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Reporter Klive Walker Investigates the Reggae Underground   
01/08/2006 03:22AM
Contributed by: WMC_News_Dept.

New BooksTontonto, Canada - Insomniac Press has published Dubwise (ISBN 1-894663-96-9), a book by Toronto-based music writer Klive Walker. On Dubwise Walker takes a fresh look at reggae music and how it has influenced international popular culture. He analyzes Bob Marley's global effect, but he also discusses the vital contributions to reggae culture of such innovators as poet Louise Bennett, hand drummer Oswald "Count Ossie" Williams, jazz saxophonist Joe Harriott, ska trombonist Don Drummond and singer Dennis Brown.

In a groundbreaking essay, Walker sheds new light on the history of women in reggae, ignored for far too long. Figures such as singer-songwriters Marcia Griffiths and Judy Mowatt made crucial contributions to reggae culture with solo careers that had more of an impact than the time they spent as backing singers for Bob Marley and the Wallers.

Walker treats-die reggae crafted by American, British and Canadian artists of Caribbean heritage with the importance it deserves, looking for the first time at the history of reggae in Canada, including the work of dub poet Lillian Alien and the band Truths and Rights. Elsewhere, he considers the work of U.K. roots reggae bands such as Aswad and Steel Pulse, and the contribution of Jamaican-American deejay/rappers Sister Carol and Shinehead.

Finally Walker examines reggae's relationship to hip-hop, weaving together histories of dancehall dee jays and hip-hop MCs in the rise of raggamuffin rap, a Caribbean diasporic phenomenon.

Klive Walker's articles on reggae have been published in Toronto's Word magazine and the U.K.'s Untold. This is his first book.

Purchase the book:

Other reggae books:

Catch a Fire
56 Thoughts from 56 Hope Road
No Woman No Cry
Bob Marley
Bob Marley And the Wailers
Marley And Me
Bob Marley
Caribbean Currents
This Is Reggae Music
Deep Down with Dennis Brown
The Rough Guide to Reggae 3

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