Black Roots (band)

Last updated

Black Roots
Black Roots.jpg
Background information
Origin Bristol, England, UK
GenresReggae
Years active1979–early 1990s, late 2000s–present
LabelsNubian, Kick, BBC Records and Tapes, Makasound, Bristol Archive, Sugar Shack, Soulbeats, Khanti, Take It Easy Agency, Real Rock
MembersErrol Brown
Kondwani Ngozi
Jabulani Ngozi
Carlton Smith
Past membersTrevor Seivwright
Derrick King
Charles Bryan aka Delroy O'Gilvie
Cordell Francis
Website blackrootsreggae.net

Black Roots are a roots reggae band from the St. Paul's area of Bristol, England, formed in 1979. [1] [2] They toured extensively in the UK and Europe in the 1980s and early 1990s releasing several albums and singles during that time before disappearing from the music scene for about ten years. Their comeback began when Soundicate/Makasound, a record label in France, released an album in 2004 and followed it up with another in 2007 (both were compilations made up from their extensive back catalogue). In December 2010 they performed their first live show for some twenty years at the Trinity Hall in Bristol and since then they have been active once again, playing live dates and releasing a new album.

Contents

History

The original line-up of the band included Errol Brown (vocals), Delroy O'Gilvie (vocals), Kondwani Ngozi (congas, vocals), Jabulani Ngozi (rhythm guitar), Cordell Francis (lead guitar), Trevor Seivwright (drums), and Derrick King (bass guitar). [1] They soon got into routine of regular performances across the UK and appeared on the first Rockers Roadshow television programme broadcast of Channel 4. [1] [3] Their first (self-titled) album was released on their Kick, and the band was commissioned by the BBC to write and record the theme song to the sitcom The Front Line. [1] [4] [5] They also recorded several sessions for BBC radio, including sessions for John Peel's show in 1981 and 1983 and additional sessions for David Jensen, [6] and these were issued on the In Session album in 1985 by the BBC. They toured Europe with UB40, Eek-A-Mouse and Linton Kwesi Johnson, and performed at the WOMAD Festival in 1985. [1] The band's third album, All Day All Night was produced by Mad Professor and featured Vin Gordon. [1] Several more albums followed, the last, Natural Reaction, in 1990.

The band then ceased to exist as a touring concern, although several dub albums were released based on their earlier work over the next five years. Nubian Records released Dub Factor – The Mad Professor Mixes in 1991, Dub Factor 2 – The Dub Judah Mixes in 1994 and Dub Factor 3 – Dub Chronicles The Mad Professor and Dub Judah Mixes in 1995.

The final studio album release from the band, during the period, came in 1993, it was a reworking of earlier recordings produced by Dub Judah, entitled Black Roots with Friends featuring vocals by B.B. Seaton, Trevor Dixon, Dub Judah, Mikey Forbes and a cameo performance by Delroy Ogilvie. Then activity ceases completely for several years.

French label Makasound released a compilation of the band's first two albums on a fourteen-track CD titled On The Frontline on 4 July 2004. It was followed on 25 November 2007 with a reissue of In Session. On the back of these releases the band did some live shows in France. Bristol Archive Records approached the band and offered to re-release some more of their back catalogue. They first released a compilation of the band's singles entitled The Reggae Singles Anthology on double vinyl, CD and digital download on 5 September 2011 that included a re-mastered version of the Celebration video recording on DVD and followed this with a reissue on CD of All Day All Night on 23 April 2012 with bonus tracks.

In April 2012 the band record new material for an album, On The Ground, that was co-released by Sugar Shack Records and Nubian Records on 10 September 2012. The album was produced by Jeff Spencer and Black Roots and mixed by Louis Beckett. The album featured the four original vocalists — Delroy Ogilvie, Carlton Smith, Errol Brown and Kondwani Ngozi — as well as two of the musicians from the original line up, guitarists Cordell Francis and Jabulani Ngozi. It was followed by the dub version On The Ground in Dub, also on Sugar Shack and Nubian Records that was released on 4 March 2013. The band released a second album of new recordings via French record company Soulbeats Records on 23 September 2014 entitled Ghetto Feel. This album is also produced by Jeff Spencer and Black Roots and mixed by Louis Beckett. This release has been followed by a third album of new studio recordings produced and mixed by the same team as Ghetto Feel called Son Of Man and released by Soulbeats Records on 22 January 2016.

Black Roots released a single on 22 August 2016 entitled Move On EP on their own label Nubian Records on digital download only. It contains 5 mixes of Move On, a song first recorded and released by the band in 1981 on their debut 12" vinyl record that coincidentally was also the first record they released on their own label Nubian Records. This was followed by another digital only single release on Nubian in 2017 titled I Believe, containing 4 mixes of this song taken off the On The Ground album.

The band have added a further 2 studio albums to their extensive discography by releasing Take It in November 2018 and Nothing in the Larder in June 2021 in collaboration with Khanti Records and Take It Easy Agency respectively both based in France. In 2021 they licensed 5 recordings and their respective dub versions to Real Records in Italy. 4 of these, Juvenile Delinquent/Dub the Youth; What Them a Do/Jah Jah Dub; Release the Food/Folitrickshun Dub and All Day All Night/Pressure Dub were released as limited edition 7" vinyl records in 2021. The last of these recordings Blackheart Man/Blacheart Dub is releasing in early 2022.

The band have played a series of live shows, since they reformed in 2010, both in the UK and in Europe, including Bristol Veg Fest 2011 and 2014, ATP I'll Be Your Mirror curated by Portishead at Alexandra Palace in London, Sardinia Reggae Festival in Italy, WOW Festival in the Isle of Wight, Glastonbury, Lambeth Country Show in Brockworth Park in London, Festival Ecolozicalizes, Garance Reggae Festival, Reggae Sun Ska and Nomade Reggae FestivaL in France, Dour and Afro C in Belgium, Ostroda Reggae Festival in Poland, Octopode in Switzerland and Rototom Sunsplash in Spain. [7]

Singer O'Gilvie formed a new band, Orange Street, and released a solo album, Farm Digging, in 2005. Sady Charles Bryan aka Delroy O'Gilvie passed away unexpectedly in July 2019.

Bass guitarist Derrick King died on 30 April 2011 at Frenchay Hospital from respiratory failure, after suffering from motor neuron disease for some time. [8]

Discography

Albums

Dub albums
Compilations

Singles

Video

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Barrington Levy</span> Musical artist

Barrington Ainsworth Levy is a Jamaican reggae and dancehall artist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sugar Minott</span> Jamaican reggae singer (1956–2010)

Lincoln Barrington "Sugar" Minott was a Jamaican reggae and dancehall singer, producer and sound-system operator.

Dub is an electronic musical style that grew out of reggae in the late 1960s and early 1970s. It is commonly considered a subgenre of reggae, though it has developed to extend beyond that style. Generally, dub consists of remixes of existing recordings created by significantly manipulating the original, usually through the removal of vocal parts, emphasis of the rhythm section, the application of studio effects such as echo and reverb, and the occasional dubbing of vocal or instrumental snippets from the original version or other works.

<i>East of the River Nile</i> 1977 studio album by Augustus Pablo

East of the River Nile is a 1977 reggae studio album by Jamaican musician Augustus Pablo. A purely instrumental album, East of the River Nile showcases Pablo's skill on the melodica, and various other keyboards. Also featured are studio musicians famous as members of The Wailers, Bob Marley's backing band.

Hopeton Overton Brown is a recording engineer and producer who rose to fame in the 1980s mixing dub music as "Scientist". A protégé of King Tubby, Scientist's contemporaries include several figures who, working at King Tubby's studio, had helped pioneer the genre in the 1970s: Ruddock, Bunny Lee, Philip Smart, Pat Kelly and Prince Jammy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Johnny Clarke</span> Jamaican reggae musician

Johnny Clarke is a Jamaican reggae musician, best known for his recordings with producer Bunny Lee in the 1970s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mad Professor</span> Musical artist

Neil Joseph Stephen Fraser known by his stage-name Mad Professor, is a Guyanese-born British dub music producer and engineer known for his original productions and remix work. He is considered one of the leading producers of dub music's second generation and was instrumental in transitioning dub into the digital age. He has collaborated with reggae artists such as Lee "Scratch" Perry, Sly and Robbie, Pato Banton, Jah Shaka and Horace Andy, as well as artists outside the realm of traditional reggae and dub, such as Sade, Massive Attack, The Orb, Gaudi, the Brazilian DJ Marcelinho da Lua, Grace Jones, and Perry Farrell.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">King Jammy</span> Musical artist

Lloyd Woodrowe James, better known as Prince Jammy or King Jammy, is a Jamaican dub mixer and record producer. He began his musical career as a dub master at King Tubby's recording studio. His dubs are known for their clear sound and use of effects.

<i>Bad Brains</i> (album) 1982 studio album by Bad Brains

Bad Brains is the debut studio album recorded by American hardcore punk/reggae band Bad Brains. Recorded in 1981 and released on the cassette-only label ROIR on February 5, 1982, many fans refer to it as "The Yellow Tape" because of its yellow packaging, much in the way that the Beatles' self-titled record is often called "The White Album". Though Bad Brains had recorded the 16 song Black Dots album in 1979 and the 5-song Omega Sessions EP in 1980, the ROIR cassette was the band's first release of anything longer than a single.

Winston Holness, better known as Niney the Observer, is a Jamaican record producer and singer who was a key figure in the creation of many classic reggae recordings dating from the 1970s and early 1980s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Earl "Chinna" Smith</span> Musical artist

Earl "Chinna" Smith, a.k.a. Earl Flute and Melchezidek the High Priest, is a Jamaican guitarist active since the late 1960s. He is most well known for his work with the Soul Syndicate band and as guitarist for Bob Marley & the Wailers, among others, and has recorded with many reggae artists, appearing on more than 500 albums.

Basque Dub Foundation, more often known as B D F, started in the early 1990s as studio project by Iñaki Yarritu, a London-based reggae musician originally from the Basque Country. Iñaki moved into music production in the late 1980s, having been previously involved in Reggae since the late 1970s as a radio DJ, journalist and promoter. In their early days BDF toured as a sound system, supporting Mad Professor in the first dub sessions to take place in Spain.

Carlton "Santa" Davis is a musician from Jamaica, primarily known for his drumming with bands such as Bob Marley & The Wailers, The Aggrovators, Soul Syndicate and Roots Radics. He has worked with reggae artists such as Jimmy Cliff, Black Uhuru, Burning Spear, Big Youth, The Wailers, Peter Tosh, Andrew Tosh, Wailing Souls, Ini Kamoze, Big Mountain, Michael Rose, and Ziggy Marley.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jah Thomas</span> Musical artist

Nkrumah "Jah" Thomas is a reggae deejay and record producer who first came to prominence in the 1970s, later setting up his own Midnight Rock and Nura labels.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Michael Prophet</span> Musical artist

Michael George Haynes, known professionally as Michael Prophet, was a Jamaican roots reggae singer known for his "crying" tenor vocal style, whose recording career began in 1977. Prophet was one of Jamaica’s most popular roots reggae singers and had several prominent hits during his 40-year career, after his passing his family together with Thomas Evers of Rockers Artist Agency released the highly rated live album "live at plein les watts"

Jah Lloyd, aka Jah Lion, The Black Lion of Judah, and Jah Ali was a Jamaican reggae singer, deejay and producer.

Jarret Lloyd Vincent, better known by one of his stage aliases Bim Sherman, was a Jamaican musician and singer-songwriter.

Lacksley Castell, sometimes misspelled Laxley, Lacksly, Lasky or Locksley Castel was a Jamaican reggae singer best known for his work in the early 1980s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">B.R. Stylers</span> Musical artist

B.R. Stylers is an Italian reggae dub band from Pordenone founded in 2000. Current members are Michela Grena (voice), Paolo Baldini (bass), GP Ennas (drums), Filippo Buresta (keyboards) and Manuel Tomba (mixing).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Easy Star Records</span> American independent record label

Easy Star Records is an American independent record label founded in 1996. Based in New York City, the label primarily produces and releases albums in the genres of reggae and dub.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Larkin, Colin (1998) The Virgin Encyclopedia of Reggae, Virgin Books, ISBN   0-7535-0242-9, p. 27-28
  2. Whiteley, Sheila, Bennett, Andy, & Hawkins, Stan (2005) Music, Space and Place: popular music and cultural identity, Ashgate Publishing, ISBN   978-0-7546-5574-9, p. 73-74
  3. Greene, Jo-Ann "Black Roots Review", Allmusic , Macrovision Corporation
  4. Greene, Jo-Ann "The Front Line Review", Allmusic , Macrovision Corporation
  5. "The Roots Train", Echoes, 8 November 1986, p. 15
  6. Black Roots at the BBC's Keeping It Peel site
  7. "Black Roots 2017". Rototomsunsplash.com. Retrieved 31 October 2019.
  8. "Derrick Lloyd King Archived 23 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine ", thisisbristol.co.uk, 13 May 2011, retrieved 2011-07-17