In honour of the sun's annual all-too-brief visit to the UK here's some variations on the same theme for you (insert smiley face thingy here):
And finally something fresh and quite lovely in my opinion:
Just somewhere to post my ramblings that won't fit into 140 characters. Don't expect anything particularly insightful or earth-shattering.
I: I is for Instrumental and there really was only one choice of artist once I'd decided that! For me, one of the most wonderful things about Jamaican music is the artists' ability to take a tune by another artist and re-produce it in their own style - either by making dub versions or by re-arranging the piece to suit their own instrument, in the process creating something that is both familiar yet also new and exciting. An absolute master of this process was the fabulously talented keyboard player Jackie Mittoo. Mitto was a founder member of The Skatalites and is an absolute hero of mine. Earlier in the playlist we heard Lord Tanamo's Keep on Moving, this selection is Jackie Mittoo taking the same song and making something equally wonderful out of it: Jackie Mittoo - Totally Together.
K: There can really be only one choice for the letter K: King Tubby. Originally an electronics engineer and disc cutter, Osbourne Ruddock became King Tubby after cutting his musical teeth working for Duke Reid as a sound engineer. I think it's fair to say that Tubby revolutionised not just Jamaican music but recorded music in general. His attention to detail and pioneering recording techniques are still recognisable in music produced today. I came rather late to an appreciation of dub but once I'd discovered the depth and intricacy of much of his work, King Tubby became one of the artists I play most often. My selection is from the wonderful collaboration between Tubby and Harry Mudie - In Dub Conference vol.1: Harry Mudie - Dub with a Difference.
M: At the risk of being predictable, no prizes for guessing that M is for Marley. The discography at the back of Timothy White's brilliant biography of Bob Marley runs to 66 pages. Starting with the first discs The Wailers made with Leslie Kong in 1961 through to material released posthumously it really is a goldmine for the reggae obsessive or casual Marley fan. Choosing just one record from that vast list is almost impossible, the sheer range and diversity of Marley's work is mind-blowing. I've chosen an early Coxsone recording, a loose cover of Curtis Mayfield's Talkin Bout My baby : The Wailers - Diamond Baby.
U: The letter U presented me with something of a dilemma: to choose Lee Perry's studio band The Upsetters or his Upsetter label. Perry set up his own label after falling out with Coxsone and named the label after his track I Am The Upsetter, which in itself was a musical dig at his former boss. Distributed in the UK by Trojan, Upsetter was home to some of the finest early reggae artists, all under the watchful eye of Perry and benefiting from his sheer genius with a tune; if you have a listen to the Complete UK Upsetters Singles CDs you will see what a wealth of music I had to choose from. In the end I decided to choose a tune by The Upsetters the band, on Upsetter the label - best of both worlds!: The Upsetters - French Connection.
X: The last time I did an A to Z playlist (not for a radio show - I was off sick & bored) I struggled to find a track for the letter X. Artists and tunes starting with X may be few and far between but I'd missed out on a whole class of reggae right under my nose: X-Rated Reggae. Not the puerile pap a la Judge Dread but real reggae with themes and lyrics ranging from the slightly risqué to the full-blown filthy (pun intended). Performed by some of the biggest names in reggae some of it is hilarious; the titles speak for themselves: Rub & Squeeze, Push It In, Sex Grand National, and so on. I almost chose Nora Dean singing what seems to be a song about a man with a penis shaped like a scorpion but eventually chose one of the finest voices in reggae with his version of Max Romeo's Wet Dream: Dave Barker - Wet Version.
Z: And so we finally arrive at Z but we also end up back where we started. I've chosen a cracking ska tune by another old-boy of the Alpha Boys School and one that sings of Zion, the place of peace, freedom and unity beloved of so much reggae music: Desmond Dekker - Mount Zion.