Nazarenes - Songs of Life (Heartbeat 11661-7624-2, 2005)
Taj Weekes & Adowa - Hope and Doubt (AlphaPocket Records CD 0011, 2005)
Winston Jarrett and the Righteous Flames - Survival is the Game (Young
Tree Records YTR-1225 CD, 2005)
I seem to be in the midst of one of those periods where a lot of reggae is
coming my way. Fine with me 'cause I love the stuff, and my habit of reviewing
reggae releases en masse is once again on display. Among the riches this time
are discs by promising newcomers and a mighty retrospective from an often
overlooked vet.
Ethiopia has always been a spiritual home in the Rastafarian worldview, and that
foundational vibe is present on Songs of Life, the U.S. debut album by an
Ethiopian-born duo who call themselves the Nazarenes. Brothers Medhane and Noah
Tewolde are skilled singers, players and composers who sound as though they've
been influenced as much by American soul music as classic reggae, and as a
result this disc pulsates with spiritual themes (as you'd expect from the
prophet-like cover photo of the two) as well as meditations on love, life and
unity. Every track on the disc is called "Song of" something, and the end result
feels rather like life lessons set to reggae music. There's a lot of versatility
here, from deep roots to a bright popish feel, and these brethren serve it all
up expertly and from the heart. Highly recommended.
Of Ethiopian heritage but hailing from the Caribbean island of St.
Lucia, Taj Weekes is presently based in New York City with his band Adowa. His
sort of reggae is built around a longstanding roots-style framework, with tidy
production values and a crisp rhythmic bounce that matches well with Weekes'
warm, mildly urgent voice and knack for melodic and lyrical hooks. Hope and
Doubt brings reggae to the mainstream in a way that readily bespeaks Bob
Marley- not about to compromise commercially though readily embracing all with
ears to hear. Songs like "Scream Out Mellow," "MPLA" and "Life" are deep but
everyman-like expressions of consciousness that flow easily while providing
ample food for thought. Also highly recommended.
On the reggae scene for considerably longer than the above two is
Winston Jarrett, once a member of legendary Jamaican singer Alton Ellis' backup
group the Flames and still an accomplished vocalist in his own right. With the
two-CD set Survival is the Game, many of his previously hard-to-find
songs are now compiled for the first time. And that's a blessing. Covering a
nearly 30-year period, the tracks here (some previously unreleased or never
before on CD) include rock solid roots, lovers tunes, dubs and a very complete
picture of a strong, committed singer deserving of such a retrospective. Factor
in backing by the Wailers and Roots Radics bands, lyrical and musical references
to Bob
Marley and Peter Tosh, the recasting of familiar riddims from Studio One and
beyond and contributions by Jackie Mittoo and King Tubby, and you've got a
killer release that no reggae fan should pass by. Survival has indeed been the
game for Winston Jarrett, and he's winning.
Buy Nazarene's Songs of Life, Taj Weekes' Hope & Doubt, and Winston Jarrett 's Survival Is the Game].
World Music Central
http://www.worldmusiccentral.org/article.php/2005100521305514