|
 Steel Pulse - African Holocaust (RAS/Sanctuary
06076-89931-2, 2004)
Horace Andy Meets Mad Professor - From The Roots (RAS/Sanctuary
06076-89932-2, 2004)
Burning Spear - Creation Rebel: The Original Classic Recordings From Studio
One (Heartbeat 11661-7664-2, 2004)
Dennis Brown Presents Prince Jammy - Umoja/20th Century DEBwise (Blood
and Fire BAFCD 046, 2004)
There's plenty of genuinely great reggae coming down the chute these days. And
let's put the emphasis squarely on the "genuine" aspect here as we check into
two high quality new releases from a couple of long timers as well as sumptuous
reissues spotlighting classic works from a couple more.
Along with Aswad, Steel Pulse remain the primary representatives of British
reggae. However, where Aswad seem to have left the roots behind for good, Steel
Pulse re-embrace the foundational reggae sound and come across fresh and mighty
because of it. Front man David Hinds' lead vocals retain the same soaring
flexibility as back in the band's mid-'70s nascent days, the keyboard
accentuations of other remaining original member Selwyn Brown add color to the
melodic hooks of Hinds' compositions and the songs themselves are the genuine
article reggae this band has always excelled at.
Songs such as "Global Warning," "No More Weapons," "Darker Than Blue" and the
title track address the dual concerns of today's overly militant world and the
horrifying consistency with which people of African descent have been
marginalized. But despite the often grim subject matter, the disc's no-nonsense
reggae grooves are sharp enough to set you in motion and keep you there. Apart
from one digression into dancehall ("Blazing Fire," which at least sports nicely
conscious lyrics), African Holocaust easily earns a place among Steel
Pulse's many notable achievements [Buy
African Holocaust now].
Though he's graying of hair and beard nowadays, veteran Jamaican
vocalist Horace Andy still sings with that wonderful mixture of quivering
vulnerability and and reedy authority that made songs like "Mr. Bassie" and
"Skylarking" enduring reggae classics. He's in peak form on From the Roots,
with assistance from Sly and Robbie and the same musical crew who made that drum
and bass duo's recent CD The Dub Revolutionaries such a joy.
The arrangements are solidly heavy and the knowing hand of the Mad Professor
never lets the sparsely spacey production detract from the beat. Whether
touching upon Rastafarian-based tenets ("Babylon Bridge," "Zion the Holy Land"),
dismissing superficiality ("Vanity Vanity," "Dem Lie") or wryly examining fine
lines of love and longing ("For Me," "Gimmie What Me Want"), this latest from
Andy is a dandy [Buy
From the Roots, and
The Dub Revolutionaries].
For reggae fans,
Burning Spear needs no introduction. Born Winston
Rodney in St. Ann's Bay, Jamaica in 1945 (same place and year as Bob Marley),
Spear has never faltered in his humble mission to bring high quality reggae to
the world. Like many Jamaican singers, he got his start at Kingston's Studio One
under the guidance of late producer Clement Dodd.
Spear's early efforts for
Studio One (beginning in 1969) are essential- the work of an Afrocentric singer
with an imperfect but uniguely soulful voice matched with a producer who knew
precisely how to put that voice in a sonic context that echoed with the cultural
connections so vital to the emerging roots reggae scene.
Many of the songs on Creation Rebel ("Door Peep," "Pick Up the Pieces," "Foggy Road," "Call On You")
are ones that Spear would rework on later albums or please crowds worldwide with
in his live performances. But it's here that the honing of his craft is heard
with succinct brilliance. He was young when these tracks were laid but sounds as
intense as an old timer. That intensity is heightened and tightened by Dodd's
airy production style and backing by some of reggae's greatest players.
fter
releasing dozens of reissues of Studio One material, this is the Heartbeat
label's first since Dodd's death in May 2004. No reggae lover should pass it by
[Buy
Creation Rebel now].
Finally, on the dub side of things, there's Dennis Brown. Brown is
another reggae late great, having passed away in 1999. He excelled at the
romantic reggae style called lover's rock and recorded some first rate roots and
culture material as well. His renown as a singer tended to overshadow his work
as a producer, though he ably played that role on many of his own recordings and
those of others.
There are two late '70s dub albums combined on Umoja/20th
Century DEBwise, both consisting of tracks cut by the likes of Brown himself,
the Tamlins and Junior Delgado, produced by Brown and then given the dub
treatment by Prince Jammy, engineering whiz at the studio of the legendary King
Tubby. There's 75 minutes of rock solid dub here, with drums and bass calling
the shots and plenty of well placed guitar, keyboard and horn bursts urging
things along, plus some particularly strong percussion work in the second half.
Prince Jammy lays on just the right amount of murky, smoky sheen, having learned
well from Tubby the master.
Another direct hit for Blood and Fire, the U.K.
label that's reissued many great reggae and dub albums in the last decade [Buy
Umoja now].
|