This article needs additional citations for verification .(January 2011) |
Reggae is a music genre that originated in Jamaica in the late 1960s. Australia has several bands and sound systems that play reggae music in a style faithful to its expression in Jamaica. Australia has a relatively small Jamaican community, but reggae penetrated local consciousness via the popularity of reggae among the non-Jamaican population of England in the 1960s and 1970s. Many indigenous musicians have embraced reggae, both for its musical qualities and its ethos of resistance. Examples include Mantaka, No Fixed Address, Zennith and Coloured Stone.
The first Reggae sound system in Australia was Soulmaker, established in 1972 by J.J. Roberts, a Jamaican from Saint Catherine Parish. Bob Marley & The Wailers toured Australia in 1979, playing Brisbane, Adelaide, Perth, Melbourne and Sydney. Reggae had success on the radio charts in Australia in the early 1980s when Toots and the Maytals, the first artist to use the term "reggae" in song, went to number one with their song "Beautiful Woman". [1] [2] One of the first Australian reggae bands was Untabu. The original members of the band came from Trinidad & Tobago, Bruce Mc Clean - guitar and Errol H Renaud - steel pan, lead singer Ras Roni from Barbados, percussionist Jorge Morales from Puerto Rico and Fijians Rupeni Davui - bass, James Purmodh - drums and Joel Knight - keys. They had releases on Larrikin Records and were resident in a number of clubs in the Darlinghurst and Manly area of Sydney. They also toured the East coast regularly. They performed original music and reggae covers. The Aboriginal band No Fixed Address from Adelaide also had reggae songs in their repertoire.
In 1984, Australian label Corroboree Records had its first release with Dangerous Times. [3] This 7" single was recorded at Channel One Studios with the Roots Radics, voiced and mixed at King Tubby's with Bugs as engineer, and voiced by Dudley Green and General Justice. It Contains the song "Dangerous Dub" on the B side, which was mixed by King Tubby. It was released in Jamaica, the UK and Australia. In 1985 Larry Maluma arrived in Australia from Zambia with master tapes recorded in Zambia. He remixed a couple of tracks, Black or White and Chimutima Chako at AAV studios in Melbourne for a 45 single vinyl which was released in 1986 under his own newly formed independent (Safari Music) label. In 1987, two years after his arrival from Zambia Larry Maluma released his first album Confusion on his own Safari Music label. The video clip "Black and White" from the same album was aired on Countdown Revolution and Rock Arena on ABC. Larry Maluma went on to release his 14th album, Ndakondwa (I'm Happy), in 2014.
The first notable dub release in Australia was Ten Dubs That Shook The World by Sheriff Lindo and the Hammer, issued on the artist's own label, Endless Recordings, in 1988. The LP was reissued on the Creative Vibes label with five extra tracks in 1998, and again by EM Records of Japan in 2006, on CD (catalogue number EM1049CD) and LP (EM1049LP), limited to 500 copies. The CD version contains five extra tracks.
Melbourne-based band The Red Eyes released their first live CD in 2003 Live at the Evelyn, following it with two CD EPs, two full-length albums (Rudeworld in 2006 and Red Army in 2010) and the 2011 single Circles before disbanding. [4] Their catalog contains reggae, dub and occasional drum 'n' bass tracks. The band's lead singer El Witeri is Maori, and their work has been remixed by New Zealand dub producer, Deep Fried Dub.
In September 2006, Astronomy Class released Exit Strategy on the record label Elefant Traks. The record fused reggae and hip hop music. In February 2007, Melbourne-based producer Mista Savona released Melbourne Meets Kingston on Elefant Traks. It is a 21-track collaboration with Jamaican singers and deejays such as Anthony B, Determine and Big Youth. In September 2008, the Sydney-based band King Tide released their debut album To our Dearly Deported on the UK label Urban Sedated. The single "No Dog War" was used worldwide by the Sony corporation for their Wag the Dog campaign. The commercial shot in Brazil featured members from the cast of the feature film City of God . In December 2009, Australian artist Matty Woods released The Ras Gong Guerrilla EP , a 10-track recording that tackles Australian and international political issues such as Indigenous sovereignty, climate change and human rights. [5]
Desert Reggae is a developing contemporary style possibly originating in Central Australia and featuring lyrics often sung in Australian Aboriginal languages. As of 2015, many indigenous Australian artists from the Northern Territory represented by the Aboriginal owned and operated music label CAAMA Music identify as reggae or ska artists (often in combination with rock). Artists include Tjintu Desert Band (previously known as Sunshine Reggae) and Tjupi Band. Some also identify as Desert Reggae artists, with examples including Lajamanu Teenage Band, Rising Wind, [6] Irrunytju Band and Eastern Arrernte Band. [7] Annual music event Bush Bands Bash in Alice Springs features many Desert Reggae bands. [8]
Reggaeton, a music genre that blends reggae, hip hop, and traditional Latin American music, is also popular in Australia. The genre first came to prominence when Puerto Rican reggaeton artist Daddy Yankee released his most notable single, "Gasolina," to Australian radio in 2006. Already a hit worldwide, it reached a peak of No. 12 on the ARIA Singles Chart and was certified Platinum, [9] making it one of the few Spanish-language songs to reach that position on the Australian charts.
A range of reggae festivals and festivals highlighting reggae music are held around Australia. Queensland hosts more than any other state, with Reggaetown and Kuranda Roots held near Cairns in far north Queensland, and Good Love (formerly One Love) held at the Gold Coast. Good Love Festival [10] is one of New Zealand's largest and most iconic music events, and made its Australian debut [11] in 2020 headlined by Shaggy and Sean Paul. In 2022, the festival changed its name to Good Love. [12]
In 2016, the first Jamaican Music & Food Festival was held in Melbourne, Victoria featuring reggae and other music of Jamaican origin. Sponsored by PBS and with live performances by Australian artists, bands and DJs, the festival has also featured many International artists including Jamaican reggae singer Bushman, British vocalist General Levy and soul singer Richie Stephens. In 2019 the festival also took place in Sydney, NSW and featured Mad Professor as its headline performer. [13]
Byron Bay Reggaefest [14] started at The Brewery [15] ( 28°38′42″S153°36′17″E / 28.64507°S 153.604697°E ; previously known as The Buddha Bar) on 4 December 2010 planned a 2-day festival at Missingham Park, Ballina NSW [16] on 17 & 18 September 2011.
Dub in the Park is an annual festival of dub, roots and world music first held in Adelaide, South Australia in 2016. [17] The festival was discontinued in 2019, but is expected to return in 2022.
South Beach annual Reggae Party Fremantle Western Australia started in 1998.
Raggamuffin Music Festival was an annual reggae music festival that toured Australia and New Zealand. The festival postponed in 2017 and has not returned since.
Notable Australian reggae radio programs of the past include Splashdown and The Pounding System. Australia's longest running reggae radio show is Jamdown Vershun which has been broadcasting on 92.1 FM in Perth with selector General Justice since July 1979. [18] The Jamaican singer, producer, and broadcaster Mikey Dread produced and presented a reggae radio special for 2JJJ in the mid to late 1980s.
In Melbourne, the PBS 106.7FM program "Babylon Burning" (formerly known as "Chant Down Babylon") [19] has been presented by Jesse I since the late 1990s.
Foreigndub ran a weekly radio show in Sydney on 94.5FM – FBI radio every Sunday from 5–7 pm called 'Foreigndub Airways'. They broadcast the show 2010-2019, now moved to 3-5pm Sunday slot on 2SER and stream worldwide.
Every Saturday afternoon, 4ZZZ presents The Yard, a Reggae show from 4-6pm with selecta Basmati (Rhythm Collision Sound)
Every Wednesday Morning 12 am −2am Fresh 92.7 a community station based in Adelaide has a reggae dancehall show called Dancehall & Ting which has aired since July 2012 and is hosted by DJ Ragz.
In 2013 An online radio station, Australia Reggae Radio (ARR) began broadcasting from Melbourne. ARR plays 24-hour Reggae and Dancehall music, 7 days a week. [20] Run by a former Jamaican music executive and current selector and MC, Zare Demus, ARR features a broad range of reggae and dancehall shows from both Australian and international DJs including, but not limited to, Robert Ragz – Dancehall and Ting from Adelaide, Australia; Basmati – The Yard from Brisbane, Australia; Zare Demus – The Zare Demus Show from Melbourne, Australia; Mumma Trees – Jamdown Vershun from Perth, Australia; DJ Septik – Slow Bounce from Brussels, Belgium and Young Lion – Young Lion Show from the UK.
In 2017 [21] The first-ever chart dedicated to reggae and dancehall music established in Australia by radio presenter DJ Ragz, [22] music producer DJ Wade [23] and Dancehall Reggae Australia. [24]
Artist | Title | Label | Format | Release Year |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pressure Drop | Reggae Riot’ b/w ‘Jah | EMI | 7” | 1979 |
Leon De Castro's Babylon | Suspicious Minds' b/w 'Hindley Street | Warner Brothers | 7" | 1979 |
Cassava | 27 years' b/w 'Stir It Up | EMI | 1980 | |
Un Tabu | Open Your Eyes' b/w 'Dem Coming Down | Larrikin | EP | 1980 |
Igniters | Ignition' 'Rubby Dub' b/w 'More Flaming Dub' 'Kent Street Skank | Larrikin | EP | 1981 |
Joe Dolce | Reggae Matilda’ b/w ‘Stick It Out | Ariola 103683 | 7” | 1981 |
The Allniters | She Made a Monkey Out of Me / Allniters Are Alrighters / She Drives Me Around the Bend | Larrikin/Green | 7” | 1981 |
Us Mob/No Fixed Address | Wrong Side of the Road | Soundtrack | 1981 | |
Strange Tenants | Something Like That / She Asked Me / Soldier Boy / Ground Point Zero | Bluebeat | 12” | 1982 |
No Fixed Address | From My Eyes | Rough Diamond/Astor/PolyGram | EP | 1982 |
The Leftovers | The Lemonade Song’ ‘Double Bay’ ‘Yay Al | Method | 7” | 1983 |
The All Nighters | D-D-D-Dance with the Allniters | Powderworks | LP | 1983 |
Strange Tenants | Take One Step/Two Steps Back / Grey Skies / Killer Zombies / Mr & Mrs | Bluebeat | 12” | 1983 |
Strange Tenants | I Work At My Machine’ b/w ‘The Firm | Bluebeat | LP | 1984 |
Strange Tenants | Movin' In | Bluebeat | LP | 1984 |
Vegimite Reggae | Trendy Ex-Hippies | Confidential Records | LP | 1984 |
Vegimite Reggae | Send it Out’ b/w ‘Faces | Confidential Records | 7” | 1984 |
Club Ska | Black ‘n’ White’ b/w ‘Club Dub | Powderworks | 7” | 1986 |
Club Ska | Cupid’ b/w ‘Bottom End | Powderworks | 7” | 1986 |
Club Ska | On The Road’ b/w ‘Beside | Beat E Records/Creole Records | 7” | 1987 |
Sherrif Lindo and the Hammer | 10 Dubs That Shook The World | Endless Recordings ER001 | LP | 1988 |
Joe Geia | Yil Lull | Gammin Records | LP | 1988 |
Spy Vs Spy | Working Week (Dub Mix | WEA | 12” | 1988 |
Vegimite Reggae | Too Many Years' b/w 'Love is Gone | M.A.X. Records 7" 1989 | 7” | 1989 |
The Latenotes | Hallelujah Ska | Unicorn Records | CD | 1990 |
Fraction | Tribute to Bob and Peter' b/w 'Good Times | Rainbow Wirl 12" 1991 | 12” | 1991 |
Kate Ceberano and MC Kye | Satisfied | Regular Records 12" 1991 | 12” | 1991 |
The Rockmelons feat. Kye | Bubble & Squeak' from 'Form One Planet | Mushroom | CD | 1992 |
Mixed Relations | Love | Polydor | CD | 1993 |
Christine Anu with Paul Kelly | Last Train | White Records | CD | 1993 |
Dub Congress + Starman | Red Pepper | Self-published | CD | 1993 |
Mixed Relations | Love | Polydor | CD | 1993 |
Bellydance | One Blood | Regular/Festival | CD | 1993 |
Kev Carmody & Tiddas | Sorry Business | Dub Mix | CD | 1993 |
The Natural Mystics | Natural Creation | Self-published | CD | 1994 |
Various | Tribal Heart | AIM | CD | 1994 |
Starman | Wizzdom | Wizzdom Productions | CD | 1995 |
Hoopsnake | Outta My System | rooArt | CD | 1995 |
Sacred Sound System feat. Kye | Mantra Mix | Mushroom | CD | 1996 |
Wicked Beat Sound System | Music from the Core | One Movement | CD | 1996 |
Sherrif Lindo and the Hammer | Ten Dubs That Shook The World: Ten Dubs Ten Years On | Creative Vibes | CD | 1998 |
Backy Skank | Introducing Backy Skank | MGM CD EP | CD | 1998 |
Bellydance | Babylon Mixed Business | Road Show | CD | 1998 |
Danny Rankin’ | Zenith | Self published | CD | 1998 |
Various | Dub for the Masses Vol. 1 | Creative Vibes | CD | 1999 |
Jeff Dread | The Merchant of Dub | Creative Vibes | CD | 1999 |
Dubble Dub | Deadly Headly | Head Records | CD | 2000 |
Various | Dub for the Masses Vol. 2 | Creative Vibes | CD | 2001 |
Backy Skank | Suited and Booted | Maximum | CD | 2003 |
George Rrurrambu | Nerbu Message | Skinnyfish | CD | 2004 |
Mista Savona | Mr Savona Presents Invasion Day | Mr Savona | CD | 2004 |
Secret Masters | The Lost Dub Tapes | Master Tunes | CD | 2004 |
King Tide | To Our Dearly Deported | Vitamin Records | CD | 2005 |
Budspells | Inna Sense | Ruffage Records | CD | 2005 |
Rastawookie | Rastawookie | Self-published | CD | 2005 |
Hot Rubber Glove | Inna Rubba Dub Manor | Rudekat Records | CD | 2005 |
King Tide | Scared New World | Vitamin Records | CD | 2006 |
Blue King Brown | Stand Up | Roots Level Records | CD | 2006 |
Resurrectors | Healing | Future Classic | CD | 2006 |
Various | Island Time | Rudekat Records | CD | 2006 |
Dubmarine | Dub Deep | Rudekat Records | CD | 2006 |
The Red Eyes | Rude World | ? | CD | 2006 |
Rastawookie | Perfectly Ordinary | Pollyannaism Polly | CD | 2007 |
Mista Savona | Mista Savona Presents Melbourne Meets Kingston | Elefant Traks | CD | 2007 |
Various | Island Time 2 | Rudekat Records | CD | 2007 |
Zennith | I Like It | Zennith | CD | 2007 |
Rumpunch | Sucklin’ | Rumpunch | CD | 2008 |
Errol H Renaud | Live | Eman music | CD | 2008 |
Fyah Walk | Sunrise Red | Roots and Stream Productions/Vitamin | CD | 2009 |
King Tide | Roots Pop Reggae | Vitamin records | CD | 2009 |
Various | Champion Sound Sampler Vol. 1 | Champion Sound | CD | 2009 |
Elephant Wise | The Reasoning | Dasvibes | CD / Digital | 2009 |
Raz Bin Sam | Life is a Gift | Dasvibes | CD / Digital | 2009 |
Raz Bin Sam | Own This Life | Dasvibes | CD / Digital | 2009 |
Sub-Tribe & The 4'20' Sound | Dub Road | Sub-Tribe | Vinyl / Digital | 2020 |
Errol H Renaud | TBR | Eman music | CD | 2011 |
The Strides | The Strides | Earshift Records | CD | 2009 |
Errol H Renaud | Free | Eman music | CD | 2017 |
Budspells | Nomadik Souls | Vitamin | CD | 2009 |
Fyah Walk | Ocean Sounds | Roots and Stream Productions/Vitamin | CD | 2009 |
Grace Barbé | Kreol Daughter | MGM | CD | 2008 |
Secret Masters | Words | Power | CD | 2009 |
Reggae is a music genre that originated in Jamaica in the late 1960s. The term also denotes the modern popular music of Jamaica and its diaspora. A 1968 single by Toots and the Maytals, "Do the Reggay", was the first popular song to use the word reggae, effectively naming the genre and introducing it to a global audience. While sometimes used in a broad sense to refer to most types of popular Jamaican dance music, the term reggae more properly denotes a particular music style that was strongly influenced by traditional mento as well as by American jazz and rhythm and blues, and evolved out of the earlier genres ska and rocksteady. Reggae usually relates news, social gossip, and political commentary. It is instantly recognizable from the counterpoint between the bass and drum downbeat and the offbeat rhythm section. The immediate origins of reggae were in ska and rocksteady; from the latter, reggae took over the use of the bass as a percussion instrument.
Island Records is a Jamaican multinational record label owned by Universal Music Group. It was founded in 1959 by Chris Blackwell, Graeme Goodall, and Leslie Kong in Jamaica, and was eventually sold to PolyGram in 1989. Island and A&M Records, another label recently acquired by PolyGram, were both at the time the largest independent record labels in history, with Island having exerted a major influence on the progressive music scene in the United Kingdom in the early 1970s. Island Records operates four international divisions: Island US, Island UK, Island Australia, and Island France. Current key people include Island US president Darcus Beese, and MD Jon Turner. Partially due to its significant legacy, Island remains one of UMG's pre-eminent record labels.
James Chambers, OM, known professionally as Jimmy Cliff, is a Jamaican ska, rocksteady, reggae and soul musician, multi-instrumentalist, singer, and actor. He is the only living reggae musician to hold the Order of Merit, the highest honour that can be granted by the Jamaican government for achievements in the arts and sciences.
Sean Paul Ryan Francis Henriques is a Jamaican deejay, singer, and rapper who is regarded as one of dancehall and reggae's most prolific artists of all time. He released his first album, Stage One, in 2000. However, it was in 2002 that he gained international fame after releasing his next album, Dutty Rock. The single "Get Busy" topped the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the United States, as did "Temperature" (2005), off his third album, The Trinity.
The Maytals, known from 1972 to 2020 as Toots and the Maytals, are a Jamaican musical group, one of the best known ska and rocksteady vocal groups. The Maytals were formed in the early 1960s and were key figures in popularizing reggae music.
William Anthony Maragh, also known as Super Cat, is a Jamaican deejay who achieved widespread popularity during the late 1980s and early 1990s dancehall movement. His nickname, "Wild Apache", was given to him by his mentor Early B. Super Cat is considered one of the greatest deejays in the history of the Jamaican dancehall scene.
There are several subgenres of reggae music including various predecessors to the form.
Leslie Kong was a Jamaican reggae producer.
Frederick Nathaniel "Toots" Hibbert, was a Jamaican singer and songwriter who was the lead vocalist for the reggae and ska band Toots and the Maytals. A reggae pioneer, he performed for six decades and helped establish some of the fundamentals of reggae music. Hibbert's 1968 song "Do the Reggay" is widely credited as the genesis of the genre name reggae. His band's album True Love won a Grammy Award in 2005.
Sly and Robbie were a prolific Jamaican rhythm section and production duo, associated primarily with the reggae and dub genres. Drummer Sly Dunbar and bassist Robbie Shakespeare teamed up in the mid-1970s after establishing themselves separately in Jamaica as professional musicians. Shakespeare died in December 2021 following kidney surgery.
Clive Hunt is a Jamaican reggae multi-instrumentist, arranger, composer and producer.
New Zealand reggae is the New Zealand variation of the musical genre reggae. It is a large and well established part of New Zealand music, and includes some of the country's most successful and highly acclaimed bands.
Funky Kingston is the name of two albums by Jamaican reggae group Toots and the Maytals. The first was issued in Jamaica and the United Kingdom in 1973 on Dragon Records, a subsidiary label of Island Records, owned by Chris Blackwell. A different album, with the same cover and title, was issued in the United States in 1975 on Mango Records. That album was compiled from three previous Maytals albums by Island Records employee Danny Holloway and peaked at #164 on the Billboard 200. It was also voted the eleventh best album of 1975 in the annual Jazz & Pop poll. In 2003, the American version was placed at number 378 on Rolling Stone's list of The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, 380 in a 2012 revised list and 344 in a 2020 revised list.
Wayne Jobson, also known as Native Wayne, is a Jamaican record producer of European ancestry. He has worked with such artists as No Doubt, Gregory Isaacs and Toots & the Maytals. He hosts the weekly radio show "Alter Native" every Sunday afternoon on Indie 103.1. He previously hosted a similar radio show, "Reggae Revolution", at Indie's main competitor KROQ-FM. Jobson is also known as a musician. He recorded an album in 1977 produced by Lee 'Scratch' Perry at the Black Ark.
Carl Harvey is a Jamaican born Canadian guitarist and record producer who recorded as a member of Crack of Dawn and The Aggrovators in the 1970s, and later became guitarist for Toots & the Maytals.
"Bam Bam" is a 1982 song by Jamaican dancehall recording artist Sister Nancy. The song's chorus was inspired by the 1966 song of the same name, by The Maytals and Byron Lee and the Dragonaires. The song's instrumental samples the 1974 song "Stalag 17", by Ansell Collins, a well known riddim, alternatively known as a backing track used repeatedly. The song has been labeled as a "well-known reggae anthem" by BBC and a "classic" by The Observer.
Paul Douglas is a Jamaican Grammy Award-winning musician, best known for his work as the drummer, percussionist and bandleader of Toots and the Maytals. His career spans more than five decades as one of reggae's most recorded drummers. Music journalist and reggae historian David Katz wrote, “dependable drummer Paul Douglas played on countless reggae hits."
"Murder She Wrote" is a song by Jamaican reggae duo Chaka Demus & Pliers, from their 1993 album Tease Me. It was first released as a single in 1992 and again in late 1993, reaching number 27 on the UK Singles Chart in early 1994, and number 57 on the US Billboard Hot 100, spending 17 weeks there. The song was certified gold in the UK in 2022. The music to the song is based on the Maytals' 1966 song "Bam Bam", while the lyrics discuss abortion.
West Indies Records Limited (WIRL) was a recording studio in Kingston, Jamaica established by future Prime Minister Edward Seaga in 1958. Seaga recruited and recorded many artists such as Higgs and Wilson, and Byron Lee and the Dragonaires. As Seaga pursued his political career he sold it to Byron Lee in 1964 who renamed it Dynamic Sounds. Dynamic became one of the best-equipped studios in the Caribbean, attracting both local and international recording artists including Eric Clapton, Paul Simon and The Rolling Stones.
Got to Be Tough is a studio album by Jamaican reggae band Toots and the Maytals. It was released through Trojan Jamaica/BMG on 28 August 2020 and financed by Trojan Jamaica owner Zak Starkey, who also played guitar for the recording. The album is the first studio release from Toots and the Maytals in more than a decade and the first after an accident wherein bandleader Toots Hibbert was hit in the head with a glass bottle, leading to his hiatus from performing. The lyrical content of the album is political, featuring pleas for unity among people.