Thursday, December 27, 2012

HE'S A REBEL - BUT NOT TONY!


Worm Bass


He's toured the world with the likes of Beenie Man, stood on the Grammy podium, and even shot a cover feature fro French Vogue

Tony Rebel
but for Delroy Nevin, more popularly known as "Worm Bass" Royal Caribbean, it's being mistaken for Rebel Salute founder Patrick "Tony Rebel"
Barrett that is still a bugbear. The situation is so bad, he recounts, that even members of the "Rebel's" family and entourage have come up to him
thinking him to be Tony Rebel.

But Worm Bass, himself a three-decade veteran of the entertainment biz, whose career started in the resort town of Montego Bay and blossomed in 
Ocho Rios, is not letting the more than passing resemblance or the mistaken identity faze him. He's moving forward as he always has with his career
in his typically organic fashion. Among his upcoming projects are a full-length disc ("in progress; we're taking our time"), and a number of dates both
across the island and overseas.

Scanning the overall music/entertainment scene, Worm Bass is appealing to artistes to take more of what he calls the "long view." in developing
their career. "We could gain so much more form this business is artiste were willing to take a serious look at the business and not be just running
down the quickest dollar," he says.

That said, the lanky bassist, and multiple talent is working hard to get himself established in the higher firmament of the music scene and thereby help
to erase the ongoing confusion between himself and "the Rebel

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Courtney John Project


Jedi Dub: Courtney John's Rootstronic

Michael A Edwards
Picture the iconic scene.

Its Star Wars, and young Luke Skywalker has just walked into an intergalactic bar/nightclub; all manner of strange  (at least to us back then) and weird denizens of faraway galaxies are milling about, imbibing drinks and making the scene just as they would in a terrestrial club. And then just as on Earth, music plays a big part in setting the scene,

Its the same kind of scene that Courtney John conjures up in "Soul of A Man" on of seveal tracks on his about-to-be-released disc. There are no visual aids, but none are necessary, as the music creates all the ambience one could imagine: multiple percussive patterns cascade over, cross with and meld into one another while all manner of fills, distortions and other sonic treatments snake in and out of the pieces to create a sonic rapture that's hard to categorize and even harder to shake out of memory.

Ironically, the exercise, featuring John, legendary keyboardist/producer Steven "Lenky" Marsden (he of the "Diwali" riddim among others) and drummer/vocalist Wiz, owes it genesis partly to another movie,Oliver Stone's 2012 release "Savages".

"We were asked to contribute some material to the soundtrack," John explains, "and in coming together for that process, we just get a vibe on this kinda sound, and we just followed it and started to experiment.

Some of the results of those "experiments" are already available (see the "Soul of A Man" video link below) and the whole package is about to released as The Courtney John Project, with the sound being branded "Rootstronic". Tour dates, beginning in Europe, will follow on that in short order. Its a forward-looking, global-minded but distinctly Jamaican sonic palette, with shades of the dub giants of the early 70s (King Tubby, Perry & the Upsetters, Pablo Moses) as well as the electro-dance music that's still enthralling audiences worldwide.

Such feats are par for the course for Courtney John who since emerging with a cover of Paul Davis' 1977 smash "I Go Crazy" has made a habit of nurturing his musical idiosyncracies rather than merely shuffling along to the beat of externally imposed "trends".   "To me this is part of a natural progression," he says as the music continues to fill the studio confines. "Our approach is to release ourselves from any conventions that the combined industry and community might try to impose - its just about being true to what we hear and coming up with an experience that can reach people and at the same time take us forward."

Indeed, the gratifying thing about hearing these tracks is that they are as much organic as "technic" the beats come hard, but its not an overwhelming  kind of noise; rather, the Rootstronic reaches back to foundations of the Jamaican sound and to the future without compromising the listener experience, provided of course, one is open-minded enough to begin with.

John feels many are. "The feedback so far is definitely validating the work," he says. "People are hungry for something new and  they're responding, both here and overseas .

Toward the end of our listening session, talk turns to the recent "monster deal" made by George Lucas in selling his legendary Lucasfilm production complex to the Disney Company. While the music is certainly intended (and very much good enough) for wide consumption, it would certainly be a propos to have forthcoming episodes of the Star Wars saga bolstered by the "Jedi Dub" of the Rootstronic sound.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZkdhvlOp0o8&feature=plcp

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Courtney John - Steady reppin "Jamaican Soul"


 While his catalog thus far betrays no allegiance to any specific genre, singer Courtney John does admit to a "soft spot" for one particular variant.
"'You could say I was bitten by the rocksteady bug," he relates. "It's still a very under-appreciated genre. It kind of fell under the shadow of the emergent reggae of Marley, Tosh et al between the late 60s and early 70s. It was our soul music"

That huge movement of  "Jamaican Soul" as the artiste puts it is enjoying one of its best resurgences yet, especially out of UK, where in fact, it never fell out of favour. Its a favourable bellwether for John - and for Jamaican music as a whole - as he gets set to release his latest album this July.
The disc is titled "From Letters to Words". The title, he explains, speaks to progressions, both personal and musical, which he felt were important to mark and to explore. "Presently, in the "words stage" of my life - not just in terms of career.

The new album comes about three years after his last release, Made In Jamaica. Not an extraordinarily long gap in the overall music biz scenario, but to Jamaican audiences used to cascades of product following product, it may be seen as something of a hiatus. John insists he's "not the type to feel pressured to match up with the 'scene' via a whole lot of output. Its more important to me that I
have to have something to say."

And, in a falsetto as wiry and agile as his frame, the singer makes some eloquent statements, ten tracks in total, including a cover of  the Chi-Lites' "Have You Seen Her" as well current singles "So Beautiful" and the "Its Gonna Be Alright" the latter an alternately smooth and spiky folky kind of song for which a video is already in rotation. John lists it as one of his favourites from the collection.

"Its Gonna Be Alright" also speaks to his overall outlook for the music, provided of course, that certain benchmarks of quality can be revisited and maintained. "There's vast wealth out there," he states in defiance of the "recession rhetoric" that plagues many. "And even when times are hard,  that's when people seek out and try to discover new music. We as Jamaican artistes need to look at the product rather than blame the economy." John, who controls the sale of his music online, as well as his own publishing adds that he has sold  more records online than  he saw on any physical statement from a record company.

Its not meant as a boast, but it is a validation of his decision to hold to the high road and not jump into any limiting deals or to compromise his independence and artistic integrity. "Reggae and the Jamaican sound is still hugely powerful. I decided not to do the "quick cash" thing or sell out in any way. Thankfully, because of the technology, I've been able to link with great people around the world, and they have been finding me."

 Indeed, they have been finding him from such disparate locations as Papua New Guinea, Russia, Kenya, Ghana, Gambia, Uganda and Tanzania and also Hong Kong and other parts of Asia. he has a fall schedule of tours to connect live with fans, beginning with the September and then Europe  and possibly other locales later in the year. 

And with Jamaica 50 excitement (and controversy) high, Courtney John has crafted his own tribute record, just widely released. It features, among others Marcia Griffiths and  Beenie Man. The feedback, he says, is overwhelmingly positive. Beyond that, he's working on another full-length disc, this one titled "The Courtney John Project", which he describes as "roots-tronic" a moniker which certainly holds some intrigue. It puts him alongside noted "riddimeister" Lenky Marsden and other top-notch creators in a decidedly "experimental" mode.


Its a posture he'd like to see - and hear - more Jamaican artists and producers adopt. "There's no one fighting down our music in the major markets as some people state and would have us believe. Its just that as a product the sound has become stagnant, its locked in to something that is obviously not working and not really in demand. So guys just have to really look into themselves and come up with a viable sound. Not saying that youth today should necessarily look to produce the same sound as we had in the 70s, but to take the principles the professionalism that Bob and the others upheld and build on it." 







Friday, June 1, 2012

DON COSMIC LIVES!!





perhaps the most revered and controversial instrumentalist-composer to come out of Jamaica. After the death of saxophone legend Charlie ‘Yardbird” Parker in 1955, the graffiti “Bird Lives!” became common around New York City. I have appropriated that phrase for the similarly legendary Don Drummond.
Even the most prestigious  and scholarly music  admit that very little is known of his early life. From a recording standpoint, he first emerged around 1956, amidst the then nascent sound system movement, contributing horn breaks on what were then known (and still so called now in some circles) as specials. Several of these would be later released in the UK, to great acclaim (but little, if any direct remuneration) on Chris Blackwell’s Island records imprint.

With the advent of the 1960s, Drummond, like many of his contemporaries, were increasingly drawn to and influenced by the twin strands of the global Black nationalist movement and the more distinctly homegrown Rastafari  ideology. Without a doubt, this must have placed him and his bandmates in sharp variance with the  Establishment who frequented the better clubs to witness their live performances. Whether this exacerbated Drummond’s  then already well known mental difficulties (schizophrenia? Manic-depression?) cannot be said with certainty.
It didn’t help either that his live-in girlfriend was Anita Mahfood, an exotic dancer popularly known as “Margarita”. Mahfood, though part of the economically powerful Kingston merchant class was herself a bit of  a “wild card” and her relationship with the troubled genius was no doubt tumultuous. That tumult reached a grisly and tragic crescendo in the early hours of New Year’s Day 1965, shortly after Mahfood returned to their East Kingston apartment.  There were reports of an argument and screams. In the aftermath Mahfood, then only 23, was found dead from multiple stab wounds.
Drummond was arrested and – in a bit of a whirlwind – tried, deemed “legally insane” and remanded to Kingston’s Bellevue Hospital. That brings us back to May 6th, 1969, the day he died, but not to the end of controversy. With no autopsy performed, Drummond’s death was ruled a suicide, an “official” version that remains contested by conspiracy theories of various sorts to this day.  The hospital staff, one claims, ruthlessly beat and otherwise ill-treated Drummond, all with the tacit permission of the then Government, which was bent on stamping out this “Black Power nonsense” (It was hardly a year prior that rioting broke out in the wake of the Government’s decision to expel pan-Africanist Walter Rodney); others claim that Mahfood’s family had extracted revenge for her demise at Drummond’s hands.
The full truth has very likely been interred with the body, but, selfish as it may seem, in the wake of Drummond’s departure, we have the tremendous treasure of the music. His official recorded output has been put at over 300 songs.   No matter how often one hears classics like “Eastern Standard Time” or “Confucious” or “Man In The Street” the warm idiosyncracy and fleet-footed, “hop-skipping” energy (my coinage) of Drummond’s playing and compositions shines through. This goes not only for us here in Jamaica, but for music lovers worldwide

Which brings to mind, as an aside, What is it about the month of May anyway?
Bassist Lloyd Brevett recently made a painful, and by all accounts untimely, transition (precipitated by the tragic shooting death of his son), leaving drummer Lloyd Knibb as now the only surviving member of the original musical aggregation known as the Skatalites who helped shape and popularise a distinctly Jamaican sound, enjoyed in the four corners of the earth.
 Incidentally(?) May is also the month in which Clement “Sir Coxsone” Dodd checked out of this earthly realm. He left us, in 2004, on May 5 to be exact, or one day before (36 years after) Drummond did. It was in Dodd’s famed Studio One that Drummond and the Skatalites not only laid down their own recordings, but as the de facto “house band” provided support for a host of other Jamaican musical legends.  “Don Cosmic” as he would also come to be known, first caught Dodd’s attention during a performance at Kingston’s Majestic theatre
But back to Drummond. To borrow a very apt summation from noted musicologist Herbie Miller, “He was a musical prophet created by the people, not one imposing himself on them in pursuit of stardom, but having it thrust upon him. Drummond observed their tribulations and aspirations then reshaped them into a blues allegory reflected through his compositions and plaintive trombone tone.”

In my own humble estimation, Don Drummond was an original, a “one-of-a-kind” from a nation that seems to specialize in “one-of-a-kind” people. Whatever format you can get it in, get hold of his music and – in a very good way – let him blow your mind.

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Marking Milestones with Muzik

"Cut to  the quick/
deception was the tool/
performers poured music in the wound/...

Throwing off sparks/
bringing this Frankenstein/
skanking to life/
and ready to face the dawn/"

- "Rebel Love Revival" (excerpt)
c2009


Fifty years of political independence.
A half-century of existence for Founder/Production Chief Patrick "Tony Rebel" Barrett.
Almost two decades of successful and critically acclaimed stagings of Rebel Salute.

There was much to celebrate inside the ballroom of the Wyndham Kingston Tuesday night last and the invited musical guests proved more than nable to get the crowd of media, sponsors' reps, music fraternity and general well-wishers to appreciate the magnitude - and dynamism - of the occasion.

Battle of the Bands 2012 Jamaica finalists Raging Fyah overcame the first of the night's persistent sound glitches to deliver a rousing rendition of "Judgement Day" from their still growing repertoire. They would return in even finer form at the end of the night with "Far Away" and "Can't Run From Yourself". Similarly C-Sharp, still on a roll from their excellent CD release concert for "The Invitation" took their now trademark tight musicianship and audience rapport to even greater levels with a flawless delivery of "Reggae My Song".

In between those musical tentpoles, there were stirring comments from members of the head table, product pacakge giveaways from the sponsors and more scintillating musical stints, all guided with poise and relaxed wit by emcee Lady Renae. Ibamar, trombonist/vocalist Pesso, "basso profundo" Mikey Spice and veteran Edi "The Gun" Fitzroy all gave encouraging hints of things to come.

He didn't perform, but the "boss" Tony Rebel made another impassioned plea for more support for roots reggae, both from corporate circles and the media, a pleas supported - at least vocally - by his head table colleagues.

At night's end, with Pepsi and meatless cocktails awaiting eventgoers, the impression was distinctly left that Jamaica's globally revered musical brand was in good hands on the advent of the Golden Anniversary, and  iwth the promise of new chapters to be written - and sung.