Showing posts with label The Skatalites. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Skatalites. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

NYC Fall 2015 Ska Calendar #14!

A rare 3D cover of this classic album! 
Friday, October 9, 2015 @ 11:00 pm

New York Ska Jazz Ensemble, Deejay Spinach

The Delancey (downstairs)
168 Delancey Street
New York, NY
$10

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Saturday, October 10, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

Inspecter 7, Consumata Sonidera, The Crypt Keeper 5, World War IX, DJ I Don't Like You

The Grand Victory
245 Grand Street
Brooklyn, NY
$15/21+

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Friday, October 23, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

Skarroneros, Whole Sum, PrinceLionSound, plus selections by host DJ Gorilla!

Hallo Berlin
626 10th Avenue (44th and 45th Streets)
New York, NY
No cover!

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Saturday, October 24, 2015 @ 10:00 pm

Rude Boy George

Toshi's Living Room and Penthouse
1141 Broadway (at 26th Street)
New York, NY
No cover!

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Wednesday, October 28, 2015 @ 8:00 pm

UB40 featuring Ali Campbell, Astro, and Mickey Virtue, and Radio Riddler (backing UB40 and doing their own Purple Reggae set!)

Webster Hall
125 East 11th Street
Manhattan, NY
$35/18+

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Friday, October 30, 2015 @ 8:00 pm

Devil's Night with Mephiskapheles, Hub City Stompers, 45 Adaptors, Hymen Holocaust

Mercury Lounge
217 East Houston Street
New York, NY
$20 in advance/$25 day of show
21+

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Saturday, October 31, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

Halloween Party w/Rude Boy George

Toshi's Living Room and Penthouse
1141 Broadway (at 26th Street)
New York, NY
No cover!

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Saturday, October 31, 2015 @ 9:00 pm

Tea Factory Sounds and Love So Nice present the 7th Annual Witch Dance!

The Far East and The Frightnrs, with selections by Grace of Spades, Jah Point (Shockwave Sound, Rudies Don't Care) and Mush One (Al Paragus HQ) featuring Screechy Dan!

The Kimberlye Project
1332 Atlantic Avenue
Brooklyn, NY

Ital Food
Doors at 9:00 pm
$10

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Saturday, October 31, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

Mephiskapheles

The Stanhope House
45 Main Street
Stanhope, NJ
$13/All Ages

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Wednesday, November 4, 2015 @ 7:45 pm

The Skatalites, Rude Boy George

Stage One
Fairfield Theatre Company
70 Sanford Street
Fairfield, CT
Tix: $28

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Friday, November, 13, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

Mustard Plug, Survay Says, Rude Boy George

Knitting Factory Brooklyn
361 Metropolitan Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$13 in advance/$15 day of show

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Wednesday, December 18, 2015

HR (of Bad Brains), Dubb Agents, Banddroidz, Skarroneros

Bowery Electric
327 Bowery
NYC

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Thursday, November 19, 2015 @ 6:00 pm

Five Iron Frenzy, The Toasters, Survay Says

The Stanhope House
45 Main Street
Stanhope, NJ
$20/All Ages

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Friday, November 20, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

Five Iron Frenzy, The Toasters, Survay Says

Santos Party House
96 Lafayette Street
New York, NY
$20 in advance/$25 day of show
16+

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Saturday, December 19, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

The Slackers and The Pietasters

Irving Plaza
17 Irving Place
New York, NY
$32.50

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Wednesday, September 16, 2015

NYC Fall 2015 Ska Calendar #13

Rude Boy George--New Wave Goes Ska!
Saturday, September 19, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

Rude Boy George

Toshi's Living Room and Penthouse
1141 Broadway (at 26th Street)
New York, NY
No cover!

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Sunday, September 20, 2015 @ 6:00 pm

Fishbone, Roots of Creation, Lions on the Moon

Brooklyn Bowl
61 Wythe Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$17/21+

(Note there is an All Ages, daytime show earlier on 9/20 at Brooklyn Bowl with Fishbone! It's $8.00; doors open at 12:00 pm, show starts at 2:00 pm!)

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Sunday, September 27, 2015

Across The Aisle

World Maker Faire
New York Hall of Science
Queens, NY

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Friday, October 9, 2015 @ 11:00 pm

New York Ska Jazz Ensemble, Deejay Spinach

The Delancey (downstairs)
168 Delancey Street
New York, NY
$10

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Saturday, October 24, 2015 @ 10:00 pm

Rude Boy George

Toshi's Living Room and Penthouse
1141 Broadway (at 26th Street)
New York, NY
No cover!

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Wednesday, October 28, 2015 @ 8:00 pm

UB40 featuring Ali Campbell, Astro, and Mickey Virtue, and Radio Riddler (backing UB40 and doing their own Purple Reggae set!)

Webster Hall
125 East 11th Street
Manhattan, NY
$35/18+

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Friday, October 30, 2015 @ 8:00 pm

Devil's Night with Mephiskapheles, Hub City Stompers, 45 Adaptors, Hymen Holocaust

Mercury Lounge
217 East Houston Street
New York, NY
$20 in advance/$25 day of show
21+

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Saturday, October 31, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

Halloween Party w/Rude Boy George

Toshi's Living Room and Penthouse
1141 Broadway (at 26th Street)
New York, NY
No cover!

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Saturday, October 31, 2015 @7:00 pm

Mephiskapheles

The Stanhope House
45 Main Street
Stanhope, NJ
$13/All Ages

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Wednesday, November 4, 2015 @ 7:45 pm

The Skatalites, Rude Boy George

Stage One
Fairfield Theatre Company
70 Sanford Street
Fairfield, CT
Tix: $28

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Friday, November, 13, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

Mustard Plug, Survay Says, Rude Boy George

Knitting Factory Brooklyn
361 Metropolitan Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$13 in advance/$15 day of show

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Thursday, November 19, 2015 @ 6:00 pm

Five Iron Frenzy, The Toasters, Survay Says

The Stanhope House
45 Main Street
Stanhope, NJ
$20/All Ages

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Friday, November 20, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

Five Iron Frenzy, The Toasters, Survay Says

Santos Party House
96 Lafayette Street
New York, NY
$20 in advance/$25 day of show
16+

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Saturday, December 19, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

The Slackers and The Pietasters

Irving Plaza
17 Irving Place
New York, NY
$32.50

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Tuesday, September 8, 2015

More Remembrances of Rico

Rico and his frequent collaborator
Laurel Aitken
Harry Pye at The Rebel Magazine has a wonderful tribute to Rico that includes remembrances of Rico performing with Jerry Dammers and his Spatial AKA Orchestra in 2010, as well as a gig Rico did at Gaz's Rockin' Blues in 2003 (and before Rico's set, the DJ played a recording of "First Victims of War," a new track by Jerry Dammers, Rico, Dick Cuthell, Horace Panter, and Lynval Golding that was intended to pick up where "Ghost Town" left off and lead to a full-on Specials reunion, with new material being written and performed; frustratingly, we all know how that didn't work out...).

In addition, Pye reminded me of something I had forgotten--that Ian Dury name-checked Rico on his 1979 hit, "Reasons to Be Cheerful, Part 3":

"Take your mum to Paris, lighting up the chalice
Wee Willy Harris
Bantu Stephen Biko, listening to Rico
Harpo, Groucho, Chico"

(Rico later appeared as a guest musician on Dury's 1984 album, 4,000 Week's Holiday.)



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NME re-printed Jerry Dammers' phenomenal tribute to Rico, which he originally released via his Facebook page. Read it here, if you haven't already.

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The Telegraph and The Guardian have published fairly in-depth obituaries for Rico, though The Telegraph states that Don Drummond was a saxophonist! The Guardian obit was written by reggae expert David Katz.

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The always amazing John V. at Hoi Polloi! Skazine sent me this incredible interview by Stephanie Claman with Rico from the January 17, 1981 issue of Black Echoes (thank you, John!). It was done just prior to the release of That Man is Forward (2 Tone) and amongst many interesting things about Rico's career that are revealed is the fact that he left Jamaica for the UK in 1961 because he and Skatalites trumpet player Johnny Moore had started demanding more money for their recording session work (which was slave wages meager to begin with) and ended up being blackballed by Coxsone Dodd and Duke Reid.

My favorite quote from Rico is when explained why he didn't like playing standards for the tourists in the "uptown" spots in JA--he found it boring, particularly when compared to the vital music scene in Kingston:

"So I've always preferred to be in Kingston and hungry, than in Montego Bay and my belly full..."

With Rico, it was always about the music.



Friday, May 1, 2015

The Duff Guide to Ska Spring/Summer 2015 NYC Ska Calendar #6

Saturday, May 2, 2015 (3 sets starting at 7:00 pm)

Rude Boy George

Toshi's Living Room
1141 Broadway
New York, NY
No cover!

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Saturday, May 2, 2015 @ 8:00 pm

Fishbone, Easy Star Allstars, The Skints

Brooklyn Bowl
61 Wythe Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$22/21+

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Saturday, May 9, 2015 @ 9:00 pm

Dig Deeper Presents Derrick Morgan, Crazy Baldhead, DJ Scratch Famous (of Deadly Dragon Sound System), DJ Honky and Mr. Robinson

Littlefield
622 Degraw Street
Brooklyn, NY 11217
$20 in advance/$25 day of show
21+

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Saturday, May 9, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

The Skatalites

Brooklyn Bowl
61 Wythe Avenue
Brooklyn, NY

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Friday, May 15, 2015, from 10:30 pm to 11:00 pm

Rude Boy George

Jersey Shore Festival
The Aztec Pool
901 Boardwalk
Seaside Heights, NJ
Free!

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Saturday, May 30, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

Rude Boy George

State Theatre of Boyertown
61 North Reading Avenue
Boyertown, PA

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Saturday, June 20, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

Rude Boy George, Pidgin Droppings

Oskar Schindler Performing Arts Center
4 Boland Drive
West Orange, NJ

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Friday, June 26, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

The Pietasters

Rock's Off Booze Cruise
The Jewel
Board the boat at East 23rd Street and the FDR Drive, Manhattan
Tix: $25 in advance/$30 day of show
21+

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Wednesday, July 15, 2015 @ 6:30 pm

The Mighty Mighty Bosstones, Streetdogs, The Interrupters

Webster Hall
125 East 11th Street,
Manhattan, NY
$27.50/18+

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Wednesday, October 28, 2015 @ 8:00 pm

UB40 featuring Ali Campbell, Astro, and Mickey Virtue

Webster Hall
125 East 11th Street,
Manhattan, NY
$35/18+

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Friday, April 17, 2015

The Duff Guide to Ska Record Store Day 2015 Ska Round-Up

Legions of (mostly) older music fans will be lining-up outside of your local mom and pop record shop this Saturday morning (April 18, 2015) to partake in the twice-yearly celebration of indie record stores and vinyl known throughout the USA, UK, Germany, Belgium, Netherlands, France, Mexico, Italy, and Spain as Record Store Day.

While I may grouse a bit about the pricey-ness of these limited-edition RSD releases (and how the UK RSD releases are consistently better than those available in the USA), each year you can find me in a record store or two (or three) on this day, hoping to pick up a few of that year's crop (usually new wave or post-punk related releases) that caught my attention.

So, while I'm more likely to be able to find some of the non-ska releases on my list this year (I'd like the Johnny Marr, Kate Pierson, and Buzzcocks singles; The Pop Group EP, and Replacements 10"), I'm sharing this recap of the some of the ska RSD releases that I'd be lucky to get my mitts on (and you would be, too):

1) For their first-ever Record Store Day release, Soul Jazz Records is issuing the Down Beat Special Studio One five x 7" box set, featuring the following killer singles (this is a UK-only release, limited to 500 copies--though, I suspect import copies will be available in the USA for a pretty penny):
  • Willie Williams "Armagideon Time" b/w Marcia Griffiths "Feel Like Jumping"
  • The Skatalites "Addis Ababa" b/w The Eternals "Queen of the Minstrels"
  • Dawn Penn "No No No" b/w Dub Specialist "Hooligan (Dub)"
  • The Mad Lads "Ten to One" b/w Jackie Mittoo "Totally Together"
  • Michigan and Smiley "Nice Up the Dance" b/w "The Wailers "Simmer Down"

2) Demon Music Group is issuing The Beat's The 7" Singles Collection. This box set contains thirteen Beat vinyl 45s, from their 2 Tone debut, "Tears of a Clown," to their last Special Beat Service single, "Ackee 1-2-3"--and everything in between: "Mirror In The Bathroom," "Hands Off... She’s Mine," "Best Friend," "Too Nice To Talk To," "Doors of Your Heart," "All Out To Get You," "Hit It," "Save It For Later," "Jeanette," "I Confess," and "Can’t Get To Losing You." A 16-page booklet is included, presumably about the band and each single. Only 1,000 copies of this set are being pressed and it's a UK-only release.


3) Salvo is issuing Madness"Lovestruck" (from 1999's Wonderful) b/w"Le Grand Pantalon" (a fantastic, reflective version of "Baggy Trousers" that was used in a 2011 Kronenbourg 1664 beer ad and was included on the 2013 A Guided Tour of Madness box set). Neither track has been available on vinyl before. Only 1,000 copies of this single will be for sale in the UK.


4) Trojan Records will be releasing a 60s ska/reggae compilation with cuts from Desmond Dekker and The Aces, The Upsetters, and the like. Titled Rude Boy Rumble, this 12-track LP will feature cuts chosen by Tom "Papa" Ray AKA The Soul Selector (also the owner of Vintage Vinyl in St. Louis, MO). This release will be available in the USA.


Happy record hunting this Saturday!


Saturday, March 28, 2015

Record Store Day 2015: Soul Jazz Presents "Down Beat Special" Studio One 7" Box Set

For their first-ever Record Store Day release, Soul Jazz Records is issuing the Down Beat Special Studio One five 7" box set, which will feature the following singles:

Willie Williams "Armagideon Time" b/w Marcia Griffiths "Feel Like Jumping"

The Skatalites "Addis Ababa" b/w The Eternals "Queen of the Minstrels"

Dawn Penn "No No No" b/w Dub specialist "Hooligan (Dub)"

The Mad Lads "Ten to One" b/w Jackie Mittoo "Totally Together"

Michigan and Smiley "Nice Up the Dance" b/w "The Wailers "Simmer Down"

I have to admit that I'm pretty bummed that this is a UK-only, limited-edition (500 copies) Record Store Day 2015 release, since it's going to be very hard to obtain here in the States and will likely cost an arm and a leg as a rare import (RSD releases in the US tend to be marked up significantly as it is).

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Check out the other ska/reggae related RSD 2015 releases we're interested in here.

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Tuesday, February 24, 2015

NYC Winter/Spring 2015 Ska Calendar #3

Wednesday, February 25, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

The Scofflaws (opening for Drumming for Love Benefit featuring Eric Bolivar, George Porter, Jr., Ivan Neville, Brian Stoltz, and Adam Dietch)

Marlin Room at Webster Hall
125 East 11th Street
New York, NY
Tickets: $35

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Friday, February 27, 2015 @ 9:00 pm

Reggae in the Slope w/NY Ska Jazz Ensemble, Deejay Spinach

Port Royal
837 Union Street
Brooklyn, NY
$10

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Saturday, February 28, 2015 (2 Sets: 8:00 pm and 9:30 pm)

Brown Rice Family Band

Friends and Lovers
641 Classon Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
No cover!

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Saturday, March 7, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

Vic Ruggiero, The Snails, Reggay Lords (Record Release!), DJ Grace of Spades

Grand Victory
245 Grand Street
Brooklyn, NY
$10/21+

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Saturday, March 14, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

The Pilfers Record Release Party w/Leaving Lifted, Fear Nuttin Band, The Rudie Crew, Sweet Lucy, Rude Boy George, The Native Alien Tribe, plus special guests and DJs!

The Wick
260 Meserole Street
Brooklyn, NY
$15 in advance/$25 at door
18+

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Tuesday, March 17, 2015 @ 6:00 pm

St. Patrick's Day Bash w/Straight to Hell, Bonus Pump, Badfish

BB King Blues Club
237 West 42nd Street
New York, NY
$20/All ages

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Saturday, March 21, 2015 @ 9:30 pm

Rude Boy George

Seaside Tavern
981 Cove Road
Stamford, CT

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Friday, April 17, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

Skarroneros, The Beatdown, The Pandemics, Beat Brigade, King Django

Grand Victory
245 Grand Street
Brooklyn, NY
$10/21+

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Saturday, April 25, 2015 @ 7:30 pm

Roddy Radiation (of The Specials) w/The Scotch Bonnets, Rude Boy George

Fontana's Bar
105 Eldridge Street
New York, NY
$10/21+

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Wednesday, April 29, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

The English Beat, The Skints

The Gramercy Theater
127 East 23rd Street
New York, NY
$25/16+

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Saturday, May 2, 2015

Rude Boy George

Toshi's Living Room
1141 Broadway
New York, NY

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Saturday, May 2, 2015 @ 8:00 pm

Fishbone, Easy Star Allstars, The Skints

Brooklyn Bowl
61 Wythe Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$22/21+

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Saturday, May 9, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

The Skatalites

Brooklyn Bowl
61 Wythe Avenue
Brooklyn, NY

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Saturday, May 30, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

Rude Boy George

State Theatre of Boyertown
61 North Reading Avenue
Boyertown, PA

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Sunday, February 22, 2015

Duff Interview: Tsuyoshi Kawakami of Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra


Japanese ska legends Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra just released their 19th album Ska Me Forever earlier this month on Nacional Records in the US (as a nine-track LP and 18-track digital download). While The Duff Guide to Ska will have a review of Ska Me Forever up in the near future, we're thrilled to post a recent interview we were able to conduct (via email) with TSPO bass player Tsuyoshi Kawakami, who has been with the band since its founding in 1988. 

The Duff Guide to Ska: Ska Me Forever is being released as the Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra celebrates its 25th year as a band--did you all think that it would still be going strong this many years later? Are you all planning to just keep on going like The Skatalites and play even when you are old (and distinguished) men?

Tsuyoshi Kawakami: I had no idea we would last 25 years. It is an extraordinary case in the Japanese music scene that a band as big as we are can continue, specialized in a genre of ska. In that sense, we respect The Skatalites a lot. It would be fun to keep on doing this like they do.

DGTS: Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra's musical influences seem to be omnivorous--traditional ska, jazz, big band, 60s movie soundtracks, surf rock, and much more. What influenced and inspired the band as it was writing and recording the songs that are on Ska Me Forever?

TK: This album turned out to be the concentration of all elements that TSPO have, that we have been influenced by--not just ska and authentic elements but also others such as rock and dub-oriented sounds. We turn a variety of music into ska and advocate our own genre “Tokyo Ska.” And this album shows the true value of Tokyo ska.

DGTS: I've read that Gaz's Mayall's cassettes that were sold in a local record shop had an impact on Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra and the late 80s ska scene in Japan. Were his tapes all ska or a mix of styles? Were you ever in touch with him directly--and in the early days of the band was there ever the possibility that you'd release some music on Gaz's Rockin' Records?

TK: Gaz’s cassette tape included a lot of ska. At that time, ska was not so much known to the general public, so the tape was really shocking to us. We listened to it many times and learned about ska. We have certainly met him in person. He has been a big supporter for us. We saw him at Glastonbury when we performed there in 2003 and, for the first time in a long while, in 2013 at a festival in Japan. He was dancing while watching us perform!


DGTS: I've read in other interviews with the band that even though Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra has toured all of the world, you've never performed in Jamaica. Is that still true? Of the places you have toured, what are your favorite countries/venues to play? Where have you received the best, worst, and most memorable reactions from an audience?

TK: We have never been to Jamaica yet, but we definitely want to in the near future. We were amazed how many people support us in Mexico. It was electrifying to see the Mexican fans know our music so much that they can sing to all songs and instrumental tunes. We realized that even in places we had never been before, TSPO are loved so much and there are enthusiastic fans, which made us wish to perform in more different places in the world. We are very grateful.

DGTS: You've toured the USA several times. What are your impressions of the American fans and US bands that have opened up for TSPO? (And since I live in NYC--and saw your incredible show at Stage 48 two years ago--I'm interested to know when TSPO is next planning on playing in NYC...)

TK: We performed in NYC for the first time in a while in 2013. Last year, we performed at the Irving Plaza and had a blast! It made us want to have more people come to our show and know us. At this time, we do not have dates for our next NYC shows, but we wish to perform there again in the near future.

DGTS: In the late 90s, Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra started its own label through AVEX--Justa Record--which released several TSPO albums and singles, as well as a few ska compilations, and even published a magazine. What happened to it?

TK: Justa Record is still around. TSPO’s albums have been released from this label. With Justa Record we can do approaches different from TSPO as well, and we’re thinking of releasing even more interesting things from this label.

DGTS: What are some of your all-time favorite ska records released by other artists--the ones you would save if your home were on fire?

TK: If my home’s on fire? I cannot choose a record to be honest. I would like you to save a copy of our debut vinyl album Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra. :)

DGTS: It's sometimes difficult for ska fans outside of Japan to find out about what's going on in the Japanese ska scene. Can you recommend any newer Japanese ska bands that we should try to track down?

TK: It’s actually ska punk, but the band Kemuri is wonderful. Their singer Fumio Ito sang in our song named “Pride Of Lions.” Kemuri is going to tour America this year so check it out!

DGTS: What led Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra to releasing Ska Me Forever on Nacional Records, which is more known for Latin rock? (Ska Me Forever is being released on vinyl by Nacional in the US--is vinyl as popular in Japan as it is becoming here?)

TK: It all started when we met Tomas, the big boss of Nacional. He helped us out when we wanted to record a track with Manu Chao back in 2011. Just like in the US, vinyl is becoming more popular among youth, who have never listened to vinyl before.

DGTS: In addition to releasing Ska Me Forever, what other plans does Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra have for celebrating your 25th anniversary?

TK: We will culminate our 25th anniversary at a historical venue called Budokan on March 28. Our collaborator bands on Ska Me Forever, namely 10-FEET, Mongol800, and Asian Kung-Fu Generation will be there as well.

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Thanks to Tsuyoshi Kawakami for taking the time to do this interview with us!

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Wednesday, August 27, 2014

NYC Screening of "Riot on the Dance Floor: The Story of Randy Now and City Gardens"

Check out The NY Citizens button on Randy's bag!
I'm sad to say that I never made it down to see a ska show at the legendary, but long-closed City Gardens in down-and-out Trenton, NJ. While in the 80s and 90s this venue run by promoter New Wave DJ and postal worker Randy Now showcased some of the best punk, hardcore, hip-hop, metal, New Wave, and alternative acts around, Now also put together tons of ska shows that featured bands like Fishbone, The Skatalites, The Toasters, Bim Skala bim, The NY Citizens, Panic/Bigger Thomas, King Apparatus, Dance Hall Crashers, The Skunks, Mephiskapheles, and many more. So, as the US ska scene grew in the late 80s and early 90s, City Gardens became a vital spot along the ska touring route along the I-95 corridor between NYC and Philly.

With this in mind, NYC-area ska fans will want to catch a screening of a new documentary titled, "Riot on the Dance Floor: The Story of Randy Now and City Gardens," which is playing tomorrow night (Thursday, August 28, 2014 at 7:00 pm) at the AMC Loews Village 7 (66 Third Avenue in Manhattan).

There will be questions and answers session after the film with the director (Steve Tozzi) and members of the Butthole Surfers (Gibby Haynes), Rollins Band (Sim Cain), and the Cro-Mags (John Joseph), as well as an after party at Bowery Electric with Gibby Haynes DJing.

Fans of Bigger Thomas (and Rude Boy George) will find this documentary of interest, as Roger Apollon and Marc Wasserman are interviewed in the film (they're also in a new book about City Gardens titled, "Notice: No Slam Dancing, No Stage Diving, No Spikes: An Oral History of the Legendary City Gardens," by Amy Yates Wuelfing and Steven DiLodovico).


Thursday, July 24, 2014

Duff Review: Dr. Ring Ding and Kingston Rudieska "Ska'n Seoul" EP

Rudie System
2014
CD EP/digital download

(Review by Steve Shafer)

The great Dr. Ring Ding has been a fervent fan of Kingston Rudieska--South Korea's top vintage ska act in the mold and of the calibre of The Skatalites--since he first encountered their track "Oscar Wilde" in 2007 on Pork Pie's Benetton-inspired United Colors of Ska 4.0 compilation.

So when Dr. Ring Ding's Ska-Vaganza was scheduled to appear alongside Kingston Rudieska at the 2013 Jisan World Rock Festival in South Korea, he and Kingston Rudieska--both great admirers of each other's music and musicianship--took advantage of this opportunity to enter the studio to record an EP's worth of material. This brilliant collaboration yielded the cheekily-titled, five-track Ska'n Seoul, which is mostly likely one of the finest traditional ska releases of 2014.

Ska'n Seoul is bookended by the terrifically smooth--but no less desperate, urgent, and tragic--ska-jazz version of Fine Young Cannibals' (ex-Beat members Andy Cox and David Steele with ex-Akrylykz Roland Gift) dark family drama "Johnny Come Home" (originally released in 1985) and its slick deconstruction in "Johnny Come Home (Worried Dub)." Kingston Rudieska shows the love to the good Doctor with a half-English, half-Korean cover of Dr. Ring Ding and the Senior Allstars' "Bad Company" (off the essential Ram di Dance), retitled here as "Discovery of Life," which Kingston Rudieska has included in their live set for for some time now. The traditional African-American spiritual "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot" (which is not just about being shepherded into heaven, but escaping slavery through the Underground Railroad to free states or Canada) is presented as if the musicians were part of a revved-up, ecstatic ska tent revival and Dr. Ring Ding as an Elmer Gantry-like charismatic preacher. The one new tune here, written especially for this occasion, is Dr. Ring Ding's delightful "Your Sweet Kiss" (about how the only thing the singer would miss when he's dead and buried), which is reminiscent of an ace Lord Tanamo or Laurel Aitken collaboration with The Skatalites from back in the day.

If you can get your hands on this CD, do it now (a digital version is available through iTunes and you can mail order the CD through Dr. Ring Ding's website)! You'll want it and even more from this ska supergroup. May we be lucky enough for their paths cross again very soon in the future.

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Monday, April 21, 2014

NYC Spring/Summer 2014 Ska Calendar #7

The Specials by Horace Panter
Friday, April 25, 2014 @ 8:00 pm

Dirty Reggae Party XXVIII w/The Bluebeats, Majesty, Super Hi-Fi, Rockers Galore

The Swamp @ Don Pedro's
90 Manhattan Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$8

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Friday, April 25, 2014

Top Shotta Band featuring Jim Nastic, The Frightnrs, The Far East, Grace of Spades

Secret Project Robot
389 Melrose Street
Bushwick, Brooklyn

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Saturday, April 26, 2014 @ 9:00 pm

The Conscious Minds (aka The Gaylads), Crazy Baldhead, Guest DJ Scratch Famous (Deadly Dragon Sound System), DJs Mr. Robinson and DJ Honky

Littlefield
622 Degraw Street
Brooklyn, NY
Tickets: $20 in advance/$25 day of show
21+

+ + + +

Wednesday, April 30, 2014 @ 6:00 pm

The Skatalites

Brooklyn Bowl
61 Wythe Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$12/21+

+ + + +

Saturday, May 3, 2014 @ 6:00 pm
The Skatalites

Brooklyn Bowl
61 Wythe Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$12/21+

+ + + +

Saturday, May 5, 2014 @ 8:00 pm

Unofficial Reggae Party w/Boomshot Riddim Collective and The Snails

The Swamp
Johnson Avenue
Bushwick, Brooklyn
email: revqc@eastrev.com
$6

+ + + +

Monday, May 10, 2014 @ 8:00 pm

Beat Brigade "Kings" Record Release Party

The Bitter End
147 Bleecker Street
Manhattan, NY

+ + + +

Friday, May 16, 2014 @ 7:00 pm

Mad Caddies, Mrs. Skannotto, Across the Aisle

Santos Party House (upstairs)
96 Lafayette Street
Manhattan
$17 in advance/$20 day of show
16+

+ + + +

Saturday, May 17, 2014 @ 7:00 pm

Mustard Plug and Deal's Gone Bad

The Knitting Factory
361 Metropolitan Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$13

+ + + +

Friday, May 30, 2014 @ 7:00 pm

Anti-Nowhere League, Cro-Mags, Mephiskapheles, Night Birds, Up for Nothing

Irving Plaza
17 Irving Place
New York, NY
$31/16+

+ + + +

Saturday, May 31 and Sunday, June 1, 2014

Apple Stomp 2 w/The Toasters, Stubborn All-Stars, King Django, Big D and the Kids Table, Five Iron Frenzy, The Allstonians, Hub City Stompers, Slow Gherkin, Vic Ruggiero, Dan P and The Bricks, Dan Potthast, Sammy Kay and the Fast Four, Johnny Too Bad and the Strikeouts, High School Football Heroes, IV4K, Jiker, and more...

Irving Plaza
17 Irving Place
New York, NY
$70 (two-day pass)/16+

+ + + +

Sunday, June 29, 2014 @ 9:00 pm

Sly and Robbie with The Taxi Gang and Bitty McLean

B.B. Kings Blues Club and Grill
237 West 42nd Street
Manhattan, NY
$20 in advance/$25 day of the show
All ages

+ + + +

Tuesday, July 15, 2014 @ 9:00 pm

Sleepy Wonder (Thievery Corp), Geometric Echoes, Dub is a Weapon

Drom
85 Avenue A
Manhattan, NY
21+

+ + + +

Saturday, August 23, 2014 @ 7:00 pm

Rocks Off Concert Cruise with The Slackers

Departs from Circle Line Pier 83
West 42nd Street and the West Side Highway
Manhattan
$30/21+

+ + + +

Thursday, March 27, 2014

NYC Spring (!) 2014 Ska Calendar #6

HR of Bad Brains; photo by Lucian Perkins from "Hard Art, DC 1979"
Saturday, March 29, 2014 @ 8:00 pm

Rebel Roots Fest IV w/HR (of Bad Brains) and Dubb Agents, Reggay Lords, Butcher Knives, All Torn Up w/special guest selektors Dubta and Jah Point

The Swamp
Johnson Avenue
Bushwick, Brooklyn
email: revqc@eastrev.com
$12

+ + + +

Wednesday, April 9, 2014 @ 8:00 pm

Copycat (A Night of Cover Songs) w/Rude Boy George (9:00 pm), Pornography (10:00 pm), and The Spastics (11:00 pm), plus DJ Xerox!

Otto's Shrunken Head
538 East 14th Street (near Avenue B)
Manhattan
No cover!

+ + + +

Thursday, April 10, 2014 @ 7:00 pm

Horns Up Rocks presents: Skragga w/The Rudie Crew, Skarroneros, The Ladrones, Aqua Cherry

Tobacco Road
345 West 41st Street
Manhattan
$10/21+

+ + + +

Saturday, April 19, 2014 @ 10:00 pm

Smoked Out w/The Frightnrs and The Mo Greene Band

Arlene's Grocery
95 Stanton Street
Manhattan
$10/21+

+ + + +

Friday, April 25, 2014 @ 8:00 pm

Dirty Reggae Party XXVIII w/The Bluebeats, Majesty, Super Hi-Fi, Rockers Galore

The Swamp @ Don Pedro's
90 Manhattan Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$8

+ + + +

Friday, April 25, 2014

Top Shotta Band featuring Jim Nastic, The Frightnrs, The Far East, Grace of Spades

Secret Project Robot
389 Melrose Street
Bushwick, Brooklyn

+ + + +

Saturday, April 26, 2014 @ 9:00 pm

The Conscious Minds (aka The Gaylads), Crazy Baldhead, Guest DJ Scratch Famous (Deadly Dragon Sound System), DJs Mr. Robinson and DJ Honky

Littlefield
622 Degraw Street
Brooklyn, NY
Tickets: $20 in advance/$25 day of show
21+

+ + + +

Wednesday, April 30, 2014 @ 6:00 pm

The Skatalites

Brooklyn Bowl
61 Wythe Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$12/21+

+ + + +

Saturday, May 3, 2014 @ 6:00 pm

The Skatalites

Brooklyn Bowl
61 Wythe Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$12/21+

+ + + +

Saturday, May 5, 2014 @ 8:00 pm

Unofficial Reggae Party w/Boomshot Riddim Collective and The Snails

The Swamp
Johnson Avenue
Bushwick, Brooklyn
email: revqc@eastrev.com
$6

+ + + +

Friday, May 16, 2014 @ 7:00 pm

Mad Caddies, Mrs. Skannotto, Across the Aisle

Santos Party House (upstairs)
96 Lafayette Street
Manhattan
$17 in advance/$20 day of show
16+

+ + + +

Saturday, May 17, 2014 @ 7:00 pm

Mustard Plug and Deal's Gone Bad

The Knitting Factory
361 Metropolitan Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$13

+ + + +

Friday, May 30, 2014 @ 7:00 pm

Anti-Nowhere League, Cro-Mags, Mephiskapheles, Night Birds, Up for Nothing

Irving Plaza
17 Irving Place
New York, NY
$31/16+

+ + + +

Saturday, August 23, 2014 @ 7:00 pm

Rocks Off Concert Cruise with The Slackers

Departs from Circle Line Pier 83
West 42nd Street and the West Side Highway
Manhattan
$30/21+

+ + + +

Thursday, March 13, 2014

NYC Winter/Spring 2014 Ska Calendar #5

Friday, March 14, 2014 @ 7:00 pm

Hub City Stompers, Broken Heroes, Razor Blade Hand Grenade, The Best of the Worst, Rude Boy George, and Pete Wrecks

Asbury Lanes
209 4th Avenue
Asbury Park, NJ
$10 advance/$12 day of show
18+ to enter/21+ to drink

++++

Saturday, March 15, 2014 @ 8:30 pm

Version City Party w/King Django, Rudie Crew, The Snails, Rocky and the Pressers

Roxy and Duke's Roadhouse
745 Bound Brook Road
Dunellen, NJ

+ + + +

Monday, March 17, 2014 @ 7:00 pm

St. Paddy's Day More Beer Party w/The Shipwrecks, Nonstop to Cairo, and Beat Brigade

Gramercy Theater
127 East 23rd Street
New York, NY
$11/16+

+ + + +

Saturday, March 22, 2014 @ 8:00 pm

Lacey Allure's Shake, Rattle, Rock 'n' Roll Girlie Show w/Los Dudes, The Purslaines, Bikini Carwash, and Beat Brigade (plus Go-Go and Burlesque dancers!)

Trash Bar
256 Grand Street
Brooklyn, NY
$8/21+

+ + + +

Saturday, March 29, 2014 @ 8:00 pm

Rebel Roots Fest IV w/HR (of Bad Brains) and Dubb Agents, Reggay Lords, Butcher Knives, All Torn Up w/special guest selektors Dubta and Jah Point

The Swamp
Johnson Avenue
Bushwick, Brooklyn
email: revqc@eastrev.com
$12

+ + + +

Wednesday, April 9, 2014 @ 8:00 pm

Copycat (A Night of Cover Songs) w/Rude Boy George (9:00 pm), Pornography (10:00 pm), and The Spastics (11:00 pm), plus DJ Xerox!

Otto's Shrunken Head
538 East 14th Street (near Avenue B)
Manhattan
No cover!

+ + + +

Saturday, April 19, 2014 @ 10:00 pm

Smoked Out w/The Frightnrs and The Mo Greene Band

Arlene's Grocery
95 Stanton Street
Manhattan
$10/21+

+ + + +

Friday, April 25, 2014 @ 8:00 pm

Dirty Reggae Party XXVIII w/The Bluebeats, Majesty, Super Hi-Fi, Rockers Galore

The Swamp @ Don Pedro's
90 Manhattan Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$8

+ + + +

Saturday, April 26, 2014 @ 9:00 pm

The Conscious Minds (aka The Gaylads), Crazy Baldhead, Guest DJ Scratch Famous (Deadly Dragon Sound System), DJs Mr. Robinson and DJ Honky

Littlefield
622 Degraw Street
Brooklyn, NY
Tickets: $20 in advance/$25 day of show
21+

+ + + +

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

The Skatalites

Brooklyn Bowl
61 Wythe Avenue
Brooklyn, NY

+ + + +

Saturday, May 3, 2014

The Skatalites

Brooklyn Bowl
61 Wythe Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 

+ + + +

Saturday, May 5, 2014 @ 8:00 pm

Unofficial Reggae Party w/Boomshot Riddim Collective and The Snails

The Swamp
Johnson Avenue
Bushwick, Brooklyn
email: revqc@eastrev.com
$6

+ + + +

Friday, May 16, 2014 @ 7:00 pm

Mad Caddies and Mrs. Skannotto

Santos Party House (upstairs)
96 Lafayette Street
Manhattan
$17 in advance/$20 day of show
16+

+ + + +

Saturday, May 17, 2014 @ 7:00 pm

Mustard Plug and Deal's Gone Bad

The Knitting Factory
361 Metropolitan Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
$13

+ + + +

Friday, May 30, 2014 @ 7:00 pm

Anti-Nowhere League, Cro-Mags, Mephiskapheles, Night Birds, Up for Nothing

Irving Plaza
17 Irving Place
New York, NY
$31/16+

+ + + +

Saturday, August 23, 2014 @ 7:00 pm

Rocks Off Concert Cruise with The Slackers

Departs from Circle Line Pier 83
West 42nd Street and the West Side Highway
Manhattan
$30/21+

+ + + +

Thursday, March 6, 2014

King Hammond "Revolution '70" and "Tank Tops and Hot Pants" CD

Limited edition CD
2014

(Review by Steve Shafer)

Back in the late 80s, Bad Manners' bassist and prolific songwriter Nick Welsh followed up on his stellar work for their 1989 Return of the Ugly album (Nick wrote "Skaville UK," "Since You've Gone Away" and "Memory Train"--and co-penned "Rosemary" and "Return of the Ugly"; this album remains one of Bad Manners' best) with a persona and record that celebrated the late 60s/early 70s skinhead reggae explosion in the UK: King Hammond's Revolution '70 (released on Buster Bloodvessel's then newly-revived and licensed Blue Beat label). At first, almost on a lark, Nick promoted King Hammond's debut album as a long-lost Jamaican gem of the skinhead reggae era, but he quickly fessed up about the charade in order to lay claim to all of the accolades the album was (deservedly) receiving.

After reading George Marshall's review in his essential (and very much missed) "Zoot" skazine (see the scans below from my personal copy), I mail-ordered the Revolution '70 LP from Unicorn Records and when my needle hit the record was immediately struck by Welsh's fully-realized sound and vision for King Hammond. The organ-centric music (in more ways than one!) pays loving homage to the skinhead reggae keyboard greats like Harry J, Jackie Mittoo, Winston Wright, Glen Adams, Ansel Collins, et al, while sounding thoroughly original (which it is--the cuts here are all Nick's). In fact, two of the vocal tracks on Revolution '70--"Stay with Me Baby" and "Oh Lorna!" are really pop-hits disguised in boots 'n' braces (Nick revisited "Stay with Me Baby" on his terrific Soho Sessions album, where he re-worked many of his greatest ska songs from the 80s and 90s on acoustic guitar).

George Marshall's review in Issue 13 of "Zoot" (1989)
Thematically, these songs cover skinhead reggae appropriate pop culture topics--which Nick clearly relishes--such as Sergio Leone spaghetti Westerns ("One Dollar Hotel" and "Hammond's Showdown"); Bruce Lee/martial arts films ("Enter the Dragon"); gothic horror movies, no doubt, of the Hammer Horror variety featuring Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing ("The Satantic Rites of King Hammond" and "King Hammond vs. The Exorcist"), the soft-porn pop songs (with lots of sexually suggestive moaning) of Serge Gainsbourg (did you know that in 1979 he released a decent album of French reggae songs with Sly and Robbie called Aux Armes et Caetera?), and the hilarious rude records (for those of us with dirty minds to read into all of the double-entendres) of Lloyd Charmers (AKA Lloydie and the Lowbites), Prince Buster, Laurel Aitken, Judge Dread, et al (sample lyric from King Hammond's, ahem, "Pussy Power": "You must succumb-ah to my cucumb-ah").

From "Zoot" Issue 13, 1989
All of these keyboard-heavy tracks (most which include all sorts of wonderfully over-the-top spoken, shouted, or sung exhortations--many sublime in their outrageousness) are top-notch and were particularly unique back in 1989, when most bands were in the vein of either The Specials or The Skatalites. No one was doing skinhead reggae (with the exception of the now late, but always great, Laurel Aitken--though even his recordings at this time with the Potato 5 and the Pressure Tenants were typically 60s-style Jamaican ska, even if the arrangements sometimes took on more contemporary elements). While I love all of the tracks here, the two that are my favorite are probably "The Satanic Rites of King Hammond" ("Take off your hot pants and suck...This is the Hammond House of Horror, dig the beat, kids...Let me take you to a deserted graveyard, where the bones lay rotting...I will lay you down on a grave and I will raise...raise with me baby! You may be Dracula, you may be Frankenstein, but nothing can save you from King Hammond! I'm coming to get you!") and "The March of the Skinheads," which opens with an air raid siren and briefly salutes The Ethiopians' skinhead reggae anthem "Train to Skaville" before heading off on its own course (Nick was also honoring his father here, who co-wrote a song for the Artie Scott Orchestra with the same title--and I can only describe it as the type of quirky instrumental pop song you'd hear on a light Doris Day-type movie soundtrack from the 1960s).

King Hammond's follow-up, Tank Tops and Hot Pants, didn't see a proper release (mostly due to the demise of Buster's Blue Beat label and Nick's split with Bad Manners for the reformed Selecter with Neol Davies and Pauline Black), but one of Trojan Records' subsidiary labels Receiver Records (which released the excellent live Selecter Out in the Streets CD) issued the mega 25-track CD Blow Your Mind in 1992, which contained both the LP-only Revolution 70 and the newer cuts, though the track order jumbled up songs from each album (interestingly enough, this reissue drops a few cuts--"King Hammond's Magic Roundabout," "Crossroads," "Kinky Version," "Baby Version," "King Hammond Shuffle," and "Right On King Hammond," the last two were featured on Skank Records ska compilations). I really wish Tank Tops had come out on its own on vinyl--look at that cover art by Steven Friel (who provided ska-themed comic strips for "Zoot!," illustrated many of Unicorn Records' album covers, as well as Bad Manners' Return of the Ugly and King Hammond's Revolution '70)!

Tank Tops picks up right where Revolution left off, with more stellar skinhead reggae songs about sex ("Psychedelic Pum Pum" and "Pussy Got Nine Lives"), Westerns ("Hammond Rides Again" and "Spaced Out Cowboy"), blood suckers ("Dracula AD 72"), and simply great tracks with suggestive names ("Confessions of an Organist," "Suck/Lick It Up," and "Soul Up"). The album ends with the only sung song--"Skinhead Revolution"--a brilliant, funky and soulful, power-to-the people early reggae track with a great "nah, nah, nah" chorus right out of early 70s ("Skinhead on a violent street/dances to a different beat/Get ready, get ready!/Revolution on the floor/To the sound of '74/Get ready, get ready!/Nah, nah, nah/Skinhead revolution/Tank tops and hot pants everywhere/Sexy skin chicks with skin cut hair/Get ready, get ready... "). After hearing this, you'll be eager to sign up for King Hammond's musical movement, too.

The Blow Your Mind is a hard CD to find and fetches a high price on the collector's market (as does the Revolution '70 LP). One expects that this limited-edition version of Revolution '70 and Tank Tops and Hot Pants will be similarly valued and very much treasured by ska and skinhead reggae fans, too.

Thursday, January 30, 2014

Duff Review: Roland Alphonso and the Stubborn All-Stars "Roland Meets Richie" b/w Stubborn All-Stars "Rich Morrissey"

Stubborn Records
2014
7" vinyl single

(Review by Steve Shafer)

It's hard to believe that the stunning 1995 debut Stubborn All-Stars album Open Season was released almost 20 years ago (!), just as the so-called Third Wave of ska was about to burn white hot in the USA. Almost overnight, this supergroup of New York area ska musicians led by Skinnerbox's King Django became one of the most popular and acclaimed traditional ska bands on the US scene (which led to a collaboration with Rancid for the Beavis and Butthead movie soundtrack and a high enough profile for MTV news coverage)--and the Stubborn All-Stars went on to release one of the finest albums recorded of that entire era, 1997's Back with a New Batch (the boys in Rancid and Dicky Barrett of the Mighty Mighty Bosstones lent their background vocal stylings to this effort).

This single revisits one of the top, aggressively hard-hitting instrumental cuts off of Open Season--"Rich Morrissey" and its version "Roland Meets Richie" featuring the late great and very much missed Skatalite Roland Alphonso--but these are pristine new mixes that make the tunes sound better than ever. Ska vinyl freaks like me, as well as SAS fans and completists, are absolutely going to want to pick this up for its collectibility (a version of "Open Season" appeared on 1994's "Old's Cool" 7" EP and then two additional versions--the album cut and a 15th anniversary remix--were released on a single in 2009), but it's also a terrific excuse to rediscover just exactly how good these songs were in the first place.

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Duff Review: Phoenix City All-Stars "Skatisfaction"

Hotshot and Scorcher
CD/LP
2013

(Review by Steve Shafer)

As a kid--we're talking elementary and middle school years here--I was a Beatles guy, drawn to their perfectly constructed, catchy pop and rock songs (for the record, I was a much bigger fan of John's than Paul's--I liked my Beatles songs to have a bit of an edge, like "She Said, She Said," "You've Got to Hide Your Love Away," and "Strawberry Fields").  I certainly was aware of The Rolling Stones--they were inescapable in the realm of pop culture--and heard them often on NYC's classic rock radio station WNEW in the 1970s (as well as the oldies station WCBS), but I just wasn't that much into their shambling, bluesy rock.

But the advent of MTV in the early 80s started to change my stance on the Stones. I had to visit my friend Johnny in the Inwood section of upper Manhattan to watch MTV, which we did obsessively (my parents' house in nearby Yonkers didn't have cable yet and even if we did, the local cable company didn't carry MTV yet). In between all of the British New Wave music videos I was devouring, I was exposed to a number of Rolling Stones videos, including "Waiting on a Friend" (watch it and time travel back to NYC's East Village in the early 80s and see Mick and Keith hanging on a St. Mark's Place stoop with Peter Tosh), and begrudgingly found that I liked their New York centric New Wave and disco tracks from Some Girls and Tattoo You (see a tune like "Shattered": Don't you know the crime rate/Is going up, up, up, up, up/To live in this town you must be/Tough, tough, tough, tough, tough/You got rats on the West Side, bed bugs uptown/What a mess, this town's in tatters/I've been shattered, my brain's been battered/Splattered all over Manhattan").

While the Phoenix City All-stars Skatisfaction tribute album doesn't mine the late 70s/early 80s Stones output that wormed its way into my brain, I'm happily surprised to find that I really dig their stellar vintage ska take on a slew of Rolling Stones hits and deep album cuts from the 1960s and early 70s. Skatisfaction follows the Phoenix City All-stars' tremendously great tribute to 2 Tone, Two Tone Gone Ska, where the band interpreted, arranged, and performed material by The Specials, The Selecter, The Beat, Madness, and Specials producer/2 Tone fan Elvis Costello as if they were The Skatalites back at Studio One in 1965 (honoring both the originators and the revivalists). And it seems especially appropriate that the Phoenix City All-stars (comprised of members of Pama International, The Sidewalk Doctors, Kasabian, Intensified, Dub Vendor All-stars, The Loafers, Big Boss Man, The Bongolian, and The Delegators) are channelling The Skatalites on Skastisfaction, since The Skatalites tended to cover--even commandeer--the pop hits of the day (see The Beatles' "I Should Have Known Better" repurposed as "Independence Anniversary Ska" or Henry Mancini's "Mambo Parisienne" versioned as "Ska La Parisienne") and The Rolling Stones were their musical contemporaries (!). As a music fan, it may be heretical to admit this, but I prefer these songs in a ska setting rather than a blues-based one--and the fact that many of the Stones' songs were written in minor keys works to the Phoenix City All-stars' advantage, since so many of The Skatalites' best tunes are in those scales ("Reburial," "Confucius," "A Shot in the Dark," "Determination," "Exodus," etc.).

Skatisfaction starts with a killer, driving instrumental version of the menacing, I-can't-be-bought-off 1965 B-side "Play with Fire" ("Well, you've got your diamonds/And you've got your pretty clothes/And the chauffeur drives your cars/You let everybody know/But don't play with me/'Cause you're playing with fire") that was originally recorded just by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards with Phil Spector producing (and playing bass). I wasn't familiar with the original cut until looking it up on YouTube--but this version really holds up quite well against the original (and may even best it). Guest vocalist Freddie Notes (who, according to the album liner notes, sang at Mick and Bianca Jagger's wedding--and is known for his world-wide 1970 Trojan smash "Montego Bay") gives a soulful reading to "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction," shedding the youthful urgency and angry sexual frustration of the original for the wisdom that comes with age (sure he still wants it, and will keep trying to get it--but experience has taught him that life doesn't own you a damn thing and will often leave your wants and desires unsated, just like it did when you were young) .

The terrific, edgy instrumental version of "Under My Thumb" features a vocal line taken on by a Jackie Mittoo organ and guitar work very reminiscent of Ernest Ranglin or Lynn Taitt. I was never a fan of the Stones' sluggish ballad "Wild Horses," but completely love the Phoenix City All-stars' crisp rocksteady version, which still retains the original's sadness, regret, and longing through The Sidewalk Doctors' Nathan Thomas' superb vocals (this might very well be my favorite track on this album).

I've never heard Robert Johnson's "Love in Vain" until now (covered by The Rolling Stones on their 1969 album Let It Bleed--I prefer Johnson's direct and stripped down version), but this blues standard is almost completely transformed into a great Skatalites dancefloor stormer by the Phoenix City All-stars. "Paint It Black" sounds like newly rediscovered spaghetti Western reggae gem, with Oxman toasting on top (listen to it below). Willie Dixon's "Little Red Rooster" (recorded by Howlin' Wolf in 1961 and Sam Cooke in 1963--the Stones based their version on Cooke's and it reached #1 on the British charts in 1964) with Freddie Notes on vocals sounds very much like an early 60s ska track, when ska's rhythm and blues and early rock 'n' roll roots were still very evident. The country track "Sweet Virginia" (from Exile on Main Street) is rendered here as a sprightly ska track (greatly improving the song, in my opinion), with a sweet saxophone covering the vocal line.

The Phoenix City All-stars take on "Time Is On My Side" perfectly conveys the cool confidence, swagger, and cockiness of the original ("...you'll come running back to me"), with the horns delivering the vocal line. Nathan Thomas closes the album with a less boastful/more sober version of (the kinda skanky, as in nasty) "Honky Tonk Woman" that doesn't seem to revel in trolling for prostitutes and "fallen" women as much as the original (but I always found the Stones' in yer face, bad boy, sex and drugs and rock 'n' roll pose/lifestyle kind of tiresome to begin with). It's a nice touch--it an album full of them--that they keep the cowbell intro to this song and that the song fades out at the end, as if the band and Thomas drift off into a blurry night of drinking and debauchery.

People who happen to be fans of both The Rolling Stones and ska will immediately take to the Phoenix City All-stars' Skatisfaction (and they should--it's fantastic!). But the greater triumph may be its ability to win over those ska fans ambivalent (maybe even hostile!) towards the Stones--which just goes to prove that really well-crafted songs can be introduced into a new musical genre and, in the right hands, sound just as good--or even better--than the originals.

+ + + +



Friday, November 15, 2013

Duff Review: "Don Drummond: The Genius and Tragedy of the World's Greatest Trombonist" by Heather Augustyn

McFarland
2013
Paperback book

(Review by Steve Shafer)

Back in the early 80s, before I had ever listened to my first Skatalites record, I was aware of Don Drummond's untimely death. Some pop-culture reference book that was kicking around our house contained a list of musicians who had died terribly young, usually in sordid circumstances (Hendrix, Joplin, Morrison, etc.), and it had an entry that detailed how in 1965 The Skatalites' trombonist Don Drummond had murdered his girlfriend, Anita Mahfood--and after he was tried, found to be criminally insane, and committed to Bellevue Hospital, he died a few years later at age 35, under questionable circumstances. Of course, since this was the pre-internet age, and New York City always has had a large immigrant Jamaican community, I had assumed that Drummond died at the Bellevue Hospital on First Avenue in Manhattan (instead of the one in Kingston, JA). I've since become very familiar with Drummond's and The Skatalites' music (and even had the fantastic opportunity to work a bit with Lester Sterling and Lloyd Brevett during my tenure at Moon Records), but never learned much about the man behind such extraordinary and foundational music as "Man in the Street," "Ringo," "Don D Lion," "Don Cosmic" (the nickname producer Clement "Coxsone" Dodd conferred on him, due to his erratic behavior), "Marcus Junior," "Confucious," "Occupation," "Lawless Street," "Green Island," "Eastern Standard Time," and hundreds of other ska tunes.

Heather Augustyn's terrific new book, "Don Drummond: The Genius and Tragedy of the World's Greatest Trombonist," the first biography of Drummond ever written (!), helps flesh out his life and career--by no means an easy task, given Drummond's struggle with mental illness (he was either bi-polar or schizophrenic); his tendency to keep to himself and only talk about playing the trombone and music; and the multiple (and oftentimes conflicting) versions of Drummond's life presented by his contemporaries (Drummond has no close living relatives).

Given these considerable obstacles, Augustyn was determined to present as complete a portrait of Drummond as possible, traveling to Jamaica repeatedly to visit the legendary Alpha School (where the current students were learning to play Drummond's "Addis Ababa"); the clubs in Kingston where he performed; the areas in the Wareika Hills where he communed and played music with Count Ossie and the rastas; the bleak, one-room flat where he and Mahfood lived (and where she was killed by Drummond); and the asylum where he was treated multiple times before the murder and where he was committed afterwards and later died--and to interview anyone who worked with or was in any way connected to Drummond. (Indeed, while Drummond remains a somewhat elusive figure, Anita "Margarita" Mahfood--the very popular "Rumba Queen"--comes into crisp focus, courtesy of interviews with her children and friends; she was the half-Lebanese, half-white Jamaican professional nightclub dancer who, to some degree, transcended race and class to expose the upper class nightclub patrons to the drumming and culture of the socially outcast rastas.)

Drummond was born in 1932 to a poor, single mother and had the extraordinarily good fortune to be placed by the local court (due to his truancy) at the Alpha School for Boys at age nine. Essentially a vocational school run by Roman Catholic nuns--and led by the extraordinary Sister Mary Ignatius who was particularly supportive of her musically gifted students (she ran the school's sound system at parties and had an extensive record collection)--Alpha was the ideal place for Drummond's innate musical abilities to be discovered and then sharply honed (indeed, had he not come to the attention of the authorities and been enrolled at Alpha, one wonders if Drummond would have had any other opportunity to develop into a world-class musician that he became). It soon became apparent that Don Drummond's "occupation" (his training) should be music; after learning several other instruments, it was manifest that his greatest affinity was for the trombone. Under the tutelage of band leader Reuben Delgado and the mentoring of older student Carl Masters, Drummond flourished and became quite accomplished at his craft--spending most of his free time by himself practicing under the school's Monkey Tambourine Tree (though he did mentor younger trombone students, such as Rico Rodriguez, who went on to great fame in his own right, and worked with bands such as The Skatalites and The Specials).

In 1950, six months shy of graduating from Alpha, Drummond was recruited by guitarist Ernest Ranglin (and with Sister Ignatius' blessing) to join the Eric Deans Orchestra, which played American big band, Latin, and popular jazz pieces in the local clubs frequented by tourists and upper-class Jamaicans. (It was not uncommon for bands to recruit young musicians straight out of Alpha--it was a primary feeder for local acts and the Jamaican military's band.) Drummond further refined his performing chops playing jazz standards in a variety of bands--including his own--to great local acclaim. During this period, Drummond was hailed in Jamaica by his contemporaries--and by visiting international musicians, such as Sarah Vaughn, who declared him to be one of the top five trombonists in the world, and Dave Brubeck, who while performing with Drummond, stopped playing the piano to watch and listen to him, in awe of Drummond's improvisational skills--as one of the best musicians Jamaica had ever produced.

But towards the mid-1950s, as imported American rhythm and blues records began to dominate the Jamaican airwaves and the burgeoning and extraordinarily influential sound systems, popular tastes changed (and, of course, the American jazz, R and B, and early rock music was given a local twist, which eventually gave birth to ska in the early 1960s), and the fierce and often violent competition between the sound system operators (and the opening of the first recording studio on the island--Federal--in 1954) led to the explosion in the local recording of popular tunes (they often simply renamed and re-arranged the originals without giving any credit or royalties to the composers), as well as original tracks. At first these songs were cut on acetates as one-off recordings, to be exclusively used by the sound system operator who paid for it--in order to attract a loyal, paying following to their parties, who came for the great music while parting with their cash for liquor. But soon it was discovered that there was much greater profit in selling these songs as mass-produced 7" singles.

So, as the focus of the music business shifted to a great degree from stage to studio in the late 1950s, musicians were compelled to follow the money (as poor as the wages were). The best live performers such as Don Drummond (and the future members of The Skatalites) were recruited as session men for all of the top sound system operators cum producers (Clement "Coxsone" Dodd, Duke Reid, etc.) and he found himself working many days a week in the studio (his first released recording was Owen Gray's "On the Beach" in 1959), coming up with new arrangements for covers or bringing in his own compositions to be recorded--usually in one take, on the primitive one or two track recorders (they weren't even paid to rehearse--of all the Jamaican producers, only Justin Yap ever did that and, as a result, later captured some of the best Skatalites recordings in existence). Outrageous as it seems now, in the 1960s, Drummond and the other musicians only were compensated for their time in the studio and received nothing else for their work or for their compositions--no mechanical royalties and, in most instances, no publishing royalties on hundreds of their recordings/compositions, and nothing for works/recordings that were licensed to labels in the UK (to this day, Dodd's heirs receive the royalties on an extraordinary number of Drummond's compositions). The producers told the musicians what to play and how to play it. They had the money and all the power.

One particularly heartbreaking episode in Augustyn's book that illustrates the producer's almost complete control over the musicians in the studio (and how Drummond was completely consumed by his music) relates to Coxsone Dodd (he had bought Drummond's trombone on the condition that the musician pay him back over time--and thus had another way of wielding power over Drummond):

"Graeme Goodall recalls, "I remember vividly a session where Don was acting up and Coxsone went and took the horn away from him and said, 'It's my horn. It's my horn,' and Don was almost in tears. 'Let me play.' And Coxsone said, 'Listen, I'll tell you when I want you to play and what I want you to play, it's my horn.' And Don finally realized there was no point in just hanging around, he needed to blow his horn and he behaved himself for Coxsone.""

In a play for increased creative control and a greater share of the financial pie, the best musicians on the Jamaican scene banded together in 1964 to form what would become the preeminent ska supergroup, The Skatalites (Tommy McCook, Roland Alphonso, Lloyd Brevett, Lloyd Knibb, Lester Sterling, Don Drummond, Jah Jerry Haynes, Jackie Mittoo, Johnny Moore, and Jackie Opel)--which showcased Drummond's wonderful brilliance as a composer (he was The Skatalites' primary songwriter), arranger, and performer (make sure to check out the mind-blowing Don Drummond discography by Michael Turner in the back of the book). The Skatalites recorded hundreds of songs during their brilliant, original, 16-month incarnation, but it all crashed and burned with Drummond's murder of Mahfood on January 1, 1965. The band then split into two groups: Roland Alphonso and Soul Vendors and Tommy McCook and the Supersonics.

Throughout Drummond's career, commerce stubbornly trumped art and even though his music wonderfully transcended the ugly business of the nascent Jamaican music industry, he did not. Drummond lacked the connections and respectability (he was too dark-skinned, poor, hung out with the ostracized rastas, and, to be honest, in later years was odd and unpredictable) to be chosen for international promotional tours (like the "uptown" Byron Lee and the Dragonnaires, who represented Jamaica and were presented as the palatable and refined version of ska music at the 1964 World's Fair in NYC) that would have brought him much greater recognition and renumeration (the money and world-wide fame would only come in the decades after his death and line the pockets of others). Some, like band leader Carlos Malcolm, thought Drummond's fame and musical ambitions were stymied (and that he was driven to despondency not madness) by the considerable constraints put on him by the producers (as well as the tastes of the record buying public to some degree--who wanted nothing but ska music in the first half of the 1960s) who dictated how and what he could play in order to earn a very meager living. No doubt, this stress, disappointment, and despair must have exacerbated his mental condition and certainly contributed to his eventual demise.

While Drummond's behavior became increasingly erratic during his adult years (he first checked himself into Bellevue in 1960), his prodigious talents caused his friends and collaborators to overlook his bizarre, anti-social behavior; it was all a matter of Don being Don. There are disturbing stories in this book of Dodd and others checking Drummond out of Bellevue and ferrying him to recording sessions and gigs; of Drummond rolling a peeled banana in the sand and consuming it--and of him literally eating dirt; and times when he would appear on stage, open up his case, polish his trombone, place the instrument back in its case, and walk off stage (and in one instance, he allegedly urinated off the stage). But more often than not, he had it together enough to perform on stage and in the studio brilliantly--his illness didn't always interfere with his craft. (It does appear that Drummond often self-medicated--as many untreated mentally ill people do by abusing alcohol or illicit drugs--by smoking marijuana, though Augustyn cites studies that this may actually have aggravated the symptoms of his mental illness.)

Drummond and Mahfood encountered each other over the years in the various nightclubs where each had been performing and she eventually moved in with him. Mahfood was enamored with Drummond in no small part due to his incredible musical talents and to escape her physically abusive husband, the boxer Rudolph Bent (her father had also beat her as she was growing up). There is some question as to whether their relationship was platonic or not, though she clearly loved him on an emotional level, as illustrated by her declarations of love for Drummond expressed on her one recording (accompanied essentially by The Skatalites), "Woman A Come," found on the seminal ska collection from Mango, More Intensified: Original Ska 1963-1967, Volume 2 (which was one of the few vintage ska comps easily found in the late 1980s and was hugely influential on many traditional third wave bands). What is clear is that after an argument overheard by witnesses (where Mahfood repeatedly referred to a knife wrapped in cloth at Drummond's feet), Drummond stabbed Mahfood several times in the early hours of January 1, 1965 and later reported to the police that Mahfood had stabbed herself. There has been much speculation as to Drummond's motives, but in light of his mental illness, they are essentially rendered moot, as he was most likely delusional during the murder (and justly convicted as criminally insane and committed to Bellevue).

The treatment of schizophrenia and other mental illness in the 1960s was still relatively primitive (lobotomies and electro-shock therapy were in use even at the best first-world mental health facilities), though the development and use of anti-psychotic medication such as Thorazine and Lithium helped alleviate many symptoms, they were often prescribed at such dangerously high doses that they left many patients semi-catatonic and threatened their overall health. According to Augustyn's book, no records exist of Drummond's treatment at Bellevue (they were either thrown out or lost in one of the may hurricanes to hit Jamaica over the years), but she speculates that poor management of his antipsychotic medications may have caused his death from a heart attack (she debunks the myth that Mahfood's father somehow arranged for Drummond to be knocked-off in revenge for his daughter's murder).

While I've omitted a wealth of details in my brief (and probably flawed) sketch of Drummond's life, Augustyn's biography of Drummond provides a compelling and multi-layered rendering of this truly great musician, in a valiant and largely successful attempt at revealing the real Don Drummond, while dispelling some of the tantalizing lurid myths associated with his illness and death. Having served as a caseworker for homeless and formerly homeless people suffering from mental illness (most of whom were diagnosed with schizophrenia), I know first hand that people with mental illness can be very guarded and seem almost opaque. I often found myself learning very small, but still very revelatory, bits of information about their lives (past and present) after years of working with them. So, it comes as no surprise that Drummond's thoughts, feelings, dreams, and fears are largely absent and unexpressed in this narrative--they were trapped or obscured by the symptoms of his mental illness and never shared with others (though the music he made with his trombone was probably the only means he had of expressing that part of his inner life that was free of his illness--Drummond's trombone was his true and hauntingly melancholy "voice"). So, all of us are left to sort through other people's biased recollections and faulty memories, the incomplete official records, and to surmise what other scraps of information have been lost or discarded over the decades--and Augustyn makes every effort to be a trustworthy and reliable guide through this life that will always remain partially uncharted. As you read Augustyn's "Don Drummond: The Genius and Tragedy of the World's Greatest Trombonist," make sure you play some of his records at the same time, so you can marvel at the truly extraordinary and beautiful music Don Drummond was able to create out of a life filled with adversity and madness--and let his music fill in the blank spaces between the lines.

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Check out Heather Augustyn's excellent related blog, Foundation SKA, here.

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Read a terrific interview conducted by Charles Benoit with Heather Augustyn about this book at Reggae, Steady, Ska.

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