Monday, January 23, 2017
Asian Man Records Releases Let's Go Bowling's First Two Albums on Vinyl!
Let's Go Bowling's first two albums--Music To Bowl By and Mr. Twist--are being issued on vinyl for the first time ever by Mike Park's Asian Man Records! These two stone-cold classics of the so-called Third Wave of American ska were originally released on Moon Records in 1991 and 1996 respectively, but only on compact disc and cassette, as vinyl was an unpopular (and assumed to be dead) format in the US during the 1990s.
In particular, Music To Bowl By was an extremely important album in Moon Records's history. Despite some incredible releases in the late 80s (such as The NY Citizens' On The Move and the Ska Face and NYC Ska Live comps), the label had barely limped out of that decade after a series of distributor failures and ill-fated licensing deals swallowed up the label's already limited product and capital. These brutal experiences made Moon Records' label head Rob "Bucket" Hingley all the more determined to build as strong an indie label as possible by going back to the basics (starting with a fairly busy mail-order operation out of his basement, fulfilled mostly by Buck when he wasn't on tour with The Toasters; taking orders directly from mom and pop record shops; and creating a one-man in-house promotion/marketing team to get the word out to college radio and zines--yours truly!). Let's Go Bowling's Music To Bowl By and The Scofflaws' self-titled debut album (also issued in 1991) were two vital releases from the then newly revitalized label that demonstrated to the ska world Moon's intention to go big (and be more than just a home to The Toasters and NY Citizens) and its renewed commitment to supporting high quality ska acts in the 1990s--both albums are superb from start to finish.
You can pre-order the Music to Bowl By and Mr. Twist LPs from Asian Man Records here. Both are slated for release the second week of February.
If you're unfamiliar with Let's Go Bowling, make sure to check out two of their best tracks below...
+ + + +
In particular, Music To Bowl By was an extremely important album in Moon Records's history. Despite some incredible releases in the late 80s (such as The NY Citizens' On The Move and the Ska Face and NYC Ska Live comps), the label had barely limped out of that decade after a series of distributor failures and ill-fated licensing deals swallowed up the label's already limited product and capital. These brutal experiences made Moon Records' label head Rob "Bucket" Hingley all the more determined to build as strong an indie label as possible by going back to the basics (starting with a fairly busy mail-order operation out of his basement, fulfilled mostly by Buck when he wasn't on tour with The Toasters; taking orders directly from mom and pop record shops; and creating a one-man in-house promotion/marketing team to get the word out to college radio and zines--yours truly!). Let's Go Bowling's Music To Bowl By and The Scofflaws' self-titled debut album (also issued in 1991) were two vital releases from the then newly revitalized label that demonstrated to the ska world Moon's intention to go big (and be more than just a home to The Toasters and NY Citizens) and its renewed commitment to supporting high quality ska acts in the 1990s--both albums are superb from start to finish.
You can pre-order the Music to Bowl By and Mr. Twist LPs from Asian Man Records here. Both are slated for release the second week of February.
If you're unfamiliar with Let's Go Bowling, make sure to check out two of their best tracks below...
+ + + +
Labels:
Asian Man Records,
Let's Go Bowling,
Moon Records,
NYC Ska Live,
Ska Face,
The NY Citizens,
The Scofflaws,
The Toasters
Sunday, January 22, 2017
The Duff Guide to Ska NYC Winter/Spring 2017 Ska Calendar #43
Patch by CHema Skandal! |
Dave Hillyard and the Rocksteady 7 Play the Roland Alphonso Songbook
(plus DJ 100dbs)
Hank's Saloon
46 Third Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$8
+ + + +
Friday, January 27, 2017 6:00 pm - 10:00 pm
DJ Ryan Midnight spins classic and rare ska tracks from the 60s, 2 Tone era, 90s 3rd Wave, through today's current roster of bands!
Otto's Shrunken Head
538 East 14th Street (between Aves A and B)
New York, NY
No cover
+ + + +
Friday, February 3, 2017 @ 8:00 pm
Rude Boy George, High Disciples, The Twilights, Penniless Loafers, plus DJ James Kelly
Crossroads
78 North Avenue
Garwood, NJ
$10
+ + + +
Friday, February 24, 2017 @ 8:00 pm
The Skatalites, Organically Good Trio
Brooklyn Bowl
61 Wythe Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$15/21+
+ + + +
Saturday, February 25, 2017 @ 7:00 pm
Big D and the Kids Table, Stray Bullets, Crazy and the Brains
Knitting Factory Brooklyn
361 Metropolitan Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$13
+ + + +
Saturday, March 4, 2017 @ 7:00 pm
Save Ferris, Baby Baby, Rude Boy George
The Gramercy Theatre
127 East 23rd Street
New York, NY
$20/16+
+ + + +
Friday, March 17, 2017 @ 7:00 pm
The Pietasters
The Marlin Room @ Webster Hall
125 East 11th Street
New York, NY
$16/16+
+ + + +
Friday, March 24, 2017 @ 7:00 pm
Voodoo Glow Skulls, Hub City Stompers
Knitting Factory Brooklyn
361 Metropolitan Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$13 in advance/$15 day of show
All ages
+ + + +
Friday, March 31, 2017 @ 8:00 pm
Los Fabulosos Cadillacs
The Theatre at Madison Square Garden
4 Penn Plaza
New York, NY
Tickets: $35-$95
+ + + +
Saturday, April 29, 2017 @ 5:30 pm - 9:30 pm
ReadJunk 20th Anniversary Party w/Rude Boy George (two sets) and DJ Duff
Otto's Shrunken Head
538 East 14th Street (between Aves A and B)
New York, NY
No cover
+ + + +
Friday, June 9, 2017 @ 7:00 pm
The Specials
Brooklyn Steel
319 Frost Street
Brooklyn, NY
$50/16+
+ + + +
Thursday, January 19, 2017
Duff Guide to Ska Fast Takes: Rude Guest "Lost Chicago Ska 1982-1993"
(Review by Steve Shafer)
Rude Guest Lost Chicago Ska 1982-1993 (CD, cassette, Jump Up Records, 2016; LP with remixes/bonus tracks forthcoming, 2017): While the history of the first wave of American ska bands to crop up in the wake of 2 Tone is still largely unwritten and forgotten (apart from the efforts of bands like The Toasters, Bim Skala Bim, Fishbone, and The Untouchables), every now and then another vital piece of this story comes to light. Thanks to the determination of ska obsessive and Jump Up Records label head Chuck Wren, Chi-town ska pioneers Rude Guest are finally getting their due. Founded in 1982 by brothers Kurt and Paul Schroeder (vocalist and drummer, respectively) and directly influenced by 2 Tone--while backpacking in Europe after college, Paul caught Madness and UB40 live and sent tapes of 2 Tone acts back to Kurt in the USA--Rude Guest released four DIY cassettes of all-original material (recorded surreptitiously and on the cheap after-hours through a friend at a Chicago recording studio); gigged extensively at colleges and clubs throughout the Midwest; opened for Fishbone, the Crazy 8s, Yellowman, and Naked Raygun; and appeared at the first Midwest Ska Fest in Milwaukee in 1991. Despite all of their obvious talent and long hours on the road and in the studio, Rude Guest never was able to snag a record deal (from a recent feature on the band in the Chicago Reader: "The rejection letters weren't always so bad, though. "I think the best one—I'm trying to think of who it was—they say, 'We really like you guys, but we just signed UB40,'" Paul recalls. "We love UB40. We're like, 'OK, that's not such a bad slam.'") and Kurt tragically died of cancer at age 40 in 1996, effectively ending the band just as the US ska scene was exploding.
Like many of the early 80s American ska groups, Rude Guest played tightly-wound, twitchy New Wave-y ska and reggae (synths abound!), but what makes everything transcend those times is the great strength of their songs and performances (earworms abound!). A brilliant example/starting place is the triumphant "Still I'm Happy" from their 1985 cassette, a bass-driven ska track (with killer sax and guitar solos) that shifts between minor and major keys to reflect the conflicting emotions of a break-up and the realization that the singer will be okay no matter what: "Too late, too late, too late/I'm sorry, she said and then she walked away...I can't go/I'm at the end of my rope/She said no/I wonder is there any hope...I don't know just what I'll do or where I'll be/But still I'm happy!" But there's a treasure-trove of other stellar tunes to check out, including the dubby reggae tearing down of someone's facade in "There You Go" ("Look at the way you're parading/Look at the way you think you ought to be/Look at the way you're masquerading/Look at the way/I can always read between the lines...I hope your head don't go/Where the sun don't shine/I hope your savvy don't go/'Cause you can't have mine"); a longing to escape civil unrest/war in "Revolutionary Night"; "Please, Please, Please," which may be one of the catchiest come ons/declarations of love ever set to a ska beat; the self-doubting, I'm-not-worthiness expressed in a "Girl Like You" ("What would I do/With a girl like you?") that first appears on the 1983 tape and is more than worthy of being reprised and polished up for the 1985 cassette; and the ominous "We Can't Cry," which laments the fact that humanity is headed toward self-destruction via global environmental disaster, famine, or world war: "We won't know/Until it's too late/What to do/To save ourselves."
After listening to Lost Chicago Ska, it's quite evident that had the right break come their way, Rude Guest could have hit it big--really big. But at least their place in the story of American ska is now secure and Rude Guest's amazing songs are back in print.
+ + + +
Rude Guest Lost Chicago Ska 1982-1993 (CD, cassette, Jump Up Records, 2016; LP with remixes/bonus tracks forthcoming, 2017): While the history of the first wave of American ska bands to crop up in the wake of 2 Tone is still largely unwritten and forgotten (apart from the efforts of bands like The Toasters, Bim Skala Bim, Fishbone, and The Untouchables), every now and then another vital piece of this story comes to light. Thanks to the determination of ska obsessive and Jump Up Records label head Chuck Wren, Chi-town ska pioneers Rude Guest are finally getting their due. Founded in 1982 by brothers Kurt and Paul Schroeder (vocalist and drummer, respectively) and directly influenced by 2 Tone--while backpacking in Europe after college, Paul caught Madness and UB40 live and sent tapes of 2 Tone acts back to Kurt in the USA--Rude Guest released four DIY cassettes of all-original material (recorded surreptitiously and on the cheap after-hours through a friend at a Chicago recording studio); gigged extensively at colleges and clubs throughout the Midwest; opened for Fishbone, the Crazy 8s, Yellowman, and Naked Raygun; and appeared at the first Midwest Ska Fest in Milwaukee in 1991. Despite all of their obvious talent and long hours on the road and in the studio, Rude Guest never was able to snag a record deal (from a recent feature on the band in the Chicago Reader: "The rejection letters weren't always so bad, though. "I think the best one—I'm trying to think of who it was—they say, 'We really like you guys, but we just signed UB40,'" Paul recalls. "We love UB40. We're like, 'OK, that's not such a bad slam.'") and Kurt tragically died of cancer at age 40 in 1996, effectively ending the band just as the US ska scene was exploding.
Like many of the early 80s American ska groups, Rude Guest played tightly-wound, twitchy New Wave-y ska and reggae (synths abound!), but what makes everything transcend those times is the great strength of their songs and performances (earworms abound!). A brilliant example/starting place is the triumphant "Still I'm Happy" from their 1985 cassette, a bass-driven ska track (with killer sax and guitar solos) that shifts between minor and major keys to reflect the conflicting emotions of a break-up and the realization that the singer will be okay no matter what: "Too late, too late, too late/I'm sorry, she said and then she walked away...I can't go/I'm at the end of my rope/She said no/I wonder is there any hope...I don't know just what I'll do or where I'll be/But still I'm happy!" But there's a treasure-trove of other stellar tunes to check out, including the dubby reggae tearing down of someone's facade in "There You Go" ("Look at the way you're parading/Look at the way you think you ought to be/Look at the way you're masquerading/Look at the way/I can always read between the lines...I hope your head don't go/Where the sun don't shine/I hope your savvy don't go/'Cause you can't have mine"); a longing to escape civil unrest/war in "Revolutionary Night"; "Please, Please, Please," which may be one of the catchiest come ons/declarations of love ever set to a ska beat; the self-doubting, I'm-not-worthiness expressed in a "Girl Like You" ("What would I do/With a girl like you?") that first appears on the 1983 tape and is more than worthy of being reprised and polished up for the 1985 cassette; and the ominous "We Can't Cry," which laments the fact that humanity is headed toward self-destruction via global environmental disaster, famine, or world war: "We won't know/Until it's too late/What to do/To save ourselves."
After listening to Lost Chicago Ska, it's quite evident that had the right break come their way, Rude Guest could have hit it big--really big. But at least their place in the story of American ska is now secure and Rude Guest's amazing songs are back in print.
+ + + +
Labels:
2 Tone,
Chuck Wren,
Crazy 8s,
Duff Review,
Fishbone,
Jump Up Records,
Madness,
Rude Guest,
The Toasters,
UB40,
Yellowman
Monday, January 9, 2017
Duff Guide to Ska Fast Takes: The Ska Flames "Turn-Up" LP
(Review by Steve Shafer)
The Ska Flames Turn-Up (vinyl LP, Sun Shot, 2016; a limited number of imported copies are available in the USA through Jump Up Records): While they were relatively dormant for much of the first decade of this new millennium, Japan's The Ska Flames kicked it all back into gear for their 30th anniversary in 2015, when they released a live album and performed several anniversary shows, and (fortunately for ska fans!) have been busy ever since. In addition to two great new 7" vinyl singles (read our review of them here), The Ska Flames recently have released their fifth album, Turn-Up. And like all their records, it's stunning and very much worth owning.
If you've never encountered them, The Ska Flames create and perform vintage 1960s ska/Jamaican jazz in the style of The Skatalites and cut their debut album Ska Fever back in 1989 for Gaz Mayall and his Gaz's Rockin' Records, which deservedly became an instant vintage ska classic. Of course, like The Skatalites, The Ska Flames typically play instrumentals, as is the case on Turn-Up. The whole album is out-of-this-world good, with everything launching on Side A with their muscular ska track "Yanigawa Blues" (which affords many of the players the opportunity to show off their considerable chops), a tight 'n' brisk cover of Charlie Parker's "My Little Suede Shoes," the sparky "Draw the Line," and the plaintive, but gorgeous "Kanchana." "El Camino" (featured on one of their new singles) begins Side B, followed by the playful/cartoony "Cat and Dogs" (with human generated barks and meows), the rocksteady (and what I'm assuming is a love song sung in Japanese) "Oh Babies," a sweet rendition of Bill Doggett's and Henry Glover's 1959 bossa nova cut "Ocean Liner," ending with Fonesca's Afro-Cuban gem "Whisky and Soda."
If top-shelf ska-jazz is your thing, you'd better grab this quickly from Jump Up, as it's usually very hard and horrifically expensive to buy Japanese ska releases.
+ + + +
The Ska Flames Turn-Up (vinyl LP, Sun Shot, 2016; a limited number of imported copies are available in the USA through Jump Up Records): While they were relatively dormant for much of the first decade of this new millennium, Japan's The Ska Flames kicked it all back into gear for their 30th anniversary in 2015, when they released a live album and performed several anniversary shows, and (fortunately for ska fans!) have been busy ever since. In addition to two great new 7" vinyl singles (read our review of them here), The Ska Flames recently have released their fifth album, Turn-Up. And like all their records, it's stunning and very much worth owning.
If you've never encountered them, The Ska Flames create and perform vintage 1960s ska/Jamaican jazz in the style of The Skatalites and cut their debut album Ska Fever back in 1989 for Gaz Mayall and his Gaz's Rockin' Records, which deservedly became an instant vintage ska classic. Of course, like The Skatalites, The Ska Flames typically play instrumentals, as is the case on Turn-Up. The whole album is out-of-this-world good, with everything launching on Side A with their muscular ska track "Yanigawa Blues" (which affords many of the players the opportunity to show off their considerable chops), a tight 'n' brisk cover of Charlie Parker's "My Little Suede Shoes," the sparky "Draw the Line," and the plaintive, but gorgeous "Kanchana." "El Camino" (featured on one of their new singles) begins Side B, followed by the playful/cartoony "Cat and Dogs" (with human generated barks and meows), the rocksteady (and what I'm assuming is a love song sung in Japanese) "Oh Babies," a sweet rendition of Bill Doggett's and Henry Glover's 1959 bossa nova cut "Ocean Liner," ending with Fonesca's Afro-Cuban gem "Whisky and Soda."
If top-shelf ska-jazz is your thing, you'd better grab this quickly from Jump Up, as it's usually very hard and horrifically expensive to buy Japanese ska releases.
+ + + +
Sunday, January 8, 2017
Duff Guide to Ska Fast Takes: Massive Attack v Mad Professor "No Protection" Reissue
(Review by Steve Shafer)
Massive Attack v. Mad Professor No Protection (heavyweight vinyl LP, Virgin Records, 2016 reissue; originally released in 1995 on Wild Bunch Records): I don't quite remember how I was first turned onto the extraordinary dub master Mad Professor. Perhaps it was a review in Tower Records' "Pulse" magazine or the 1995 issue #2 of the Beastie Boys' "Grand Royale" magazine that included a 24-page feature on Lee "Scratch" Perry with an extensive evaluation of his discography, which covered several incredible collaborations between Perry and the Professor. However it transpired, I quickly acquired most of the Mad Professor/Lee Perry albums, including Black Ark Experryments and Mystic Warrior, as well as many of Mad Professor's dub albums, most notably the magnificent Anti-Racist Dub Broadcast (which featured Rico Rodriguez on t-bone!). So back in '95, when I stopped by (the now long gone) Jammyland one day and saw this new CD from Mad Professor and Massive Attack (who I really didn't know much about other that they had collaborated with Horace Andy), I was really curious about it and asked whomever was behind the counter. They highly recommended it (might have even played a track or two for me) and I bought it on the spot.
The story, I later learned, was that trip-hoppers Massive Attack had asked Mad Professor to remix a track off their somewhat underwhelming second album Protection--and they were so pleased with the results that they arranged for him to create dub mix of the entire album, which completely transformed the source material and became an unqualified hit.
When I first listened to No Protection, I didn't have the original songs to compare the dubs to--but it didn't matter. These tracks stand so well on their own. There's an intriguing blend of uncertainty, menace, paranoia, and naked vulnerability that runs through all of the dubs (what's lurking in all the dark, silent space between the music?)--like living under the threat of some looming apocalypse. With titles like "Radiation Ruling the Nation," "Trinity Dub," "Cool Monsoon," and "Backward Sucking" (from the original "Heat Miser"), I envisioned a nuclear attack (of which there is "No Protection" from), radioactive fallout, and utter devastation that there was no coming back from. And it sounds just as brilliant today as it did twenty-two years ago.
No Protection is probably one of greatest modern dub records--and it's certainly Mad Professor's masterpiece.
Prior to this reissue, the LP version of this album was extremely hard to find, so make sure to pick up a copy now, while you can.
+ + + +
Massive Attack v. Mad Professor No Protection (heavyweight vinyl LP, Virgin Records, 2016 reissue; originally released in 1995 on Wild Bunch Records): I don't quite remember how I was first turned onto the extraordinary dub master Mad Professor. Perhaps it was a review in Tower Records' "Pulse" magazine or the 1995 issue #2 of the Beastie Boys' "Grand Royale" magazine that included a 24-page feature on Lee "Scratch" Perry with an extensive evaluation of his discography, which covered several incredible collaborations between Perry and the Professor. However it transpired, I quickly acquired most of the Mad Professor/Lee Perry albums, including Black Ark Experryments and Mystic Warrior, as well as many of Mad Professor's dub albums, most notably the magnificent Anti-Racist Dub Broadcast (which featured Rico Rodriguez on t-bone!). So back in '95, when I stopped by (the now long gone) Jammyland one day and saw this new CD from Mad Professor and Massive Attack (who I really didn't know much about other that they had collaborated with Horace Andy), I was really curious about it and asked whomever was behind the counter. They highly recommended it (might have even played a track or two for me) and I bought it on the spot.
The story, I later learned, was that trip-hoppers Massive Attack had asked Mad Professor to remix a track off their somewhat underwhelming second album Protection--and they were so pleased with the results that they arranged for him to create dub mix of the entire album, which completely transformed the source material and became an unqualified hit.
When I first listened to No Protection, I didn't have the original songs to compare the dubs to--but it didn't matter. These tracks stand so well on their own. There's an intriguing blend of uncertainty, menace, paranoia, and naked vulnerability that runs through all of the dubs (what's lurking in all the dark, silent space between the music?)--like living under the threat of some looming apocalypse. With titles like "Radiation Ruling the Nation," "Trinity Dub," "Cool Monsoon," and "Backward Sucking" (from the original "Heat Miser"), I envisioned a nuclear attack (of which there is "No Protection" from), radioactive fallout, and utter devastation that there was no coming back from. And it sounds just as brilliant today as it did twenty-two years ago.
No Protection is probably one of greatest modern dub records--and it's certainly Mad Professor's masterpiece.
Prior to this reissue, the LP version of this album was extremely hard to find, so make sure to pick up a copy now, while you can.
+ + + +
Labels:
Duff Review,
Horace Andy,
Lee "Scratch" Perry,
Mad Professor,
Massive Attack,
Rico Rodriguez,
Tracey Thorn
Friday, January 6, 2017
Duff Guide to Ska Fast Takes: The Selecter/The Beat Split Single "Breakdown" b/w "Side To Side"
(Review by Steve Shafer)
The Selecter/The Beat "Breakdown" b/w "Side To Side" (7" PS vinyl single, DMF Records, 2016): Who would have imagined that we'd ever see a veritable 2 Tone split single of great new material 38 years after the release of the first one? (I'm referring to, of course, the iconic, debut 2 Tone Records release of The Special AKA/The Selecter split single: "Gangsters" b/w "The Selecter.") The occasion for this release is a planned co-headlined tour of the UK and Ireland this spring, but whatever the reason, ska fans should take note and support the 2 Tone era acts courageous enough to move forward creatively (I'm looking at you, too, Madness!), instead of leaning on nostalgia and past glories to win the day.
The Selecter's "Breakdown"--from their most recent album Subculture (read The Duff Guide to Ska review of it here)--is a phenomenal song, very much worthy of being spotlighted in this fashion (and it's awesome live). Here's what I wrote about it in my Subculture review...
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."]
"Dangerous tweets" takes on a whole new meaning with the new American president-elect, doesn't it?
Ranking Roger's UK version of The Beat's "Side To Side" featuring Roger's son Ranking Junior (from The Beat's recent Bounce album--read our review it here) is a terrific, driving ska tune concerned solely with getting the crowd to dance (a la "Ranking Full Stop") and boasting about the ability to do so. This track sports some wicked fast toasting by both father and son--and must be pretty fantastic live.
+ + + +
The Selecter/The Beat "Breakdown" b/w "Side To Side" (7" PS vinyl single, DMF Records, 2016): Who would have imagined that we'd ever see a veritable 2 Tone split single of great new material 38 years after the release of the first one? (I'm referring to, of course, the iconic, debut 2 Tone Records release of The Special AKA/The Selecter split single: "Gangsters" b/w "The Selecter.") The occasion for this release is a planned co-headlined tour of the UK and Ireland this spring, but whatever the reason, ska fans should take note and support the 2 Tone era acts courageous enough to move forward creatively (I'm looking at you, too, Madness!), instead of leaning on nostalgia and past glories to win the day.
The Selecter's "Breakdown"--from their most recent album Subculture (read The Duff Guide to Ska review of it here)--is a phenomenal song, very much worthy of being spotlighted in this fashion (and it's awesome live). Here's what I wrote about it in my Subculture review...
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?"
[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."]
"Dangerous tweets" takes on a whole new meaning with the new American president-elect, doesn't it?
Ranking Roger's UK version of The Beat's "Side To Side" featuring Roger's son Ranking Junior (from The Beat's recent Bounce album--read our review it here) is a terrific, driving ska tune concerned solely with getting the crowd to dance (a la "Ranking Full Stop") and boasting about the ability to do so. This track sports some wicked fast toasting by both father and son--and must be pretty fantastic live.
+ + + +
Labels:
2 Tone,
Duff Review,
Gaps Hendrickson,
Madness,
Neol Davies,
Pauline Black,
Ranking Roger,
The Beat,
The English Beat,
The Selecter
Thursday, January 5, 2017
Duff Guide to Ska Fast Takes: The Toasters "Skaboom!" Reissue
The "Skaboom" LP and cassette covers with the re-worked original art by Bob Fingerman. |
The Toasters Skaboom! (blue heavyweight vinyl/cassette, Jump Up Records/Megalith Records, 2016 reissue; originally released in the USA in 1987 on Moving Target/Celluloid and in a slightly altered form in the UK on Unicorn as Pool Shark): While The Toasters' 1987 debut LP wasn't the first American ska album out of the gate (bands like Chicago's Heavy Manners, Berkeley's The Uptones, and Boston's Bim Skala Bim beat them to the punch), Skaboom! was arguably the most influential record in the development/history of American ska--not only on its many musical merits, but because The Toasters' efforts to promote it helped lay the DIY foundation for the massive ska revival that hit the USA less than a decade later.
By 1987, The Toasters' brand of ska had evolved from the quirky, heavily New Wave-influenced ska of 1985's Recriminations EP to the brash and gritty, New York-centric in your face/"I'm walking here!" modern ska of Skaboom! that became their enduring, signature sound. And the band had metastasized into a "Warriors"-size gang; the only holdovers from the Recriminations era were Robert "Bucket" Hingley on guitar (the British expat zealously determined to popularize ska in America), Steve "Hex" LaForge on keys, and Gary Eye on percussion--augmented by The Unity Two, Sean "Cavo" Dinsmore and Lionel "Nene" Bernard sharing vocals with Bucket, Brian Emerich on bass, Jonathan McCain on drums, Marcel Reginato on alto sax, John Dugan on tenor sax, Greg Grinnell on cornet, and Anne Hellandsjo on trombone. The Toasters' (in)famous residency at CBGBs (the hardcore scene spilled over into the ska scene and with it came a fair amount of violence that led Hilly Kristal to ban ska from CBs for a time) and their non-stop gigging at other renown NYC clubs like Danceteria helped whip the band into a formidable live act (amongst the best I've ever seen).
Not only did The Toasters have the live chops (and then some), they had the tunes, too--written by Bucket, Dinsmore, and LaForge. Skaboom! is a brilliant collection of songs from start to finish--"Talk is Cheap," "Pool Shark," "Weekend in LA," "Shocker," "East Side Beat," "ABCs," "Manipulator," "Mr. Trouble," "Now or Never," and more--most of which are still included in The Toasters' live set 30 years later (you can read our in-depth look at some of these tracks here). Indeed, hearing this album for the first time in 1987, I remember being struck how original and fully-formed it all was--Skaboom! wasn't a 2 Tone clone, but its very own amazing thing.
Since Bucket's still fledgling Moon Records wasn't in a position to press and distribute Skaboom! (which they had produced themselves--hence, the fairly rudimentary recording), they struck up a deal with the French/American NYC-based independent label Celluloid to have the album released on their rock/reggae imprint Moving Target (which had issued records from Sly and Robbie, Yellowman, Dennis Bovell, and The Fleshtones). As a result, Skaboom! was distributed far and wide across the USA (and Unicorn did a decent job with Pool Shark in England, with some copies making their way over to the continent via mail order), so The Toasters decided to go for broke, quit their day jobs, and devote themselves to the band full-time--embarking on their first national tour in support of the album (the "Toast on the Coast" tour, naturally).
In the late 80s, ska music pretty much was limited to parochial underground scenes in major cities like NYC, Boston, DC, Chicago, San Francisco, and LA, which were fairly isolated from each other in those pre-internet days (I had no idea that there were any other ska bands from California apart from Fishbone and The Untouchables until hearing Moon Records' Ska Face: An All American Ska Compilation in 1988). Notably, The Toasters' "Toast on the Coast" tour helped forge the first ska touring network (which many bands would later follow); started to connect all of the disjointed regional ska scenes; and inspired numerous ska bands to form in their wake (which would reach critical mass in the mid-to-late 1990s with the so-called Third Wave of ska).
American fans converted to ska through 2 Tone (which many people here discovered long after it was over in the UK) and/or Fishbone's EP and The UTs' Wild Child apparently were primed and ravenous for more new, homegrown ska music. As a result, Moving Target/Celluloid sold upwards of 25,000 copies of the Skaboom! LP, CD, and cassette (though royalties on Skaboom! were never paid to the band before Celluloid went bankrupt right after the release of Thrill Me Up on Celluloid's new ska imprint for The Toasters, Skaloid)--and the album made it to a very respectable #54 spot on the CMJ college radio charts. In addition, Skaboom!/Pool Shark was well-received by the post-2 Tone UK scene that had emerged in the mid-to-late 80s around such extraordinary acts as Laurel Aitken, Derrick Morgan, The Trojans, Potato 5, The Deltones, The Hotknives, The Loafers, Maroon Town, The Riffs, Bad Manners, Judge Dread, and others. Scotland's phenomenal Zoot skazine declared The Toasters' Skaboom! to be "the best thing to come out of America since sliced bread" (a compliment) and the band eventually made it over to tour the UK in 1989 (where they recorded the live album Frankenska for Unicorn).
Three decades later, it's easy to take Skaboom! for granted (particularly in light of all of the great Toasters records that followed it), but one cannot overstate the significance of this release. In many ways, Skaboom! was the catalyst for much, if not all, of what transpired in American ska for years to come. Without it, the burgeoning U.S. ska scene might have gone bust a decade sooner...
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To read more about The Toasters' history and their Thrill Me Up, This Gun for Hire, and New York Fever albums, click here.
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Labels:
2 Tone,
Bim skala bim,
Bucket,
Duff Review,
Heavy Manners,
Laurel Aitken,
Maroon Town,
Potato 5,
The Deltones,
The Loafers,
The Toasters,
The Trojans,
The Untouchables,
The Uptones,
Unity 2,
Zoot
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