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Owen Gray

May 29th 2006 11:32
Owen Gray is performing in LA alongside Alton Ellis, Derrick Morgan, Pat Kelly and Dennis Alcapone on June 11th.

I was fortunate enough to see Owen Gray perform in Melbourne in November 2004. Though a decent age he performed with great gusto and showmanship. Before that moment I hadn’t come across Gray very often – he was really overshadowed by other Jamaican artists. Seeing him perform with the Melbourne Ska Orchestra, a 27 piece band of Melbourne ska identities, created a new interest for the artist, particularly in me. I quickly discovered he was someone with a wealth of experience to match his performance skills. He obviously had a deep passion for the music and this had lasted over 45 years in the business. Though he probably doesn’t have the string of hits like artists such as Jimmy Cliff or Desmond Dekker, his appeal lies in his passion and humility.


Owen Gray
Owen Gray with the Melbourne Ska Orchestra


Owen Gray was born in 1939 and grew up in Trenchtown, Jamaica. He attended the Alpha Boys School alongside many other great music names and began performing from a young age as well as trying his hand at drama while at University. He has the claim of being the first to record a dubplate and was the inspiration for many other musicians. Having heard Gray on the radio (and knowing him as was the nature in Kingston at the time) many others wanted what he had. In 1960 he recorded Please Don’t Let Me Go with the Caribs, who contained Ernest Ranglin’ and also some Australians living in Jamaica. On the Beach, a song recorded shortly after is another of his most well known tracks. He was very much the first recording star in Jamaica releasing the popular American R&B style. His songs were also gaining popularity with the Jamaican community in the UK and he relocated there in 1962.


Owen Gray tried his hand at a variety of genres – soul just as much as the Jamaican ones. Soul was very popular in the UK and he quite happily mixed it in as he moved in ska, rocksteady and reggae genres. His rendition of Can I Get a Witness is a cracker. To this day he performs a large variety of styles and is open to the progression of Jamaican music (The Age, 2004).

Owen Gray worked with some of the biggest names and recorded for some of the most well known labels in Jamaican music history. Coxsone Dodd and Studio One, Chris Blackwell and Island Records, Melodisc, Camel (Pama) and Trojan all released Gray’s music at different times. Some of his other most popular tracks include Jezebel, Darling Patricia and Bongo Natty amongst others.

Like many Jamaican musicians, his career went up and down and he moved between the UK, USA and Jamaica. Right now there is resurgence in popularity for the Jamaican greats and he is performing across the world to very receptive crowds.

Photo Copyright Glen Smyth

References

Reggaetrain.com
Kate Welsman for The Age
Answers.com
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Desmond Dekker Passes Away

May 26th 2006 09:07
Yesterday I said I was going to write about each of the artists playing the gig on June 10th in LA, USA. Something came up that I couldn’t overlook, so I will move on to them next week.

Desmond Dekker
It is with great disappointment to hear that Desmond Dekker has passed away. Dekker was born Desmond Adolphus Dacres on July 16, 1941 and died Thursday morning at 4 am May 25th in London of a heart attack. He was 64.

Dekker made an impact on the Jamaican music scene with his song Honour Your Mother and Father for Leslie Kong on the excellent Beverley’s label. It was a cracking upbeat ska number that set his path as a Jamaican musical icon. This was 1963, right in the thick of Jamaica’s indigenous music beginnings. He followed this song up with a number of others including the well known King of Ska (backed by The Cherry Pies) and Get Up Edina (backed by The Four Aces). The Aces would be his vocal group for his next stint of recordings, made up of Wilson James and brothers Clive, Carl, Barry and Patrick Howard (not necessarily all at the same time). In 1967 they recorded the rocksteady number 007, which went to #14 on the UK charts. This was followed by winning the 1968 Jamaican Festival Song Competition with the song Music Like Dirt, better known as Intensified. The year after in 1969, on the back of the UK skinheads’ love of reggae music and Dekker’s touring in the UK, their song Israelites went to #1 on the UK charts. It was also Dekker’s only US charting song, reaching the top ten.

Dekker was spending a lot of time touring the UK and by the time he recorded the Jimmy Cliff penned You Can Get It If You Really Want in 1970, he had relocated there. Leslie Kong’s death in 1971 was said to be a big set back for Dekker. He had had 20 number one hits in Jamaica by this time, but his career started to slide. A re-release of Israelites made the UK charts in 1975, but the mid to late seventies saw Dekker struggle. With the prominence of the 2-tone movement in the UK in the late seventies to early eighties, Dekker capitalised with albums Black and Dekker and Compass point on the Stiff label, which also released the likes of Madness and Ian Dury. Like 2-tone, it was short lived and Dekker had to file for bankruptcy in 1984. He was down but not out though. In 1993 he recorded an album with some former members of The Specials titled King of Kings. From that point on he performed consistently throughout the USA, UK and Europe right up until his recent death.

From what I have been told Dekker was very much a showman, with a unique sense of dress (like many Jamaicans) and a string of hits that would impress any audience. Personally, he was very much my gateway into Jamaican music. I would credit him with being the artist that made me look to the sixties for ska and reggae. Israelites, Intensified, 007 and Unity were and continue to be songs that can send shivers down my spine. He had a belting voice that was as high as anyone’s. I can’t remember the specific song, but I remember someone once commenting they thought a woman was singing.

It is a sad passing and made sadder still by the fact it is not an uncommon occurrence amongst Jamaican music royalty. The founders of ska are at an age where death is a definite reality and Dekker’s death comes shortly after Laurel Aitken’s, Phyllis Dillon, Coxsone Dodd and C Clancy Eccles to name just a few.

References

Desmond Dekker Official Site
Jamaica Observer
Jamaica Gleaner News
Grover Records
Radio Jamaica
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Reggae and Ska on Myspace May

May 23rd 2006 11:52
Although I’m not a huge fan of Myspace due to its highly unstable nature, bands have taken to it like fish to water. Reggae and ska bands seem to have taken the attitude they can’t afford not to get on board the Myspace train because of the way it attracts attention to the band they can’t get through their own websites. Mp3 hosting sweetens the deal and they can get an idea how many people are listening to their music. Here are a few bands worth checking out on Myspace.

Intensified
http://www.myspace.com/intensifieduk
Great UK rocksteady, reggae and ska band that have been together 15 years. Doesn’t have that much info about the band on their website, but you can listen to a few songs from the 2004 record Doghouse Bass and download the live track Morality Panic.

Hepcat
http://www.myspace.com/hepcatlive
One of the most loved US reggae band with the smoothest sound you’ll ever hear. They still play here and there, though not as often as they once did. Warning: takes a long time to load.

Impalers
http://www.myspace.com/theimpalerssf
The house band for Axe Records, who released the Aggrolites first record. They play a mix of skinhead reggae and rocksteady and have released two 45s on Axe and play live mainly in San Francisco. You can hear four tracks here.

Ska Vendors
The Ska Vendors
http://www.myspace.com/theskavendors
Finally, an Aussie band. They’ve just released their debut CD and this Melbourne ska/reggae band is definitely going places. Hear four tracks on their myspace.
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Lyrical Madmen break up

May 22nd 2006 11:29
Sydney band The Lyrical Madmen have decided to call it a day. Playing a blend of ska, reggae and pop, they were on the scene for around six years and played to a huge range of audiences. They were often seen on ska gig lineups in the city, but hailing from the Northern Beaches of Sydney, tended to play a majority of their shows on the northern side of the bridge.

These boys were by no means your typical ska fans. They weren’t skinheads or rudeboys, but rather surfers and their music really reflected this with a laid back style. Reggae and hip hop started to come into their sound more as time went on, but they always had a definite sound and style throughout their time.

Lyrical Madmen
My first memory of them was at a gig at the Tartan Heart Ska Club at the Greensquare Hotel a bit over 5 years ago. They were due to play last and I was excited to see this new band, but there was a huge fight between punters that saw glass doors smashed and police turn up to control the punks and they never got to play! Luckily enough I saw them in the same place not long after (see the picture) and went on to see them many more times. They played the three SkaBQs I put on at the Harp in Tempe and I got to play on the same lineup with them a number of time with The Signals. The guys are all very approachable and know how to have a good time.

It’s a shame they are going as there aren’t many ska/reggae bands about in Sydney. I can only think that after some major lineup changes recently their progress started to stall. Life goes on though and so does reggae in Sydney!
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Toots and the Maytals are definitely up there when it comes to all-time reggae stars. Their music, more than many perhaps any other artist, is a favourite with all lovers of reggae, but also music fans in general.

When played I can’t think of any other reggae songs that receive a better reception on the dance floor. They had hit after hit, perhaps not in the music charts sense of the word, but definitely as far as having a dedicated fan base to their music. Their songs are continually covered knowing their popularity – even an Australian band Kingtide covered their song Broadway Jungle calling it No Dog War. The Specials also did Pressure Drop and hundred of bands have thrown their songs into their set lists.

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Steel Pulse

May 2nd 2006 08:52
Steel Pulse
Steel Pulse are probably my favourite roots reggae band. The reason for this is that a good number of their songs are upbeat danceable numbers as opposed to the laid back style of most roots reggae bands.

Steel Pulse started in 1975 in Birmingham, England with David Hinds, Basil Gabbidon and Ronnie McQueen. Rastafarian in faith, the band were from a very early age conscience in their outlook. Even in 2006, Jamaica is 80 per cent Christian and so Rastafarianism in 1975 was not necessarily embraced by the Jamaican population in Birmingham at the time and the bands conscience Rastafarian music was likewise not embraced by the community.

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The Aggrolites

May 1st 2006 05:16
They are perhaps the most popular band playing a contemporary slant on the old Jamaican sound in the world today. At the very least, they have a cult following that extends across the world. With them just about to release their next album through Hellcat, the sub label of Epitaph records, one imagines that their following will only continue to increase.

Live Aggrolites
Their debut album was released on both vinyl LP and CD on San Francisco based Axe Records and when I got it I was blown away. I quickly played it to anyone who would listen and even in Australia there grew a legion of fans. This album had a driving reggae sound that was obviously inspired by a pre 1972 Jamaican sound and it also had a quality that made it perfect for the dancefloor with an emphasis on catchy songs.

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Bob Marley - The Greatest?

April 28th 2006 07:53
With someone like Bob Marley, who is the biggest name in the non-reggae world, you’d expect he’d be on the nose of many die hard ska and reggae fans. I am surprised I like him and I am surprised how many reggae fans who know about the huge wealth of talent in the reggae/ska world, like him as well. This got me thinking, how can this be so?

I first came up with a comparison. You don’t get many rockers or teddy boys bad mouthing Elvis do you, at least not until his Las Vegas fat man jump suit days. This didn’t really help me answer my question though. All I could think of from that is Elvis put out a lot of quite good stuff. Okay some fantastic stuff. I’ve already answered my question really. Bob Marley over his career was involved with and released some quality material. It is this quality mainly that makes him so enjoyed. Perhaps too, it helps that he didn’t put out anything really gimmicky. If he’d done a string of Christmas albums I wouldn’t have been so respectful, although there is the odd Xmas song!

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The Pioneers

April 27th 2006 08:04
The Pioneers are one of my favourite Jamaican vocal groups. They tasted a fair amount of success both locally and in Europe and fantastically they are still playing today. The vocal group was of course very popular in Jamaica, with other groups including the Maytals, the Melodians, the Techniques and the Jamaicans to name just a few. With the talent in Jamaica in the mid to late sixties in wasn’t surprising that people passed through multiple groups. Vocal groups were also the beginnings of many a solo career such as John Holt of the Paragons.

The core of the Pioneers was and is Sydney Crook, Jackie Robinson and George Dekker. Others such as Glen Adams (The Heptones, The Upsetters) also sung with the group on some recordings. After recording in Jamaica with producers Joe Gibbs and Leslie Kong a number of hit songs, some of which made the UK charts on the Trojan Label, the Pioneers headed to the UK to base themselves there permanently.

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Moderated by Glen
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