Clash, Police, Rancid, Specials, No Doubt 등의 밴드 이전에 Bob Marley가 있었습니다. 그리고 Bob Marley가 70년대에 국제적인 센세이션이 되기 전에 그는 ska 곡을 공연하는 보컬 그룹인 Wailers의 일원이었습니다. 'ska'라는 단어는 90년대의 나쁜 기억을 떠올리게 할 수 있지만, 이 장르의 전통적인 사운드는 클래식 소울과 리듬 앤 블루스와 훨씬 더 닮아 있습니다. 미국 라디오 방송국에서 흘러나오는 곡에 영감을 받아 자메이카 아티스트들은 업비트와 뻑뻑한 기타 파트를 특히 강조하여 음악에 자신만의 색깔을 입히기 시작했습니다. 이러한 사운드는 장르의 이름 붙임에 기여했을 것입니다.
n60년대 후반, 자메이카 음악의 일부는 록스테디로 발전하게 되었고, 이는 일반적으로 느린 템포였으며 베이스에 더 중점을 두었습니다. 록스테디는 곧 레게로 발전해 나가는데, 이는 이전 장르의 요소를 혼합하며 현대적인 악기와 녹음 기술을 활용하고, 자메이카 노래와 문화의 영향을 더 많이 받아들였으며(라스타파리즘과 대마초와 같은) 그리고 섬 전역의 만연한 빈곤과 범죄와 같은 사회적, 정치적 이슈에 더 많은 초점을 맞추게 되었습니다.
n레게는 에릭 클랩턴이 1974년에 마리의 "I Shot the Sheriff"를 커버한 덕분에 널리 퍼지게 되었으며, 이는 많은 서브 장르와 해석에 영감을 주었습니다. 스카는 70년대와 80년대의 영국 2 Tone 운동과 함께 재기되었으며, Specials, Selecter, Beat와 같은 밴드들이 있었고, 이후 90년대에는 Mighty Mighty Bosstones, No Doubt, Operation Ivy, Slackers, Reel Big Fish 등과 같은 서드웨이브 밴드에 의해 연주되었습니다.
n이 아티스트들이(대부분) 공정한 인지와 찬사를 받는 동안, 많은 사람들이 레게의 대중적인 감상을 하는 사람들에 의해 간과됩니다. 만약 당신이 그 무리의 일원이라고 생각한다면, 다음은 레게의 역사와 진화를 더 잘 이해할 수 있도록 도와줄 10개의 LP입니다.
This album is basically a starter kit for fans of traditional reggae and ska. The soundtrack to the film of the movie of the same name, it's often seen as a Jimmy Cliff album, as he was the movie's star, but it's really a compilation soundtrack featuring two artists we'll talk about later (Desmond Dekker, Toots and the Maytals) also features classic singles by the Slickers, Scotty and the Melodians. The movie is also worth a watch—Cliff stars as a poor man who, after recording the title track, gets bilked by his producer, ends up dealing marijuana and then becomes a famous criminal leading police on a manhunt. It's a good intro to Jamaican rude boy culture, their admiration for American Westerns and their slang, although you'll probably need subtitles to understand a lot of it. The film studio even included them during the initial theatrical release because the lingo is so tough for many English speakers.
Prince Buster got his start running his own sound system, a part of Jamaican culture where DJs, engineers, MCs, promoters, etc. would blare music at street parties and compete to have the freshest exclusives. Unable to keep up with his rivals' collections, Buster decided to just record some new tunes himself, either singing, scatting or toasting over instrumentals. On this 1968 compilation, you'll find heartfelt rocksteady crooning with "Julie," but mostly you'll hear him chatting over some gorgeously lo-fi instrumentals, or basically doing a proto-rap sketch on "Judge Dread," where he sentences a rude boy to 400 years in prison for shooting black people. In terms of social commentary, it's almost the opposite of "Ten Commandments," a (hopefully) tongue-in-cheek sermon directed at all the women in his life to let him get away with anything while they remain faithful. He became a huge inspiration for 2 Tone bands: Madness took their name from one of his songs, and The Specials and The Beat also covered some of his tracks.
The Skatalites are ska's equivalent to supergroups like Motown's Funk Brothers and L.A.'s Wrecking Crew, except they were—and still are—the band whose name goes on the marquee, even though every founding member except alto sax player Lester Sterling has since passed away. Mainly jazz players, the group started loosely in the '50s and were brought together in the '60s by producer and Studio One fonder Clement "Coxsonne" Dodd. While best known for their take on the instrumental "Guns of Navarone," they also served as the studio band for tracks by Marley and the Wailers, Prince Buster, Lee "Scratch" Perry and many more. Ska Authentic, their 1964 debut, is the perfect place to start appreciating them, and getting to know the influence members like Tommy McCook, Roland Alphonso, Don Drummond, Lloyd Brevett and Lloyd Knibb had on generations to come.
The ska vocal group formed in 1963 with Marley, Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer wore suits and shorter hair, as opposed to the military fatigues and dreads they'd don later as reggae artists. Released in 1965 by Studio One with Dodd producing, The Wailing Wailers features Bob sounding more like a lower-pitched Frankie Lymon. There's the earliest rendition of "One Love," a cover of "What's New Pussycat?" and the album's closer, "Simmer Down," Marley's plea for peace among the young gang members in the Kingston ghettoes. It was his first No. 1 hit.
Led by the soulful voice of Toots Hibbert, the Maytals' 1968 song "Do the Reggay" was the first track to use the term that defined the genre. There are plenty of great Toots tunes, but a good starting place is Funky Kingston, with this version being a 1975 U.S. repackaging of an earlier album to bring some of the band's best work to the American audience as reggae was starting to become popular. There are covers of "Louie, Louie" and John Denver's "Country Road," and one of his signature songs, "Pressure Drop," which was featured on The Harder They Come and later famously covered by the Clash. Simply put, Toots is a force of nature on the mic, and this is the perfect way to get to know him more and then explore the rest of his discography. As of this year, he's back on the road following a hiatus due to a head injury he suffered when a fan threw a bottle of vodka at him. Get out and see him if you can.
In 1964, Desmond Dekker proclaimed himself the "King of Ska" in a single backed by the Maytals, and we're not going to argue with that title, though he later became royalty in rocksteady and reggae. If you have The Harder They Come, you already have his hit "007 (Shanty Town)" so next up we'd recommend Israelites, a reissue of the crooner's 1969 UK album, which features some of his greatest hits: "Israelites," "It Mek" and "Rude Boy Train." As a friend related in the email announcing the birth of his son, Desmond, Dekker was the inspiration for the Desmond in the Beatles' "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da," was name-checked in Rancid's "Roots Radicals" and was given a posthumous tribute from the Mighty Mighty Bosstones on " Don't Worry Desmond Dekker."
While Desmond is the King of Ska, Laurel Aitken is the Godfather. In the late '50s, the Cuban native worked with Island Records founder Chris Blackwell, and released a number of singles in England in the '60s, leading to a rise in popularity of the genre there. He was so prolific that it's difficult to really find a vinyl record that encapsulates his career, but The Fantastic Lauren Aitken, a reissue of a 1970 rarity, helps illustrate the beauty in his voice, his tenderness and sometimes vulgar lust, and how he helped ska and reggae move forward, especially with his popularity in Britain and influence on the 2 Tone movement.
The biggest outlier on this list, Bob Andy and Marcia Griffiths' 1970 collaboration blends reggae with some contemporary American soul influences, like orchestral arrangements. Think a Jamaican version of Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell, with production like Dusty in Memphis. Both singers had individual success as solo artists and as members of other groups: Andy was in the Paragons, best known for their Blondie-covered hit "The Tide Is High," and Griffiths as one of the I Threes, the trio of female backing vocalists who joined Bob Marley and the Wailers after Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer departed.
Another ska pioneer, Derrick Morgan once had the honor of having his singles chart in the top seven spots in Jamaica. This album collects some of his earlier tracks, including "Be Still," "The Hop," the Patsy Todd duet "Housewives Choice," and "Forward March," which celebrated Jamaica's 1962 independence from the U.K. A rival of Prince Buster's, he worked with Marley, Dekker and Cliff, helped pioneer rocksteady with "Tougher Than Tough" and reggae with "Seven Letters," and even influenced British skinheads with "Moon Hop," which was covered by the non-racist group Symarip and released as "Skinhead MoonStomp." Now 76 and blind, Morgan still makes occasional live performances.
The Upsetters, the house band of producer Lee "Scratch" Perry, debuted with their own album Return of Django in 1969 and backed Bob Marley on some of his early reggae recordings. But it was this 1973 album that had a huge influence on the reggae world and its followers, as it's one of the first examples of dub, the subgenre that features an emphasis on bass and drums, heavily reverbed sounds, instruments that appear and disappear from the mix, and all sorts of random warbles and effects. Once you get into this, move backward to Django and forward to 1976's Super Ape.
After praising Perry's contributions to dub, it'd be a sin to not include King Tubby Meets Rockers Uptown, the 1976 collaboration between genre pioneer Tubby and producer/instrumentalist Augustus Pablo. Held down by the bass and drums of Wailers' rhythm section Aston and Carlton Barrett, Tubby's mixing and Pablo's playing, specifically on the melodica, still sound ahead of their time.
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