the author for this invaluable resource on the band.)
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Wednesday, December 30, 2015
Tuesday, December 29, 2015
Specials Drummer John Bradbury Passes Away at Age 62
Absolutely devastating news comes today by way of the BBC, which is reporting that Specials drummer John Bradbury died last night (12/28/15) at age 62.
The band announced Bradbury's death via Twitter and has posted the following remembrance on The Specials' website:
"It is with deepest regret that we have to announce the very sad news that our much loved husband and father John "Brad" Bradbury passed away on Monday the 28th of December. Brad's drumming was the powerhouse behind The Specials and it was seen as a key part to the Two Tone sound.
He was much respected in the world of drumming and his style of reggae and ska was seen as genuinely ground breaking when The Specials first hit the charts in 1979. He was an integral part of The Specials reforming in 2008 and toured with them extensively up to the present day.
His contribution to the world of music can not be understated and he will much missed by family, friends and fans alike. It is the families sincerest wish that they are allowed the time to remember him privately."
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Our deepest condolences go out to Bradbury's family, friends, and fans.
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The band announced Bradbury's death via Twitter and has posted the following remembrance on The Specials' website:
"It is with deepest regret that we have to announce the very sad news that our much loved husband and father John "Brad" Bradbury passed away on Monday the 28th of December. Brad's drumming was the powerhouse behind The Specials and it was seen as a key part to the Two Tone sound.
He was much respected in the world of drumming and his style of reggae and ska was seen as genuinely ground breaking when The Specials first hit the charts in 1979. He was an integral part of The Specials reforming in 2008 and toured with them extensively up to the present day.
His contribution to the world of music can not be understated and he will much missed by family, friends and fans alike. It is the families sincerest wish that they are allowed the time to remember him privately."
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Our deepest condolences go out to Bradbury's family, friends, and fans.
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Monday, December 28, 2015
The Duff Guide to Ska's 2015 Year in Review, Part 2!
From the "This Are Two Tone" promotional poster. |
While I finish up writing short reviews of some of the 2015 ska releases (that I'm aware of) that deserve a mention here, you can check out some of other Duff Guide to Ska reviews and ruminations which you might have missed over the past year:
Adventures in Record Collecting: The Beat's "Psychedelic Rockers"
Richard Balls: "Be Stiff: The Stiff Records Story"
Checkerboard Phil and the 20th Anniversary of Checkerboard Kids
"I Don't Have a Say in the War Games That They Play" (Can't Protect and Won't Survive: 2 Tone's and New Wave's Cold War Dread)
Julien Temple's Madness Film: "The Liberty of Norton Folgate"
Life's Little Victories: Record Collecting #6 (UB40's Present Arms)
Oreskaband at The Gramercy Theater
Public Image Ltd. at The Playstation Theater
Radio Riddler and UB40 featuring Ali Campbell, Astro, and Mickey Campbell at Webster Hall
Shots in the Dark: Desmond Dekker's Black and Dekker
Tsuyoshi Kawakami of Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra
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Read Part 1 of this series here. Stay tuned for more reviews of ska releases from 2015...
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Saturday, December 26, 2015
The Duff Guide to Ska's 2015 Year In Review, Part 1!
Illustration by Hunt Emerson. |
2015 was a challenging year at work and with family matters. Nothing terrible, mind you--I was just very busy, with lots of demands on my time that kept me from writing about so many more ska releases and shows. So, my caveat is that my year-end review is by no means comprehensive. I missed out on a lot of great releases this year, but what I did manage to write about is very much worth your attention. And should you have some money left over from all of the holiday gift-giving or gift cards you received that are burning a hole in your pocket, please consider supporting these bands/releases by purchasing their music!
This is Part 1 of The Duff Guide to Ska's 2015 Year in Review...
Dubistry: Fuel for the Fire digital album (self-released through Bandcamp) -- Dubistry are one of those terrific, hard-to-pigeonhole bands that are an awesome mash-up of many musical styles--in this case, a sophisticated blend of ska/reggae, jazz, 70s rock and R and B, and more. Early 90s ska fans will take notice that lead singer Dunia Best was in Agent 99 with Agent Jay (as well as an early version of The Slackers) and will want to begin their exploration of Dubistry with one of the more straight-up reggae/dub tracks on the album, the almost apocalyptic, call to rise up and take action of "Tomorrow" ("You have to be fuel for the fire/Before you get burned/Because you never know/Which way the road will turn..."). Then check out the sweet, lovers rock of "Give It To Me One More Time"; a great roots reggae cover of Joni Mitchell's "Blue"; and the wonderful, stripped down (acoustic guitar and percussion), campfire ska of "Roll Away." The more musically omnivorous will love the excellent Steely Dan meets Stevie Wonder-ish earworm that is "Butterfly" and the gorgeously lush and romantic "All Through the Night" (that manages to be a great "Quiet Storm"-like soft-rock/soulful reggae hybrid). Don't miss out on this release--it's so good and essential!
Eastern Standard Time: "The Dragon" b/w "Miles and Miles" 7" (self-released) -- Read The Duff Guide to Ska review here.
Flying Vipers: The Green Tape cassette (Music A.D.D.) -- Read The Duff Guide to Ska review here.
The Frightnrs: "Sharon" b/w "Admiration" 7" (Mad Decent/The Full Hundred) -- Read The Duff Guide to Ska review here.
Heavensbee: Soul Mates digital album (Trilby Records) -- Read The Duff Guide to Ska review here.
H.R. and The Scotch Bonnets: Quest EP CD (Morphius Records) -- Read The Duff Guide to Ska review here.
The Lions: Soul Riot CD/2xLP (Stones Throw) -- This is the one release that I never got around to reviewing this year because I was afraid of not being able to do it justice. I am in awe of this record. Like Fishbone's Truth and Soul or Marvin Gaye's What's Going On, The Lions' absolutely phenomenal Soul Riot is full of songs of defiance, despair, anger, and pure joy (where love and lust are concerned) that reflect the black American experience--as the nation's horrific legacy of slavery continues to play out in so many devastating ways (in particular, see "When It Rains," "At a Loss," and "Going Nowhere"). And like Fishbone's aforementioned marketer-confounding album, Soul Riot incorporates bits of many other musical genres into its heady roots reggae mix, including R and B, funk, De La Soul-like hip hop, and dancehall. With vocal duties shared by Deston Berry, Alex Desert (both of Hepcat), Malik Moore (The Bullets, Ocean 11), Black Shakespeare (cousin of Robbie), and even Angelo Moore of Fishbone (on the awesome "Rhythm Rock") and a band full of LA ska and reggae all-star musicians, the songs of social consciousness and protest have rarely sounded this good and compelling. (Did I mention their deadly cool cover of The Clash's "Magnificent Seven" recorded for the essential The Clash Goes Jamaican comp?) As far as I'm concerned, this is the album of the year.
Mento Buru: A Bailar con Mento Buru 7" (Steady Beat Records) -- Read The Duff Guide to Ska review here.
The Meow Meows: Friends on Benefits 7" EP (Jump Up Records) -- Read The Duff Guide to Ska review here.
The Reggay Lords: Run or Get Down LP (Jump Up Records) -- Read The Duff Guide to Ska review here.
The Selecter: Access All Areas CD/DVD (Edsel) -- Read The Duff Guide to Ska review here.
The Selecter: Subculture CD/LP (DMF/Redeye) -- Read The Duff Guide to Ska review here.
The Specials: More Specials 2xCD reissue (Chrysalis) -- While I cringe at how many times The Specials' catalogue has been reissued in various packages (why can't Rico's That Man is Forward and Jama Rico receive this kind of attention?!), I picked up this deluxe version at the recommendation of a friend, who told me that the newly remastered More Specials (so often neglected/maligned in the past) had never sounded so good. One listen to the extraordinary, nuclear dread-filled opening to "Man at C and A"--the only song Jerry Dammers and Terry Hall ever wrote together--or the brightly masked despair of being stuck in a life with no future in Lynval Golding's brilliant "Do Nothing" and you'll be convinced.
Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra: Ska Me Forever LP/digital (Nacional) -- Read The Duff Guide to Ska review here.
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Click here for Part 2 of The Duff Guide to Ska's 2015 Year in Review!
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NYC Winter 2015 Ska Calendar #17
King Stitt at the controls. |
Vic Ruggiero, King Django, The Snails, Los Thujones
The Grand Victory
245 Grand Street
Brooklyn, NY
$10/21+
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Friday, January 15, 2016 @ 12 midnight
Brown Rice Family
Blue Note
131 West 3rd Street
New York, NY
$10/21+
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Friday, January 22, 2016 @ 10:30 pm
Uzimon
Mercury Lounge
217 East Houston Street
New York, NY
$10/21+
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Saturday, January 23, 2016 @ 3:00 pm
Beat Brigade, Damn Long Hairs, Sketchy, Girth Control
The Grand Victory
245 Grand Street
Brookyn, NY
$10/18+
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Saturday, January 23rd, 2016 @ 8:00 pm
Skarroneros' Sixth Anniversary show w/Gangway, Droogettes, Escasos Recursos
Don Pedro
90 Manhattan Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
21+
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Sunday, January 24, 2016 @ 6:00 pm
The Toasters, Hub City Stompers, Molly Rhythm, Death in the Arena, Backyard Superheroes, Autocracy East
The Backstage at Championship Bar
931 Chambers Street
Trenton, NJ
All ages
Tix: $13/$15
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Saturday, February 6, 2016 @ 8:00 pm
The London Souls (doing a tribute to Bob Marley in honor of his birthday), Ticklah, Dub is a Weapon (15th anniversary!)
Brooklyn Bowl
61 Wythe Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$20/21+
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Wednesday, March 9, 2016 @ 7:00 pm
Less Than Jake (playing Losing Streak and more), Westbound Train, Mephiskapheles
Highline Ballroom
431 West 16th Street
New York, NY
All ages
Tix: $14.50
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Thursday, March 10, 2016 @ 7:00 pm
Less Than Jake (playing Hello Rockview and more), Bigwig, Mickey Erg
The Gramercy Theater
127 East 23rd Street
New York, NY
All ages
Tix: $20
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Thursday, March 10, 2016 @ 9:30 pm
The Snails
Mercury Lounge
217 East Houston Street
New York, NY
$12/21+
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Wednesday, December 23, 2015
Soon Come: The Duff Guide to Ska Year in Review
As we're doing our last-minute shopping and present wrapping, we're also putting the finishing touches on our review of the past year in ska music.
Keep an eye out for it here soon...
Happy Holidays!
Keep an eye out for it here soon...
Happy Holidays!
Thursday, December 17, 2015
Rico Rodriguez "Star Wars" b/w "Take Five"!
In the years following the release of his mind-blowing and critically acclaimed Man from Wareika (Island Records, 1976), right up to his involvement with The Specials and 2 Tone, Rico Rodriguez released a series of now fairly rare 12" singles (particularly in America) that included covers of John Williams' "Star Wars" theme (which, of course, was all the rage in 1977) and Paul Desmond's jazz classic (via the Dave Brubeck Quartet) "Take Five."
With this in mind, Rico fans--and "Star Wars" obsessives--should take note that Jump Up Records has a very limited number of a new single containing both "Star Wars" and "Take Five" on both red and orange vinyl (my order has already been placed)!
With this in mind, Rico fans--and "Star Wars" obsessives--should take note that Jump Up Records has a very limited number of a new single containing both "Star Wars" and "Take Five" on both red and orange vinyl (my order has already been placed)!
Video for "When Your Someday Come" from Chris Murray Combo's New Album "Buckle Up"!
The Chris Murray Combo has just released its second album, Buckle Up (Unstrictly Roots)! (Their debut was Why So Rude in 2008.) Chris recently wrote to tell me that, "I love all the albums I've made, but this is the one that I've always wanted to make!" It was produced in his new home studio, without time or budget limitations that might have prevented him from making it all the way he envisioned.
Check out the video for the incredibly catchy "When Your Someday Come" to see one of the the results of CMC's efforts...
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We'll have a review of the album once we get our hands on a copy of the CD!
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Check out the video for the incredibly catchy "When Your Someday Come" to see one of the the results of CMC's efforts...
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We'll have a review of the album once we get our hands on a copy of the CD!
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Christmas Ska Releases from The Toasters and Friends, Roger Rivas and the Brothers of Reggae, and Dr. Ring Ding!
Cover illustration by Jordan Worley. |
Ska fans--who love this season like everyone else--have the chance to pick up three, great new Christmas releases to help you celebrate the holiday in a ska and reggae style or as a gift for that special someone...
The Toasters and Friends Christma-ska
Jump Up Records has just re-issued the rare (at least in any physical format) Toasters and Friends Christma-ska album on limited-edition red or green vinyl. This compilation of holiday tracks was recorded in 1997 for the Moon Ska Tokyo/Tachyon label and released on CD in Japan. (We had about 15 or so copies for sale at the East 10th Street Moon store--but, other than these imports--you really couldn't find this anywhere outside of Japan.) At the time, Tachyon International had licensed a good portion of Moon Ska's catalogue for release on their Moon Ska Tokyo imprint--but they also wanted an exclusive album of tracks to help promote Moon's sister label in Japan.
In addition to The Toasters, Buford O'Sullivan Experience, NY Ska Jazz Ensemble cuts listed below, the Japanese Christma-ska version also featured recordings by The Bluebeats, The Allstonians, and Skinnerbox. Three of The Toasters' tracks are original compositions ("Happy Christmas," "Christmas Time Again," and "Rudy Christmas A Jail").
Side Tree
1) The Toasters: "Happy Christmas"
2) The Toasters: "Sleigh Ride"
3) The Toasters: "Winter Wonderland"
4) The Toasters: "Little Drummer Boy"
5) The Toasters "Rudy Christmas A Jail"
6) The Toasters: "War Is Over"
7) Buford O’Sullivan Experience: "Grandma Got Run Over By A Reindeer"
Peppermint Platter
1) The Toasters: "Blue Christmas"
2) The Toasters: "Feliz Navidad"
3) Buford O’Sullivan Experience: "Did You Buy What I Bought?"
4) The Toasters: "We Three Kings"
5) The Toasters: "Christmas Time Again"
6) The Toasters: "God Rock You Steady Gentlemen"
7) New York Ska Jazz Ensemble: "Joy To The World"
I've played this album at almost every Christmas party/get-together I've had since it's release--and it's always a crowd-pleaser!
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Roger Rivas and the Brothers of Reggae "Deck the Halls" b/w "Jingle Bells"
Jump Up has also released a fantastic skinhead reggae Christmas single (on red or green vinyl) from Roger Rivas (Aggrolites, The Bullets) and the Brothers of Reggae. "Deck the Halls" and "Jingle Bells" have never sounded so good to these ears. This is Xmas straight out of JA, circa 1969!
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Dr. Ring Ding Once a Year
While I'm still waiting for it to arrive in the mail, I'm positive that Dr. Ring Ding's Once a Year (Pork Pie Records) is going to be pretty fantastic (as is everything he produces!). The album is billed as a mix of original material and covers of traditional Christmas songs:
1. "Once A Year"
2. "Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas"
3. "Dumpa Ska"
4. "Petit Papa Noël"
5. "Rub-A-Dub Santa"
6. "Lulajże Jezuniu"
7. "Twelve Elves"
8. "All I Wanna Do (On Christmas Day)"
9. "I Believe"
10. "I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus"
11. "Les Anges Dans Nos Campagnes"
12. "The Christmas Song"
13. "Christmas Again"
In keeping with the holiday spirit of giving to those in need, for every CD sold through Pork Pie, 1 € of it will be donated to a residential group for underprivileged kids in Germany (more info here: www.kinder-jugendhilfe.de).
Here's Dr. Ring Ding's video trailer for Once a Year...
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Happy holidays!
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Saturday, December 12, 2015
Lonely Atom Records Lauches Indiegogo Campaign for Series of Split Single Releases!
To fund this project, the label has been booking mixed-genre concerts to showcase awesome local and independent music on Long Island (roughly one a month), and have plans to expand into NYC in early 2016.
Lonely Atom Records, a new artist run/artist motivated record label, has launched an Indiegogo campaign to kick off their inaugural series of 7" records, Radical Chemicals.
Radical Chemicals is a six (6) 7" split singles record series pressed on colored vinyl featuring some of the best up-and-coming bands from the NYC/tristate area.
The label is looking to raise money to cover some of their startup costs to make deposits on materials and pressing the first volume in the series. Having spent over a year researching/prepping their process, the label hopes to keep the costs for listeners low by using a network of DIY visual artists/craftspeople, and upfront costs for bands participating to $0 out of pocket for this project from tracking through pressing (which is the whole point!).
The bands signed for this project so far include:
The Pandemics
InCircles
American Pinup
Karikatura
More TBA as the project continues.
To encourage people to support this endeavor, Lonely Atom Records is offering a wide variety of rewards at different pledge tiers. Tons of stuff ranging from copies of their debut release in the series (a split single between The Pandemics and InCircles) to t-shirts, limited edition picture discs and more. One package even includes admission to every concert the label books between the end of the pledge drive and New Year's Eve, 2020.
The label knows that their target of $3,600 won't cover the entire series (projected cost of just the records and packaging are well over $10K), but is only seeking costs to get them started on deposits with visual artists and materials (and the rewards of course!). You can find more info at www.lonelyatomrecords.com.
Lonely Atom Records, a new artist run/artist motivated record label, has launched an Indiegogo campaign to kick off their inaugural series of 7" records, Radical Chemicals.
Radical Chemicals is a six (6) 7" split singles record series pressed on colored vinyl featuring some of the best up-and-coming bands from the NYC/tristate area.
The label is looking to raise money to cover some of their startup costs to make deposits on materials and pressing the first volume in the series. Having spent over a year researching/prepping their process, the label hopes to keep the costs for listeners low by using a network of DIY visual artists/craftspeople, and upfront costs for bands participating to $0 out of pocket for this project from tracking through pressing (which is the whole point!).
The bands signed for this project so far include:
The Pandemics
InCircles
American Pinup
Karikatura
More TBA as the project continues.
To encourage people to support this endeavor, Lonely Atom Records is offering a wide variety of rewards at different pledge tiers. Tons of stuff ranging from copies of their debut release in the series (a split single between The Pandemics and InCircles) to t-shirts, limited edition picture discs and more. One package even includes admission to every concert the label books between the end of the pledge drive and New Year's Eve, 2020.
The label knows that their target of $3,600 won't cover the entire series (projected cost of just the records and packaging are well over $10K), but is only seeking costs to get them started on deposits with visual artists and materials (and the rewards of course!). You can find more info at www.lonelyatomrecords.com.
Preview of New Album from J. Navarro and The Traitors
Jay Navarro (of The Suicide Machines) and Eric Abbey (of 1592) have joined musical forces to bring back a sharp 2 Tone/punky-reggae Clash sound they feel is missing from the Detroit scene in the form of J. Navarro and the Traitors. Their debut album Criminals and Lions--mixed by Agent Jay (Slackers/Crazy Baldhead)--will be released on Asbestos Records at some point early in the new year.
However, you can preview/purchase (name your price!) two tracks off Criminals and Lions from their Bandcamp page now! "Deeper" is a great, hard-driving ska track (that sounds like it could be from King Apparatus' debut album) about seeing beyond the superficial differences that can be used to divide us:
"Deeper than white.
(Deeper!)
Deeper than black.
(Deeper!)
Deeper than inside.
We're all human!"
"Water" refers to Detroit's 2014 water crisis, which emerged after the city entered bankruptcy and was placed under the control of an emergency manager (appointed by Michigan's governor). In his search to find revenue for the city's coffers, the manager decided to go after Detroit's poorest black residents--about 40% of this city's population lives in poverty--who were behind on their water bills and turned off their water if they couldn't pay. This prompted the United Nations to issue this unusual rebuke: "Disconnection of water services because of failure to pay due to lack of means constitutes a violation of the human right to water and other international human rights." What was particularly galling was the it appeared that the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department wasn't pursing significant, overdue commercial and municipal water bills with as much zeal (and wasn't shutting off their water when payment wasn't forthcoming). After echoing the UN's declaration, "water is a human right--please don't stop the water," J. Navarro and the Traitors' terrifically upbeat track (very appropriately) segues into a spirited ska cover of Toots and Maytals' "Pressure Drop" that simultaneously recognizes and sympathizes with the plight of Detroit's residents, while calling out the powers that be for their inhumane actions:
"I say a pressure drop, oh pressure
Oh yeah, pressure drop a drop on you
I say a pressure drop, oh pressure
Oh yeah, pressure drop a drop on you
I say when it drops, oh you gonna feel it
Know that you were doing wrong!
I say when it drops, oh you gonna feel it
Know that you were doing wrong!"
We need more protest songs like this.
After hearing these two tracks, I can't wait to hear the rest of the album!
However, you can preview/purchase (name your price!) two tracks off Criminals and Lions from their Bandcamp page now! "Deeper" is a great, hard-driving ska track (that sounds like it could be from King Apparatus' debut album) about seeing beyond the superficial differences that can be used to divide us:
"Deeper than white.
(Deeper!)
Deeper than black.
(Deeper!)
Deeper than inside.
We're all human!"
"Water" refers to Detroit's 2014 water crisis, which emerged after the city entered bankruptcy and was placed under the control of an emergency manager (appointed by Michigan's governor). In his search to find revenue for the city's coffers, the manager decided to go after Detroit's poorest black residents--about 40% of this city's population lives in poverty--who were behind on their water bills and turned off their water if they couldn't pay. This prompted the United Nations to issue this unusual rebuke: "Disconnection of water services because of failure to pay due to lack of means constitutes a violation of the human right to water and other international human rights." What was particularly galling was the it appeared that the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department wasn't pursing significant, overdue commercial and municipal water bills with as much zeal (and wasn't shutting off their water when payment wasn't forthcoming). After echoing the UN's declaration, "water is a human right--please don't stop the water," J. Navarro and the Traitors' terrifically upbeat track (very appropriately) segues into a spirited ska cover of Toots and Maytals' "Pressure Drop" that simultaneously recognizes and sympathizes with the plight of Detroit's residents, while calling out the powers that be for their inhumane actions:
"I say a pressure drop, oh pressure
Oh yeah, pressure drop a drop on you
I say a pressure drop, oh pressure
Oh yeah, pressure drop a drop on you
I say when it drops, oh you gonna feel it
Know that you were doing wrong!
I say when it drops, oh you gonna feel it
Know that you were doing wrong!"
We need more protest songs like this.
After hearing these two tracks, I can't wait to hear the rest of the album!
Thursday, December 10, 2015
The Phoenix City All-stars Tackle Dexy's Midnight Runners!
The long-gestating new album from the Phoenix City All-stars is finally seeing the light of day (it was originally scheduled for release last April). For their third album--Searching for the Young Ska Rebels (a nice play on this 1980 debut record)--the Phoenix City All-stars are covering the Stax/Motown-influenced soul music of Dexy's Midnight Runners (Dammers wanted to sign them to 2 Tone back in the day, you know.) You can order the limited-edition LP or CD here. To whet your appetite, take a listen to the Searching for the Young Ska Rebels album sampler video below.
The back story on the Phoenix City All-stars is that they're led by Sean Flowerdew (of Pama Int'l and the organizer of the London International Ska Festival) and Lenny Bignell (of The Sidewalk Doctors). The Phoenix City All-stars' two previous albums are stellar Studio One-type approaches to the 2 Tone catalogue (Two Tone Gone Ska) and select Rolling Stones hits (Skatisfaction). Read The Duff Guide to Ska reviews of these albums here and here.
Here's the Searching for the Young Ska Rebels track list for the LP:
"Burn It Down"
"Geno"
"Seven Days Is Too Long"
"I Couldn't Dub It If I Tried"
"There There My Dear"
"Because of You"
"Jackie Wilson Said"
"Come On Dubleen"
And the following tracks are available on the CD and digital album:
"Because of You" (organ version)
"Seven Days Is Too Long" (instrumental)
The back story on the Phoenix City All-stars is that they're led by Sean Flowerdew (of Pama Int'l and the organizer of the London International Ska Festival) and Lenny Bignell (of The Sidewalk Doctors). The Phoenix City All-stars' two previous albums are stellar Studio One-type approaches to the 2 Tone catalogue (Two Tone Gone Ska) and select Rolling Stones hits (Skatisfaction). Read The Duff Guide to Ska reviews of these albums here and here.
Here's the Searching for the Young Ska Rebels track list for the LP:
"Burn It Down"
"Geno"
"Seven Days Is Too Long"
"I Couldn't Dub It If I Tried"
"There There My Dear"
"Because of You"
"Jackie Wilson Said"
"Come On Dubleen"
And the following tracks are available on the CD and digital album:
"Because of You" (organ version)
"Seven Days Is Too Long" (instrumental)
Tuesday, December 8, 2015
Free Ska Sampler from Rare Breed Recording Co.!
Rare Breed Recording Co., a relatively new ska label co-founded by Vinnie Fiorello from Less Than Jake and Obi Fernandez of Westbound Train, has a little something to stuff your, um, digital stocking with this holiday season. They're offering a free download of their Winter 2015/16 Sampler, which features tracks from both well-known and newer acts, including The Slackers, King Django, Big D and The Kids Table, Obi Fernandez, Brooklyn Attractors, The Far East, The Steady 45's, The Pomps, JukeBox 101 (Jeff Roffredo and Jesse Wagner of The Aggrolites), Anthony Raneri, Beebs and Her Money Makers, Doped Up Dollies, and Ranking Joe with The Pomps.
Monday, December 7, 2015
Accidental Fire Destroys Lee "Scratch" Perry's Studio in Switzerland
The BBC and other outlets (NME, AV Club, etc.) report that Lee "Scratch" Perry accidentally burnt down his home recording studio in Switzerland last week after he left a candle unattended in his "secret lab." (You may recall that Perry his legendary Black Ark studio in Kingston, JA also was destroyed by an intentional or accidental fire in 1979.) Tragically, Perry lost his "life collections" of studio equipment, recordings, books, outfits, and other materials and memorabilia related to his long and incredible career as a performer and producer.
CBC Radio has a terrific interview with Mirielle Perry and Lee Perry from a day after the fire that's very much worth reading (from what she says about Perry's behavior with electrical wires and potentially combustable materials, it's surprising that he doesn't start more fires!), as well as Lee "Scratch" Perry's original Facebook post announcing the destruction of his studio (where he offers to put his fans on the guest list of his shows in exchange for putting together the "magic hats" and "special outfits" that he wears during his performances--all the old ones all went up in flames).
CBC Radio has a terrific interview with Mirielle Perry and Lee Perry from a day after the fire that's very much worth reading (from what she says about Perry's behavior with electrical wires and potentially combustable materials, it's surprising that he doesn't start more fires!), as well as Lee "Scratch" Perry's original Facebook post announcing the destruction of his studio (where he offers to put his fans on the guest list of his shows in exchange for putting together the "magic hats" and "special outfits" that he wears during his performances--all the old ones all went up in flames).
Jools Holland BBC Radio 2 Tribute to Rico Rodriguez
It's only available for a limited time (23 more days from today, to be exact), so when you have a moment, listen to Jools Holland's recent tribute to/celebration of Rico Rodriguez on BBC Radio 2. Holland played a fantastic mix of recordings of Rico's own music ("Man From Wareika"), as well his absolutely essential contributions to other musician's songs (Dandy Livingstone's "Rudy, A Message to You," The Specials' "Ghost Town"). 2 Tone's/The Specials'/The Special AKA's Jerry Dammers and reggae saxophonist Michael "Bammie" Rose (who's worked with Rico, Aswad, Dennis Bovell, Lee Perry, and Jools Holland's band) were on hand to share their memories of Rico and their thoughts about his incredible musical career.
Friday, December 4, 2015
NYC Winter 2015 Ska Calendar #16
Fatty ready for snow! |
Brown Rice Family, Underground Horns
Drom
85 Avenue A (between 5th and 6th Streets)
New York, NY
$10 in advance/$15 at door
+ + + +
Saturday, December 12, 2016 @ 9:00 pm
Dubistry
Shrine NYC
2271 Adam Clayton Powell Jr Blvd (at 134th Street)
New York, NY
No cover!
+ + + +
Wednesday, December 18, 2015
HR (of Bad Brains), Dubb Agents, Banddroidz, Skarroneros
Bowery Electric
327 Bowery
New York, NY
+ + + +
Saturday, December 19, 2015 @ 7:00 pm
The Slackers, The Pietasters, Sammy K, The Snails,
Irving Plaza
17 Irving Place
New York, NY
$32.50
+ + + +
Wednesday, December 30, 2015 @ 7:00 pm
Vic Ruggiero, King Django, The Snails, Los Thujones
The Grand Victory
245 Grand Street
Brooklyn, NY
$10/21+
+ + + +
Friday, January 22, 2016 @ 10:30 pm
Uzimon
Mercury Lounge
217 East Houston Street
New York, NY
$10/21+
+ + + +
Sunday, January 24, 2016 @ 6:00 pm
The Toasters, Hub City Stompers, Molly Rhythm, Death in the Arena, Backyard Superheroes, Autocracy East
The Backstage at Championship Bar
931 Chambers Street
Trenton, NJ
All ages
Tix: $13/$15
+ + + +
Wednesday, March 9, 2016 @ 7:00 pm
Less Than Jake, Westbound Train, Mephiskapheles,
Highline Ballroom
431 West 16th Street
New York, NY
All ages
Tix: $14.50
+ + + +
Thursday, March 10, 2016 @ 9:30 pm
The Snails
Mercury Lounge
217 East Houston Street
New York, NY
$12/21+
+ + + +
Thursday, December 3, 2015
Duff Review: The Selecter "Subculture"
DMF/Redeye
CD/LP
2015
(Review by Steve Shafer)
After hearing how good their String Theory album was from my friend Marc Wasserman (Marco on the Bass blog, Bigger Thomas, Rude Boy George, Heavensbee)--and then catching their fantastic and surprisingly fun show at New York City's Gramercy Theater in September of 2013--I was curious to as to what I would find on Subculture, the third album from Pauline Black's and Arthur "Gaps" Hendrickson's iteration of The Selecter. What finally compelled me to buy the album was randomly coming across Pauline Black's terrific interview with Rachel Martin on NPR in late September, where Black commented that she and Hendrickson are like the Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire of ska! (It's been a long time since a new ska record has been given a strong promotional push in the US --check out these interviews on Vice's Noisey music blog and Flavorwire, and read a profile of Ms. Black on Vice's women's experiences-focused site, Broadly).
I recently brought along the Subculture CD for a long car trip, since I had many uninterrupted hours to listen to--and digest--this album. From the very first play, I was struck by how many strong, catchy, and pointedly political songs there are on Subculture (apart from two covers, all songs are credited to Black, Hendrickson, and Neil Pyzer--who plays sax, guitar, and keys; recorded and produced the album; and is a former member of post-punk band Spear of Destiny; it also should be noted that the great Prince Fatty did a stellar job of mixing everything). While The Selecter with Black and Hendrickson is clearly rooted in the sound, vision, and social consciousness of the original 2 Tone version of the band, their new songs aren't attempting to be a rehash or clever facsimile of the band's classic sound captured on Too Much Pressure (which, apart from several excellent vintage ska covers and two originals by Black, was very much shaped by Neol Davies' stellar songwriting). The better reference point is Celebrate the Bullet, where The Selecter's sound expanded to incorporate more elements of reggae and rock, as well as material from additional songwriters within the group (on Celebrate the Bullet, Davies wrote five of the tracks, Black composed three, Compton Amanor penned two, and Gaps one).
As the Banksy-like street art cover suggests, Subculture is about presenting the alternative viewpoint in contrast to whatever is being propagated in the mainstream. On one level, the album acknowledges (and celebrates!) ska music's dogged and less-than-glorious place in the pop culture hierarchy. But it also is very concerned with issues of political, social, and economic injustice. Many of the songs on Subculture are written from the point-of-view of the wronged and oppressed--groups of people whose interests are subordinate to those of the dominant society.
Inspired by appalling incidents in both the UK and the US, "Breakdown," the most politically potent song on the album, posits that the relatively frequent unjustified police killings of mostly unarmed (and sometimes handcuffed) black boys, men, and women are a horrific symptom of entrenched racism, societal dysfunction, and purposeful neglect. The failure of government and institutions at all levels to successfully address long-standing issues afflicting disadvantaged communities of color--substandard schools and public services; job and housing discrimination; limited access to health care; grinding and inescapable poverty; crime/addiction; and much more--has created neighborhoods, towns, even entire cities, full of people that have been effectively abandoned/written off. They are "others" apart from the rest of society, who--as the conservative/Ayn Rand-ian narrative goes--through some moral failing/deficit are responsible for their own lot in life (the rich are all self-made men, who achieved great success without anyone else's help, right?)--and, as such, society isn't responsible for their well-being. (It probably doesn't help that the people in these poor communities of color don't have the power to influence or flat out rig the system for their own benefit.)
In these neighborhoods, cities, and towns, nothing functions as it should, including the law and those who are entrusted to enforce it.
"I know a place
Where after six it's shut down
Where police just a drive around
But people just go on with their lives
The same
Stranger beware
The taxicab won't take you there
And he will charge you double fare
He says that there is danger down there
There's going to be a breakdown
A cultural breakdown
A social breakdown
In the eyes of the law
There's going to be a breakdown
A cultural breakdown
A social breakdown
We've heard it all before
Young souls rebel
They need to make a quick buck
They don't rely on nobody's luck
But people just go on with their lives
The same
Out on the streets
People sending dangerous tweets
For five minutes of dubious fame
So, tell me who is to blame?"
After Pauline Black sings, "Some things are so wrong that nothing ever makes it right," Gaps Hendrickson recites a devastatingly long list of black boys, women, and men unjustifiably killed by police in the UK and USA, starting with Stephen Lawrence and ending with Trayvon Martin, Renisha McBride, Michael Brown, and Tamir Rice (though there seems to be an ever-growing number of new names to add to this list...). "Breakdown" is a "Ghost Town" of sorts for the 21st century (it borrows just enough of "Ghost Town's" structure and snippets of its melody and horn lines to reinforce that notion) and like that iconic song, it reflects the great inequity, fractiousness, and despair of our times.
[I love how this song references "Out in the Streets," which Neol Davies states in the liner notes for Access All Areas was about being young and having nothing to do after the pubs closed at 11:00 pm: "You find yourself driving around the ring road and end up somewhere you wish you hadn't. It was a comment on failed nights out in a city like Coventry--out on the streets again."]
It's fitting that the striking "Karma" follows "Breakdown," as they're of a piece. "Karma" zeros in on individual people's bad decisions instead of society's, though the people in the song (a John and a prostitute, a neglected kid and his drug-addicted mother, an abused woman and her abuser, the rich few and host of impoverished people) are stuck inflicting pain and unhappiness on each other (trapped in the neighborhood, town, or city of "Breakdown"), in an unbroken circle of misery (refrain: "And the world spins around/What goes around, round, round/Always comes back one day").
Could it really be that the last ska song to decry the grossly festering Israeli/Palestinian conflict was The Special AKA's "War Crimes" in 1982? With its sly reference to the Biblical tower of Babel myth in Genesis (early in human history, God thought that humanity--which only had one common language--had too much freedom and power, and were full of hubris, so he created and imposed many different languages on human beings, so they couldn't communicate easily with each other) and its cheeky alliterative pun, The Selecter's "Babble On" (...Babylon) expresses great outrage that the situation in Israel still hasn't be resolved after all these decades (two state solution, anyone?)--and that civilians continue to die on both sides: "I don't care what you say/I don't care who you pray to/You're killing innocents/You're killing innocents/Who cares whose god is greater/If there is one creator?" The song also implies that the Israeli/Palestinian conflict serves as proxy war between Christian and Islamic states and interests, which isn't too far off the mark.
The amazing, upbeat, should-be-a-single "Hit the Ground Running" offers encouragement to someone trying to earn a living on UK's "zero-hour contracts" (employees enter an insane agreement where they are essentially on-call all the time for their employer, who can give them anywhere between zero and 40 hours a week of work--talk about rigging the system to one's complete advantage!), while enduring the needlessly punitive bedroom tax (people receiving housing benefits in public housing can see their rent support reduced if it is determined they have "spare bedrooms").
Not all on Subculture is about bleak, seemingly intractable crises! There are many tracks about friendship and love. "It Never Worked Out" is Gaps Hendrickson's fantastic, melancholy, and regretful tune about all that he might be missing after the demise of a romantic relationship:
"Love was out to get me
I didn't know that
Yes, she treated me bad
I should have seen that
Wasted good, good times
Having good times
I didn't know then
What I know now
Life goes on and on
And we were living it up
Down life's happy road
We were giving it up
Been to lots of places
That I never seen
I didn't know then
What I know now
'Cos it never worked out
Yes, it never worked out
Oh, what life could be
Something keeps haunting me
Things I don't understand
Things I don't do now"
"Box Fresh" recognizes the enduring friendship and musical partnership between Black and Hendrickson, while "Open Goal" is about a couple whose relationship has devolved to the point where the man takes the woman completely for granted. The Selecter's cover of Patti Smith's and Bruce Springsteen's defiant classic rock love song "Because the Night" is given a brisk and pretty successful ska revamp here.
And there are other songs of hope, joy, and resilience, like "Walk the Walk" (whose horn line briefly quotes Dandy Livingston's "A Message to You, Rudy"), "Still I Rise" (written in tribute to Maya Angelou and her poem of the same name about being unbreakable in the face of all manner of oppression), Gap's "Stone Cold Sober" (presumably about successfully taking it one day at a time) and his extraordinary cover of Mr. Foundation's rude boy anthem "See Them A Come" ("Wicked dem come/But we nah run/We have no gun/So we nah run/Look how you get up every day/Saying prayers to the devil, I say/Should be like Cassius Clay/Steadfast strong and never run away/Through the hustlings and jugglings/You have to make a stance").
All in all, The Selecter's Subculture is an excellent and thoroughly enjoyable record that should please both graying 2 Tone fans and fresh, new, soon-to-be devotees. Like Madness (who themselves keep releasing brilliant new albums every few years!), they deserve extra points for resisting the lure of relying on nostalgia and doing the hard work of making something great and new.
CD/LP
2015
(Review by Steve Shafer)
After hearing how good their String Theory album was from my friend Marc Wasserman (Marco on the Bass blog, Bigger Thomas, Rude Boy George, Heavensbee)--and then catching their fantastic and surprisingly fun show at New York City's Gramercy Theater in September of 2013--I was curious to as to what I would find on Subculture, the third album from Pauline Black's and Arthur "Gaps" Hendrickson's iteration of The Selecter. What finally compelled me to buy the album was randomly coming across Pauline Black's terrific interview with Rachel Martin on NPR in late September, where Black commented that she and Hendrickson are like the Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire of ska! (It's been a long time since a new ska record has been given a strong promotional push in the US --check out these interviews on Vice's Noisey music blog and Flavorwire, and read a profile of Ms. Black on Vice's women's experiences-focused site, Broadly).
I recently brought along the Subculture CD for a long car trip, since I had many uninterrupted hours to listen to--and digest--this album. From the very first play, I was struck by how many strong, catchy, and pointedly political songs there are on Subculture (apart from two covers, all songs are credited to Black, Hendrickson, and Neil Pyzer--who plays sax, guitar, and keys; recorded and produced the album; and is a former member of post-punk band Spear of Destiny; it also should be noted that the great Prince Fatty did a stellar job of mixing everything). While The Selecter with Black and Hendrickson is clearly rooted in the sound, vision, and social consciousness of the original 2 Tone version of the band, their new songs aren't attempting to be a rehash or clever facsimile of the band's classic sound captured on Too Much Pressure (which, apart from several excellent vintage ska covers and two originals by Black, was very much shaped by Neol Davies' stellar songwriting). The better reference point is Celebrate the Bullet, where The Selecter's sound expanded to incorporate more elements of reggae and rock, as well as material from additional songwriters within the group (on Celebrate the Bullet, Davies wrote five of the tracks, Black composed three, Compton Amanor penned two, and Gaps one).
As the Banksy-like street art cover suggests, Subculture is about presenting the alternative viewpoint in contrast to whatever is being propagated in the mainstream. On one level, the album acknowledges (and celebrates!) ska music's dogged and less-than-glorious place in the pop culture hierarchy. But it also is very concerned with issues of political, social, and economic injustice. Many of the songs on Subculture are written from the point-of-view of the wronged and oppressed--groups of people whose interests are subordinate to those of the dominant society.
Inspired by appalling incidents in both the UK and the US, "Breakdown," the most politically potent song on the album, posits that the relatively frequent unjustified police killings of mostly unarmed (and sometimes handcuffed) black boys, men, and women are a horrific symptom of entrenched racism, societal dysfunction, and purposeful neglect. The failure of government and institutions at all levels to successfully address long-standing issues afflicting disadvantaged communities of color--substandard schools and public services; job and housing discrimination; limited access to health care; grinding and inescapable poverty; crime/addiction; and much more--has created neighborhoods, towns, even entire cities, full of people that have been effectively abandoned/written off. They are "others" apart from the rest of society, who--as the conservative/Ayn Rand-ian narrative goes--through some moral failing/deficit are responsible for their own lot in life (the rich are all self-made men, who achieved great success without anyone else's help, right?)--and, as such, society isn't responsible for their well-being. (It probably doesn't help that the people in these poor communities of color don't have the power to influence or flat out rig the system for their own benefit.)
In these neighborhoods, cities, and towns, nothing functions as it should, including the law and those who are entrusted to enforce it.
"I know a place
Where after six it's shut down
Where police just a drive around
But people just go on with their lives
The same
Stranger beware
The taxicab won't take you there
And he will charge you double fare
He says that there is danger down there
There's going to be a breakdown
A cultural breakdown
A social breakdown
In the eyes of the law
There's going to be a breakdown
A cultural breakdown
A social breakdown
We've heard it all before
Young souls rebel
They need to make a quick buck
They don't rely on nobody's luck
But people just go on with their lives
The same
Out on the streets
People sending dangerous tweets
For five minutes of dubious fame
So, tell me who is to blame?"
After Pauline Black sings, "Some things are so wrong that nothing ever makes it right," Gaps Hendrickson recites a devastatingly long list of black boys, women, and men unjustifiably killed by police in the UK and USA, starting with Stephen Lawrence and ending with Trayvon Martin, Renisha McBride, Michael Brown, and Tamir Rice (though there seems to be an ever-growing number of new names to add to this list...). "Breakdown" is a "Ghost Town" of sorts for the 21st century (it borrows just enough of "Ghost Town's" structure and snippets of its melody and horn lines to reinforce that notion) and like that iconic song, it reflects the great inequity, fractiousness, and despair of our times.
[I love how this song references "Out in the Streets," which Neol Davies states in the liner notes for Access All Areas was about being young and having nothing to do after the pubs closed at 11:00 pm: "You find yourself driving around the ring road and end up somewhere you wish you hadn't. It was a comment on failed nights out in a city like Coventry--out on the streets again."]
It's fitting that the striking "Karma" follows "Breakdown," as they're of a piece. "Karma" zeros in on individual people's bad decisions instead of society's, though the people in the song (a John and a prostitute, a neglected kid and his drug-addicted mother, an abused woman and her abuser, the rich few and host of impoverished people) are stuck inflicting pain and unhappiness on each other (trapped in the neighborhood, town, or city of "Breakdown"), in an unbroken circle of misery (refrain: "And the world spins around/What goes around, round, round/Always comes back one day").
Could it really be that the last ska song to decry the grossly festering Israeli/Palestinian conflict was The Special AKA's "War Crimes" in 1982? With its sly reference to the Biblical tower of Babel myth in Genesis (early in human history, God thought that humanity--which only had one common language--had too much freedom and power, and were full of hubris, so he created and imposed many different languages on human beings, so they couldn't communicate easily with each other) and its cheeky alliterative pun, The Selecter's "Babble On" (...Babylon) expresses great outrage that the situation in Israel still hasn't be resolved after all these decades (two state solution, anyone?)--and that civilians continue to die on both sides: "I don't care what you say/I don't care who you pray to/You're killing innocents/You're killing innocents/Who cares whose god is greater/If there is one creator?" The song also implies that the Israeli/Palestinian conflict serves as proxy war between Christian and Islamic states and interests, which isn't too far off the mark.
The amazing, upbeat, should-be-a-single "Hit the Ground Running" offers encouragement to someone trying to earn a living on UK's "zero-hour contracts" (employees enter an insane agreement where they are essentially on-call all the time for their employer, who can give them anywhere between zero and 40 hours a week of work--talk about rigging the system to one's complete advantage!), while enduring the needlessly punitive bedroom tax (people receiving housing benefits in public housing can see their rent support reduced if it is determined they have "spare bedrooms").
Not all on Subculture is about bleak, seemingly intractable crises! There are many tracks about friendship and love. "It Never Worked Out" is Gaps Hendrickson's fantastic, melancholy, and regretful tune about all that he might be missing after the demise of a romantic relationship:
"Love was out to get me
I didn't know that
Yes, she treated me bad
I should have seen that
Wasted good, good times
Having good times
I didn't know then
What I know now
Life goes on and on
And we were living it up
Down life's happy road
We were giving it up
Been to lots of places
That I never seen
I didn't know then
What I know now
'Cos it never worked out
Yes, it never worked out
Oh, what life could be
Something keeps haunting me
Things I don't understand
Things I don't do now"
"Box Fresh" recognizes the enduring friendship and musical partnership between Black and Hendrickson, while "Open Goal" is about a couple whose relationship has devolved to the point where the man takes the woman completely for granted. The Selecter's cover of Patti Smith's and Bruce Springsteen's defiant classic rock love song "Because the Night" is given a brisk and pretty successful ska revamp here.
And there are other songs of hope, joy, and resilience, like "Walk the Walk" (whose horn line briefly quotes Dandy Livingston's "A Message to You, Rudy"), "Still I Rise" (written in tribute to Maya Angelou and her poem of the same name about being unbreakable in the face of all manner of oppression), Gap's "Stone Cold Sober" (presumably about successfully taking it one day at a time) and his extraordinary cover of Mr. Foundation's rude boy anthem "See Them A Come" ("Wicked dem come/But we nah run/We have no gun/So we nah run/Look how you get up every day/Saying prayers to the devil, I say/Should be like Cassius Clay/Steadfast strong and never run away/Through the hustlings and jugglings/You have to make a stance").
All in all, The Selecter's Subculture is an excellent and thoroughly enjoyable record that should please both graying 2 Tone fans and fresh, new, soon-to-be devotees. Like Madness (who themselves keep releasing brilliant new albums every few years!), they deserve extra points for resisting the lure of relying on nostalgia and doing the hard work of making something great and new.
Tuesday, November 24, 2015
MOJO and Vive Le Rock! Give "Rhoda Dakar Sings The Bodysnatchers" Rave Reviews!
If you still haven't gotten around to picking up the phenomenal Rhoda Dakar Sings The Bodysnatchers album (Phoenix City Records/Cherry Red), perhaps the glowing reviews for this release published in the latest issues of MOJO and Vive Le Rock! will motivate you (though, I'm not sure why The Duff Guide to Ska review didn't convince you already!).
In the December 2015 issue of MOJO (with Elvis Costello on the cover), reviewer Lois Wilson gives the album four stars and notes that "she continues to uphold the 2 Tone tradition, making listeners think ("Easy Life" tackles gender inequality; "Hiawatha" calls for racial harmony) as well as dance (with skanking covers of "007" and "Let's Do the Rocksteady")."
Andy Pearl, in issue #30 of Vive Le Rock! (with Killing Joke on the cover), rates the album 8 out of 10 and declares that "original songs like "Private Eye" and "Mixed Feeling"...demonstrate that this was a band who had their own identity away from the dance craze. What was originally a one-off project has been met with such support and enthusiasm that Dakar has started to play a few gigs showcasing these songs again and maybe, finally, the Bodysnatchers will start to get their rightful recognition."
This issue of Vive Le Rock! also contains a lovely remembrance of the late Rico Rodriguez.
+ + + +
The Rhoda Dakar Sings The Bodysnatchers CD/LP is available through her shop, which also offers Bodysnatchers t-shirts!
In the December 2015 issue of MOJO (with Elvis Costello on the cover), reviewer Lois Wilson gives the album four stars and notes that "she continues to uphold the 2 Tone tradition, making listeners think ("Easy Life" tackles gender inequality; "Hiawatha" calls for racial harmony) as well as dance (with skanking covers of "007" and "Let's Do the Rocksteady")."
Andy Pearl, in issue #30 of Vive Le Rock! (with Killing Joke on the cover), rates the album 8 out of 10 and declares that "original songs like "Private Eye" and "Mixed Feeling"...demonstrate that this was a band who had their own identity away from the dance craze. What was originally a one-off project has been met with such support and enthusiasm that Dakar has started to play a few gigs showcasing these songs again and maybe, finally, the Bodysnatchers will start to get their rightful recognition."
This issue of Vive Le Rock! also contains a lovely remembrance of the late Rico Rodriguez.
+ + + +
The Rhoda Dakar Sings The Bodysnatchers CD/LP is available through her shop, which also offers Bodysnatchers t-shirts!
Monday, November 23, 2015
The Duff Guide to Post-Punk Gig Review: Public Image Ltd. at The PlayStation Theater, NYC, on 11/16/15!
John Lydon and PiL telling it like it is. |
"An Evening with Public Image Ltd."
PlayStation Theater, Times Square, New York
11/16/15
(Review by Steve Shafer)
Following the barbaric terrorist attacks on Paris just a few days earlier, it was probably prudent that the heavy security measures one had to go through in order to enter the Public Image Ltd. show had been enacted. Every concertgoer received 1) a full-body pat down, 2) had a metal detector run over their arms, legs, and torso, and 3) their bags, if any, were thoroughly searched (afterwards, I felt like I should have been locating my departure gate). But waiting that night on the long line to enter the venue with all of the graying and stout forty- and fifty-something PiL fans (and a smattering of young punks!)--with all of the Times Square tourists swirling around us (who had no idea who PiL were when they asked what we were queued up for)--and then going through the airport-style security, it all felt somewhat absurd and surreal, like we had lost our bearings (fear of possible attack wasn't usually part of the equation). We were gathered there for the music, perhaps a message, and certainly for a bit a fun with our friends (as were our compatriots at the Bataclan...). It never crossed my mind not to go see PiL, but the mass murder in Paris had imposed new meaning on attending their show that night. Yet, I doubt that it was anyone's primary intention for it to be an act of defiance (though, more on that later).
Did some of us feel guilt or shame to be participating in the same, seemingly innocent type of event that resulted in so many people being killed? Perhaps. (Guilt washed over me while I was waiting on line, watching the Times Square news ticker displaying the latest, horrific updates from Paris...) I suppose the indiscriminate slaughter of music fans and cafe-goers was meant to cow all of us in Europe and America into giving up the pleasure of going out with friends to a gig or for a drink and a bite to eat--the fun stuff that unites us and strengthens our bonds with each other. So, the only rational response for the average person living in a free society is to keep on doing these things--to ensure that they continue to be possible, even in uncertain times. And that's just what we all did, consciously or not.
The PlayStation Theater is in the sub-basement of an ugly, behemoth of an office building, which houses MTV and Viacom (and explained the music industry-types I encountered at the bar). When I descended the long staircase and entered the actual concert hall (which was comprised of two open, dance floor levels and a balcony with theater seating), it dawned on me that I'd been in this venue once before, when it was the former Loews Astor movie theater. The last time I had been there was in 1977, when I was eleven, to see "Star Wars" for the first time (shown on a 70mm print!). Mind blown, then and now.
There was no opening act for PiL, but plenty of fantastic dub reggae pumping out of the PA, no doubt selected by John Lydon (AKA Johnny Rotten), who's been a huge, very knowledgeable reggae fan since his teens. The 2,100-capacity theater was nearly full when Lydon and his PiL bandmates--Lu Edmonds (Mekons, Damned) on guitar, Scott Firth (Elvis Costello, The Spice Girls!) on bass, and Bruce Smith (Pop Group, Slits) on drums--hit the stage for two hours of completely blistering and mesmerizing post-punk/dance-rock. To be honest, I never expected it to have been this good.
Ever the sharp provocateur, Lydon--at almost 60 (!)--gave one of the most animated, funny, engaging, and compelling performances I've ever seen. Not one moment was phoned in; he gave it his all throughout the entire set, like it was the only gig that would ever matter (how exactly can his voice survive night after night of this?!). Madly gesturing, mugging, and making eye contact with seemingly everyone in the crowd, Lydon caterwauled, bellowed, spit out, and sang (as only he does) gleefully defiant songs challenging convention, power, and authority (more on that later), on tracks ranging from PiL's first single in 1978 ("Public Image") through key selections from their new 2015 album, What the World Needs Now... (released on their own PiL label). And it seemed like every song was presented in its expansive 12 inch version, long enough for us to fully inhabit it--to become transfixed by the rhythm section's Rock of Gibraltar-solid grooves and Edmonds' slashes of (what else?) angular post-punk guitar, so Lydon could have all the time he needed to convey his voluminous thoughts on a particular subject. ("Religion" must have been about 10 or 12 minutes long--I watched the first five minutes, then went off to empty my bladder, and returned in time for the last few minutes of the song and its theatrics: The very Jesus-like Edmonds was presented as the Son of God, while Firth played the Devil.)
Fairly early in the set, during a fantastic rendition of "This is Not Love Song," Lydon bitingly (and somewhat outrageously) commented (to loud cheers), "Sommme people cancel concerts--weeee never cancel concerts!" It was a cheeky piss-take on U2 and their cancelled Paris show, diminished a bit by the relative safety of our perch, way over on this side of the Atlantic. Nonetheless, it endeared PiL to the fans and was an acknowledgement of the unusual context of the evening (plus, it a was a tweak of Bono's nose!).
Almost half of their 15-song set was filled with new tracks from What the World Needs Now...--and in their live permutations, they fit in seamlessly with much of PiL's older hits. I particularly liked "Double Trouble," "Bettie Page" (about our repressed, but sex-obsessed American society), "Corporate," and a positively menacing "Shoom" (which was so much better realized live than on its recording). Of the tracks they performed from PiL's back catalogue, "The Body" (1987) was the ferocious highlight of the bunch, with the crowd singing along with the backing vocals, as Lydon wailed above us. (I've always thought "The Body" to be one of PiL's most perfect/catchy post-punk dance songs, one that recognizes society's oftentimes predatory sexual pursuit of women, but advocates responsibility--parents must raise children who will grow up to be good, decent human beings, which includes teaching them to use birth control--shades of "Too Much Too Young"--to avoid unwanted pregnancies and abortions!).
In particular, organized religion and tech/social media companies came under searing attack. The best line in "Religion" was, "Why should I call you father? You're not my Daddy!" And before "Corporate" began, Lydon sincerely (!) implored us to remember that, "Weeee are the one, all of us!" (as he pointed around the room in an inclusive, circular motion)--before ranting about how all of our devices and social media have effectively killed off ("Murderer!") real human relationships/interaction (and our capacity for empathy) and replaced communities with sham connections that serve to separate/divide us and bring out our very worst instincts ("Not global villages/But one globe/Not itty bitty little villages/of pity and learning how to/survive in the 21st century/And looking at World War III/Because all humans seem to hate humanity"). Indeed, the message between the lines this evening was that institutions are suspect, but that we do belong to--and have a responsibility for--each other (in the recent Vive Le Rock #30, Lydon states, "I like the idea of a caring society. Guess what? I became an American citizen because of Obama; he promised Obamacare and delivered on it.").
The final track before the encore was "Shoom," with its chorus of, "What the world needs now is...Fuck off!" and a fantastic, pulsing bass line (the chorus of the song is, presumably, a take on the 1965 Hal David/Burt Bacharach pop song "What the World Needs Now is Love," which was a hit for Jackie DeShannon that same year). It took us all a little while to catch on that Lydon wanted us to do the "Fuck off" part of the chorus, when he dangled the microphone and stand over the audience, like a mad boom operator. Eventually, we got it and heartily shouted our expletives (in a song chock full of them!). Lydon doesn't presume to have the answers to the host of global and personal problems that we're all facing. He most certainly thinks you should think up your own solutions. But he also firmly believes that you should call out anything and everything that is false--"bollocks"! (God forbid, you try to fool him: "Do you think that/You can play me/Do you think that/You can sway me...I'm working class, me/Right at the start/I'm horse and cart, me/Right in the heart/Four to the floor, beat/Grove in the heat/I'm always complete/I come from the street!")
The encore consisted of a spirited, yet somewhat ragged, "Public Image"--which elicited a massive roar of approval from the audience--and everyone sang along to the Irish blessing chorus of PiL's oblique but phenomenal 1986 anti-South African apartheid hymn "Rise." (It should be noted that the lyric,"Anger is an energy" is not a call to riot; Lydon also explains in Vive Le Rock #30 that after he contracted spinal meningitis as a young boy, the illness, "also took my memories for four years and that was a very long, slow process to regain my personality, to regain my life, and that's where the concept of "anger is an energy" comes from. The doctors were advised to not make life easy for me, to keep me angry, to spur the memories back...For me, "anger" has never been a violent thing, it doesn't represent hate or anything like that. Anger to me is a very positive force in my life. When I had the opportunity to use it the song "Rise," that is what I was trying to explain. But I never fully developed on it to an audience. I just hoped that people would pick up on it...It is an anthem. It's about hope. It's a hope-filled song. It doesn't preach violence or hate. It's odd that people think that. I've never preached those things. Unless it's against institutions; I hate them. Not people. There is a difference.")
When Lydon had sung his final, triumphant "Anger is an energy" and the lights came up, the crowd stayed put and applauded and cheered for at least a full five minutes, possibly more. What we had witnessed and experienced was so extraordinary, that we couldn't permit PiL to leave the stage so quickly. (Did we need time to process all that had take place--a moment to transition back to our normal lives?) Lydon was visibly touched by the reaction and thanked us all repeatedly. Before he finally exited the stage, Lydon waved his arm across the audience, pointed and stared at a wide swath of us, and slowly said, "I see all of you."
And I believe he did.
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PiL's set list, New York City, 11/16/15
"Double Trouble"
"Know Now"
"This Is Not a Love Song"
"Bettie Page"
"Deeper Water"
"Corporate"
"Death Disco"
"The One"
"Disappointed"
"The Body"
"Warrior"
"Religion"
"Shoom"
Encore:
"Public Image"
"Rise"
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Wednesday, November 18, 2015
The Checkerboard Kids' 20th Anniversary Show Video in All Its Glory!
I haven't had the time to watch it all yet, but here is the video from the Checkerboard Kids' 20th Anniversary show (which I think is actually airing tonight on NYC Time Warner cable)!
Bands/musicians featured in this NYC-area all-star ska celebration of this amazing and wonderfully unique public access cable show include Across the Aisle, Metro Stylee, Mike Drance (The Bluebeats), Coolie Ranx and Vinny Nobile (Pilfers, Bim Skala Bim), Buford O' Sullivan (The Scofflaws, Easy Star All Stars), Roy Radics (The Rudie Crew), Brendog and Jerica Rosenblum (Mephiskapheles/Doomsday), Dubistry, Dave Barry (The Toasters, Beat Brigade), Bob Timm (The Hard Times), Carmelo DiBartolo (Beat Brigade), and more!
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If you missed it, check out the recent Duff Guide to Ska interview with Checkerboard Phil!
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Bands/musicians featured in this NYC-area all-star ska celebration of this amazing and wonderfully unique public access cable show include Across the Aisle, Metro Stylee, Mike Drance (The Bluebeats), Coolie Ranx and Vinny Nobile (Pilfers, Bim Skala Bim), Buford O' Sullivan (The Scofflaws, Easy Star All Stars), Roy Radics (The Rudie Crew), Brendog and Jerica Rosenblum (Mephiskapheles/Doomsday), Dubistry, Dave Barry (The Toasters, Beat Brigade), Bob Timm (The Hard Times), Carmelo DiBartolo (Beat Brigade), and more!
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If you missed it, check out the recent Duff Guide to Ska interview with Checkerboard Phil!
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Thursday, November 12, 2015
NYC Fall/Winter 2015 Ska Calendar #15
Rude Boy George opens for Mustard Plug (despised by Maroon 5!) at the Knitting Factory Brooklyn this Friday night! |
Mustard Plug, Survay Says, Rude Boy George
Knitting Factory Brooklyn
361 Metropolitan Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$13 in advance/$15 day of show
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Thursday, November 19, 2015 @ 6:00 pm
Five Iron Frenzy, The Toasters, Survay Says
The Stanhope House
45 Main Street
Stanhope, NJ
$20/All Ages
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Friday, November 20, 2015 @ 7:00 pm
Five Iron Frenzy, The Toasters, Survay Says
Santos Party House
96 Lafayette Street
New York, NY
$20 in advance/$25 day of show
16+
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Wednesday, December 18, 2015
HR (of Bad Brains), Dubb Agents, Banddroidz, Skarroneros
Bowery Electric
327 Bowery
New York, NY
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Saturday, December 19, 2015 @ 7:00 pm
The Slackers and The Pietasters
Irving Plaza
17 Irving Place
New York, NY
$32.50
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Thursday, November 5, 2015
Rico, Rhoda Dakar, Prince Buster, and Georgie Fame in the November 2015 MOJO!
Given that a good deal of its music coverage is historic in nature and aimed at the middle-aged music fan (I'm guilty as charged--I'm smack-dab in their demographic!), MOJO is always pretty good about including news, features, and reviews relating to 2 Tone-era bands (and, to a lesser degree, the Jamaican originators). Their latest edition is a good case in point.
November's issue contains an excellent obituary for/tribute to Rico Rodriguez (who died on September 4, 2015) by reggae expert David Katz. Rico and Prince Buster also figure into a feature on 60s mod hero Georgie Fame, who performed a heady mix of rhythm and blues, soul, jazz, ska, and pop in London's jazz clubs--and, of particular note to ska fans, in 1963, Fame played his Hammond organ on Prince Buster's I Feel the Spirit LP, the first ska album released outside of Jamaica. (I never knew much about Fame--inexplicably, he never broke big in the USA--but just ordered this incredible compilation of his 60s work and am looking forward to getting to know his recordings much better...)
The Bodysnatchers' Rhoda Dakar is spotlighted in MOJO's regular "Hello Goodbye" feature, in which musicians tell their story of how they came to join a band and then how they left it (willingly or not!). Ms. Dakar is promoting the Phoenix City/Cherry Red Records release of her stellar Rhoda Dakar Sings The Bodysnatchers album (The Duff Guide to Ska review of the Pledge Music version of this release can be read here; the only difference in these releases is that the Phoenix City/Cherry Red edition contains lots of archival photos and essential, new, lengthy liner notes by Rhoda herself). Ms. Dakar has also been performing live this fall--read a review of her excellent Halloween show at Camden's Jazz Cafe in Louder Than War (The Specials' Lynval Golding played on some songs!). All fans of 2 Tone should have her album. And if you're in the UK, make sure to get to one of her gigs!
November's issue contains an excellent obituary for/tribute to Rico Rodriguez (who died on September 4, 2015) by reggae expert David Katz. Rico and Prince Buster also figure into a feature on 60s mod hero Georgie Fame, who performed a heady mix of rhythm and blues, soul, jazz, ska, and pop in London's jazz clubs--and, of particular note to ska fans, in 1963, Fame played his Hammond organ on Prince Buster's I Feel the Spirit LP, the first ska album released outside of Jamaica. (I never knew much about Fame--inexplicably, he never broke big in the USA--but just ordered this incredible compilation of his 60s work and am looking forward to getting to know his recordings much better...)
The Bodysnatchers' Rhoda Dakar is spotlighted in MOJO's regular "Hello Goodbye" feature, in which musicians tell their story of how they came to join a band and then how they left it (willingly or not!). Ms. Dakar is promoting the Phoenix City/Cherry Red Records release of her stellar Rhoda Dakar Sings The Bodysnatchers album (The Duff Guide to Ska review of the Pledge Music version of this release can be read here; the only difference in these releases is that the Phoenix City/Cherry Red edition contains lots of archival photos and essential, new, lengthy liner notes by Rhoda herself). Ms. Dakar has also been performing live this fall--read a review of her excellent Halloween show at Camden's Jazz Cafe in Louder Than War (The Specials' Lynval Golding played on some songs!). All fans of 2 Tone should have her album. And if you're in the UK, make sure to get to one of her gigs!
Friday, October 30, 2015
Duff Review: Radio Riddler and UB40 featuring Ali Campbell, Astro, and Mickey Virtue at NYC's Webster Hall on 10/28/15
Also known as the old Ritz, the first venue UB40 ever played in NYC. |
Based on my experience seeing the other version of UB40 at BB King's a few years ago (read The Duff Guide to Ska review of that show here), my expectation was that the crowd for the UB40 featuring Ali, Astro, and Mickey gig at Webster Hall earlier this week would have been filled mostly with forty-something, former-WLIR listeners like myself (that legendary, Long Island-based new wave station gave UB40 an extraordinary amount of support and airplay during the first half of the 1980s, creating a huge and loyal fan-base for them in NYC and its suburbs). And I certainly didn't think the show would be sold out. But when my good friend Adam Monkey and I made our way up to the Grand Ballroom (capacity 1,500), we found ourselves in a sea of people of all ages--shiny twenty year-olds to more weathered fans in their 40s and 50s, who--back in the day--had seen the intact UB40 performing every summer at the outdoor Miller High Life Concerts on Pier 84 on the Hudson River. There were also a fair number of British expats--I ran into a bunch of them at the bar and talked to a few next to me in the audience (at one point, I smelled something burning and was looking all around me for the source; the older Brit in back of me told me that I should expect a lot of smoking at a UB40 concert--I smiled and replied that I was used to that, but thought I had smelled someone's hair on fire).
I was eager to see openers Radio Ridder, who were said to be performing their reggae version of Prince's Purple Rain. Their take on that iconic album, Purple Reggae, is pretty phenomenal (read The Duff Guide to Ska review of Purple Reggae here) and fans apparently have been loving it on this tour--RR Frank Benbini noted from the stage that they'd already sold out of CDs halfway through the tour, as he threw the last few promo copies out to the fans (he also commented that Prince had been pretty pissed-off when he found out about their project and had received many pointed phone calls from his lawyer). Radio Riddler played six songs off the album--"Let's Go Crazy," "Take Me With You," "I Would Die 4 U," "Purple Rain" (videos of these are below), "Darling Nikki," and "When Doves Cry." All were really good to great (their extended rendition of "When Doves Cry" was the highlight of their set--I wished I had videotaped it for you!) and they were enthusiastically received by the audience. I have to admit to being a little disappointed that Radio Riddler didn't surprise us with any special guest singers (their album features appearances by Suggs from Madness, Sinead O'Connor, and others, including Ali Campbell on "Purple Rain"--I'm not sure why he didn't grace the stage for at least part of this song; the place would have exploded) and they used backing, pre-recorded tracks throughout (there was no drummer or bass player). I realize that economic factors are in play for opening acts, but a full band would have given Radio Riddler's set even more power, drive, and urgency. Having said all that, I really enjoyed their set and whole-heartedly recommend catching them if they come your way.
I'll admit to losing UB40's thread after Rat in Mi Kitchen (which is one of my favorite UB40 albums), when they released all of those Labor of Love compilations during the 1990s. They recaptured my attention years later with their excellent Who You Fighting For? (2005) and Twentyfourseven (2008) albums (where they re-engaged with the world and wrote/recorded several sharply political songs). So, it was a bit of a shock when these groups of young women near me (and throughout the venue) started screaming the second Ali Campbell stepped up to the mic. And then they continued to sing along loudly and happily to song after song. That's when it dawned on me that this version of UB40 was going to be focused on delivering their pop cover hits (indeed, a great deal of their set was drawn from 1989's massive-seller, Labor of Love II--and the album they're promoting on this tour is a Greatest Hits Live compilation), instead of their stellar original, and oftentimes sharply political, tracks. But pop songs or not, the Ali/Astro/Mickey iteration of UB40 (expertly backed by a full band and horn section, including a back-up singer who looked like Dr. Ring Ding and a sax player who reminded me of The Beat's Saxa!) packed a considerable punch and put on one hell of a fun show for the grooving, sweaty masses. Their set included fan (and commercial radio) favorites (Al Green's) "Here I Am (Come and Take Me)," (The Chi-Lites') "Homely Girl," (The Paragon's) "Wear You to the Ball," (John Holt's version of Shep and the Limelite's) "Stick by Me," (Lord Creator's) "Kingston Town," (Smokey Robinson's) "The Way You Do The Things You Do," (Charles and Eddie's) "Would I Lie To You?," (Eric Donaldson's) "Cherry Oh Baby," and (Boy Friday's) "Version Girl."
They also played several great songs off Ali's 2014 album Silhouette, which he recorded with Astro and Mickey: (a fantastic arrangement of Lionel Ritchie's tribute to Marvin Gaye sung by Diana Ross) "Missing You," (Dennis Brown's super version of The Rays') "Silhouette" (which I though was "cigarette"!), and Astro's "Cyber Bully Boys," which apparently is about the guys in the other UB40. The only time they reached deep into their back-catalogue was for brilliant renditions of two outstanding originals: "Rat in Mi Kitchen" (which I haven't see them do live since, gulp, 1985!) and the ferocious anti-Thatcher indictment, "One in Ten" (videos are below; sorry about the poor sound--it wasn't great in the venue).
An hour-and-a-half into their set, we had to jet--it was a work night and I don't exactly bounce back from a night of drinking beer like I used to--but the band and fans were still going strong (and UB40 hadn't played "Red Red Wine" yet). I really enjoyed their show, but wished that they had dialed back the number of (admittedly popular) covers in favor of more of their original material. Yet, they had given the people what they wanted. It was an evening for reveling in familiar and treasured reggae pop songs--and everyone had a blast. And I have to remind the contrarian in me that there's nothing wrong with that.