What
is SKA??????
Written by Noah Wildman
and Rob "Bucket" Hingley
Ska is dance music, first
and foremost. Ska was a Jamaican dance music that swept out of Jamaica
in the early 1960s to shake the butts of working- and middle-class Jamaicans
before going on, via West Indian immigrant connection, to the UK, and thenon
to the world. In the UK, ska was also known as "blue beat" music. Rocksteady,
and later, reggae sprang from the loins of ska in the late 1960s. Mid-1970s
and 1980s/1990s revivals of this popular dance form have kept this music
alive and fun through the present. Musically, Ska is a fusion of Jamaican
mento rhythm with r&b, with the drum coming in on the 2nd and 4th beats,
and the guitar emphasizing the up of the 2nd, 3rd and 4th beats. The drum
therefor is carrying the blues and swing beats of the American music, and
the guitar expressing the mento sound. Ska features a strong bass and drum
rhythm section, guitars, keyboards, horns and brass.
Nineteen Ninety Three saw
the historic Skavoovee tour, the first major national American tour
package of ska music. This
tour had the full spectrum of what ska is - the original Jamaican brand
of ska by it's very inventors the Skatalites, British counterparts who
revived it and reinvented in the late 70s with the Selecter and Special
Beat, and American upstarts the Toasters who raised the ska flag for the
third time starting in the early eighties. In January of 1994, American
music-industry trade magazine Billboard had ska on the cover page as 'the
next big thing.' "Ska hit big in England in the wake of punk, but it never
really crossed the Atlantic. A few dedicated fans caught on in the U.S.,
though, and turned the Jamaican/British import into an American subculture."
(Lieb, Billboard, January 15th, 1994) Only much deeper into the piece do
we find that... "...ska, reggae's fast-paced predecessor, was born in jazz
and R&B sessions of the early 60s" (Billboard 1994) The first wave
of Ska was the first style of music in Jamaica to incorporate European/American
influences wholesale.
Ska music was created in
a
poor community in a third
world country soon after World War II, by embracing American musical influences
in the 1950's and local folk forms. Combining mento and calypso with the
R&B, swing, boogie woogie, early rock and jazz made ska. The second
wave of Ska - 2Tone - combined the punk rock music energy of late 70s England
with the rhythm of Jamaican ska. Just as the 1st wave ska music was created
by combining disparate genres, so did the new ska. Bands such as the Specials
and Madness created a dance craze on European and Japanese shores, but
never quite made it to the United States. The subject here though, is Post-2Tone:
the third wave of Ska. Since Americans were deprived of the joys of ska
the first time around, it was inevitable that some convert of the music
would infect the US.
In 1982, British ex-patriate
and fan of all ska Rob Hingley started a ska band called the Toasters in
NYC in the face of overwhelming indifference in the media and music scene.
By the
late 80s, many bands started
playing ska music in new and wondrous forms all over the planet. Only today
is there starting to be an acknowledgment by the arts community of the
existence of modern ska music. Hence this article. To get a better understanding
about the music, we should address some commonly asked. Why do fans dress
up in suits and funny lil' hats? The original fans of Jamaican music were
the Jamaicans themselves. In the mid sixties, when ska had slowed down
to rock steady, the prevalent style was that of the 'rude boy' - a sharp
dressed gangster in a stingy-brimmed pork pie hat with out any obvious
means to affording such fancy dress.
It was very similar to today's
"gangsta's of rap music", whose fancy dress and
sharp cars stand out in
sharp contrast to their poverty-stricken communities. The English 2Tone
movement of the late 70s imitated this sharp dress as a way of distinguishing
itself from the loud punk style of the day. 'Dressing up to dress down'
has always been a hallmark of the modern ska crowd. If the music is originally
Jamaican, why in heavens would skinheads be attracted to it? When masses
of Jamaicans emigrated to the UK to find work in the 50s and 60s, they
brought their culture and music with them. After WWII, England suffered
a labor shortage - between the men who never came home from war and the
mass destruction in the cities, immigrants were welcome to fill the lower
ranks of manual labor.The lot in life for any new immigrant group is at
the bottom, and England has always been very structured around class.
Jamaicans became members
of the British working class, and cultural mixing was inevitable. Both
Jamaican 'Rude boys' and British 'skinheads' were young and working class.
The skinhead style evolved out of the Mod subculture, due to the fact that
a declining economy prevented a kid
from buying a scooter or
having a nice, cushy secretarial position. Both blacks and whites worked
in factories, and both shaved their heads and wore big boots as a matter
of necessity - the original skinheads were both black and white. Like the
original rude boys, skinheads dressed sharp when they went out, despite
having no obvious source of income to support a clothes habit.
Whatever cultural differences
young blacks and whites had, in the late 60s one thing they did share (other
than style) was a music - reggae, rock steady, original ska and soul music
were all on the menu. While political weather and media frenzy demonized
skinheads, the 2Tone movement remembered what skinheads originally loved
and focused strictly on the music and anti-racism
by example - skinheads who followed ska were unlikely to be racist if they
were fans of black music and integrated bands. Today, the third wave of
ska is flowing directly out of these styles - the Jamaican Rude Boy, the
British Skinhead, and their combined love for the ska. While it may be
strange to go to a hot, loud and sweaty ska concert and see kids dressed
up in
suits and formal dresses
(or jack-booted skinheads dancing to Caribbean rhythms,) it all stems from
a deep history going back to the ghetto enclaves of 1950s Kingston, Jamaica.
Its ironic that its taken 30 years and tens of thousands of miles for the
music to come around. R&B and blues of the 40's and 50's lives on in
the United States in the 90's in the form of Ska, by way of
Jamaica and England. Describing
the roots of a movement is good, but history is never simple or linear.
How bands on the East and West Coasts introduced ska to unexpecting masses?
Just how did Rob 'Bucket' Hingley start the Moon Records ska empire? When
he lived in London in the late 70s, Rob Hingley played in a band called
Eye-Witness which featured members of
Bad Manners, including West
African percussion maestro Jimmy Scott - everything, according to Jimmy,
was 'High-Life'. To be a white person playing reggae was pretty acceptable,
because many bands with white members were experimenting with the genre.
Chart-topping band UB40 is a prime example. In England at the time, the
neighborhoods were far more racially
integrated than they are
now (in the contemporary USA.)
Because of this contact,
the music was more accessible. It wasn't till around 1981 that Mr. Hingley
realized that he was going to be in the United States for more than a short
stay, so he started entertaining the idea of putting a band together. The
first line up of the Toasters were pretty much made up of his fellow
co-workers at New York City's
sci-fi comic book shop, Forbidden Planet. Around 1983, the Toasters were
ready to gig. The name, 'the Toasters' is NOT a reference to the kitchen
appliance, but a tip-of-the-hat to the original rappers and chanters of
60's Jamaica. Before settling that name, Buck's unit went of the names
of 'the Bouncers' and 'Not Bob Marley'. Back in the
UK, Hingley played a couple
of ska tunes in his band, but it was predominantly reggae. In NY, there
was no ska scene, absolutely nothing. Hingley was always into ska music,
since buying his copy of 'My Boy Lollipop' by Millie Small in 1964 on his
way back from Nairobi, Kenya, where his father had been stationed in the
British Army.
When he came over here there
was no ska music at all and a million reggae bands. He was flabbergasted
when he saw a mere 100 or so people show up for the English Beat in 1982
at Roseland ( a large concert hall.) That put him on a "mission from God,"
so to speak. Certainly ska music
in the UK had peaked, but it was amazing to him that a really great band
like the Beat couldn't draw a crowd in the US. And
he saw Madness at another venue (the World) a year after that, and there
was nobody there, either. At the very beginning in
the early eighties, the audience was just basically people from the neighborhood.
As the Toasters played more and more gigs, first
at the notorious AZ club, then at CBGB, they found people in NY who were
really into ska music that had no idea that there
was anything going on at all till somebody told them about the Toasters.
By the time 1986 had rolled around, there were many
more bands playing - what is now considered the New York old school - Beat
Brigade, the Boilers, the Second Step
and the A-Kings, to name
a few.. The Toasters released the "Recriminations" EP around 85, with Joe
Jackson helming the production
and even playing melodica on the track, 'Run Rudy Run'.
The EP crystallized things
because it was the first
nationally distributed release
for a domestic ska band in the US. The Toasters practiced at the 171A rehearsal
space, rubbing shoulders
with the Bad Brains, the Cro-Mags and Murphy's Law. At that time a bunch
of high school kids were playing garage punk
in the area. The Toasters drummer Scott Jarvis produced one of their first
EPs, "Cookie Puss." The Lower East Side of
Manhattan has produced more
than just great ska bands like the Toasters: also international rap-popsters
the Beastie Boys. After
the first EP, Moon Records slowly came into its own as more than simply
a mouth-piece for the Toasters. The two Toaster's
albums, Skaboom (1987) and Thrill Me Up (1988) actually did not originally
appear on Moon, but on a branch of
the independent Celluloid
called Skaloid. After getting ripped off by all companies who were licensing
Toasters albums (Celluloid,
Unicorn and Ska Records,) Hingley heard a loud sucking sound - a complete
vacuum created by the need for a strong
indie that could do ska music justice. One of the few Moon releases during
this period was 1988's classic On the Move
LP by the NY Citizens Buck
envisioned a strong indie ska label in it's own right, not just the Toasters.
And in 1990, Moon Records
saw the release of the Toasters third full length This Gun For Hire, the
seminal New York Citizen's Stranger Things Have
Happened EP, and New York City Ska Live, a document recorded at the Cat
Club which featured all the bands on the
scene at that moment in
time. Nineteen Ninety-One saw the debut of New York City ska-masters the
Scofflaws, and an unprecedented
move on Moon's part into the vast nether-regions of California.
Because of a lack of an indie
on the West
Coast willing to step to
the ska beat, Hingley came on in and released classic debut albums by Let's
Go Bowling (Music To Bowl
By) and the Dance Hall Crashers. The year 1992 saw further expansion of
the Moon Ska horizon, with a debut from Cali's
hepcat (out of nowhere), a compilation of Cali bands called California
Skaquake and Dead or Alive by Germany's
Busters. Moon started to
pick up music for distribution, some of the firsts being King Apparatus
from Canada and the Skunks for
Washington, DC. A trading agreement with Pork Pie Records in Germany saw
a whole slew of ska records being made available
to a ska-hungry American public. Since then, Moon has expanded and only
gotten better. More albums, more artists,
a mail order catalog with
literally 100s of albums and merchandise, and a storefront office on the
Lower East side of Manhattan (where
Hingley originally began jamming the ska.)
In 1992, Moon organized a
show at a venue called the Ritz under the banner
of 'Skalapalooza', which
featured Bad Manners, the Skatalites, the Toasters and many more. After
this smashing success (and a
legal injunction from the Lollapalooza people to stop using their name,)
an annual Moon 'Skavoovee' tour package was christened,
which has featured names such as the Skatalites, the Selecter, the Special
Beat, the Toasters, Scofflaws and
Pietasters. Ska has grown
exponentially in the past few years, but the NY scene was the first one
in the US to flourish. It was the
first place to have a lot of bands playing live and Moon Records captured
them on the NY Beat: Hit & Run compilation in 1986.
NY Beat was the very first compilation record of what is known today as
'third wave' ska music. While Moon is kicking
serious international ska
music out of NYC, they are not the only ska-presence in the Big Apple.
Stubborn Records, started by Jeff
'Django' Baker in 1992, has released some of the cream on the NYC crop,
including Skinnerbox, the Insteps, and the Stubborn
All-Stars(which consists of member of the two prior-named bands, as well
as the Scofflaws, Agent 99 and the Slackers.)
Recently, the Stubborn All-Stars have signed on to release a full LP on
a semi-major label,
Profile.
The New York
scene was the first one to really
flourish, but there were isolated bands in other cities, like Bim Skala
Bim in Boston. Hingley remembers
the time. "I don't know why all these bands popped up around '86. I guess
there were a lot of bands, like Bim Skala
Bim, playing separately, but it seemed to be that at the time we met them
perhaps they were going for longer than that." The
Mash It Up series of compilation records started in the same period as
NY Beat, but it is hard to pin down exact dates. According
to Hingley, regardless of who got there first, "it was just a matter of
establishing a network," the same network that the
ska scene depends on today for its health and growth. It was ska fans,
mods, scooterists, and skinheads who spread the word
that allowed this network to thrive. But NY and Boston are strictly East
Coast. The United States is a huge nation, and separately
on the West Coast, a ska scene was being born.
One band that can be seen
as establishing the ska beat on the West Coast
is the Untouchables. Their first album was put out in 1981 in England on
Stiff (home of 2Tone greats
Madness), because
of an overwhelming feeling of
indifference from American companies. "I Spy for the FBI" was a minor hit,
a combination of ska with
retro-soul, R&B orientation. An early, early ska band named the Donkey
Show never had a domestic release in the US,
although they had a 4-song
EP appear on Unicorn, which is ultra-rare today.
According to Hingley, "Fishbone
was easily the best
live ska band around at the time." Made up
of solely African-American
members, and sporting a style that mashed Ska, funk,
punk and mod, they released a 6 song EP around 85 which was the first exposure
to ska music for many a fan. Christmas 1987
saw two huge sold out concerts with Fishbone, the Toasters, and Murphy's
Law at Manhattan's downtown Ritz. After being
signed to CBS and the loss of some of the original members in recent years,
Fishbone has seen radical changes of direction
away from the ska scene. A Moon Records comp for 1988 called Skaface saw
some of the recording debuts of
bands like Let's Go Bowling,
Donkey Show, No Doubt and Skankhead (which would later mutate into Skankin'
Pickle.)
In 1992,
Moon would release the California Skaquake album, which would firm up Cali
as a 'scene,' featuring bands like Jump With
Joey, the Skeletones and Hepcat. Today, California is
one of the most happening
states of the union for ska music. Leading
figures of the Cali scene include one Tazy Phillips, a DJ on the KROQ radio
station there. He has produced many live
concerts, a video documenting
Cali ska, and recently a full-length CD of live-in-the-studio
recordings from the best
of today's Cali-ska
called Step On It: The Best of the Ska Parade. Jump With Joey is one of
the premiere ska bands in Cali, but they have
never had a domestic release, their albums only available as pricey Japanese
imports. One thing that has limited the Cali
scene is the difficulty
of touring outside the state - Let's Go Bowling and Skankin' Pickle are
the only California Ska bands with a
strong national live presence. While ska activity in NY is centered around
its sole major metropolitan center, California is a
huge state with several metropolitan
centers. The scene in Cali is more fragmented, with bands breaking up before
really having a
chance to establish themselves. The latest developments in unifying and
strengthening the scene there are the Dill record label
by Skankin' Pickle and the Blackpool
label and promotional force.
There is a tendency in the
youngest ska bands today to deny
there ska-roots. It is not uncommon for ska-punk bands like the Voodoo
Glowskulls, Skankin' Pickle and Sublime to say
'we're not ska' in the press.
Skankin' Pickle's Dill Record label (home also to Hawaii's Tantra Monsters)
recently released a Misfits
of Ska compilation album, fully capturing this whole 'we're not ska' movement.
When reflecting on the changes in the sound
of ska since the beginning of the Third Wave, Rob Hingley said, "Back then,
there a unique NYC 'ska sound', but now
there's a lot more latitude.
There's a lot more traditional sounds now but back then the NY sound was
a lot more aggressive. It was
on the punk rock tip, harder and faster." Today, two trend can be tagged
on the ska music genre - the continued blending of
ska with other genres that 2Tone never encompassed (such as hard-core and
funk), and a new reverence for the original
sound of ska - the traditional
jazz/R&B/swing of the Skatalites and classic Jamaican stars. There
is a big schism in U.S. ska today,
and it's not all the flat, square states that separate the East Coast from
the West Coast. (After all, there are thriving ska
scenes all over the Midwest,
such as in Chicago and the Jump Up! record label.) The difference is stylistic.
There is ska, and
then there is ska-core.
Hard-core is a kind of punk music that established itself in the skinhead
scene in the United States in the early
80s as an answer to Britain's own skinhead punk music, 'Oi!'. Though it
has had its ups and downs, hard-core music is still
alive and well in cities like New York, drawing a fan base of skins, punks,
skaters, 'riot grrrls' and crusties.
Ska music's
base support of skinheads
has overlapped with the hard-core audience to varying degrees over the
years, especially when third wave
ska was first establishing itself. It was only a matter of time before
someone had the idea to combine the two musics of one
audience.. ..and it came from Boston, the capital of Massachusetts on the
East Coast. The Mighty Mighty Bosstones came
together in the mid 80's,
when the ska scene in Boston consisted of little more than Bim Skala Bim.
After meeting to less than spectacular
reaction, they were blown off the stage opening for Fishbone and broke
up for a few years. As the ska scene began
gaining momentum, they decided to give it another shot, and in 1991 released
their debut album, "Devil's Night Out". The
Bosstones explain that they
played ska so fast simply because they weren't very good at their instruments.
Says bassist Joe Gittleman,
"When (we) started playing together it was mostly hard-core.
The ska just kind of became
part of us. And ska is just
a small part of what we
do." The Bosstones merged hard-core and ska (with a hard-core tempo) with
horns on top to create a new
subgenre called 'ska-core', because its too heavy to be ska and to skanky
to be hard-core. The Bosstones have made pains
to avoid to be labeled a 'ska band', and rightly so - they are a ska-core
band. The attitude and drive of ska-core is
essentially different than
that of ska - it is much closer to the angst and anger of mainstream 'alternative
rock', not the positive dance
vibe of more customary ska music. Then again, the angst and anger of hard-core
in the Bosstones is cut with the humor and
positive vibe of ska, making for an appealing balance.
Of note, a hard-core band
from New York City named Murphy's
Law was experimenting with
adding ska to their sound as early as 1986, but never went as far with
it as the Bosstones. Today, many
bands who tread some where between ska and alternative rock blanch at being
called ska bands. One band that adds
even more core to ska-core
are the Voodoo Glowskulls from California. Their record label (super-charged
punk outpost Epitaph)
proclaims "This ain't no fucking ska band!" in marketing the band. The
band consider themselves a hard-core band and
plays only with hard-core bands most of the time. In fact, they go as far
as to refuse to play with horn-based bands at all!
Other bands, such as No
Doubt, Dance Hall Crashers (who were actually once on the central ska label
of the world, Moon) and
Sublime make it a habit of denying ska roots, though it is their ska roots
which got them started and ska roots that mark them
out from the rest of the huge alterna-rock market. Rancid is a perfect
example of ska being marketed to the alternative
market in the guise of punk.
These bands take ska and bend it to meet ska-core, but there are also other
bands within the ska movement
that seek to make ska sound like it never left the shores of Jamaica. While
some ska fans are also fans of hard-core and
punk music, there is another segment of the ska scene that appreciates
ska for its qualities that differ from hard-core.
The influences
that made ska - R&B, jazz, swing, soul music, and early rock &
roll - are brought to the fore, bound together with
the shuffling ska beat. Out
of the Bosstone's hometown comes Skavoovie and the Epitones and the Allstonians.
From NYC there
is heavy skasters Mephiskapheles as well as traditionalists the Slackers
and the Insteps. The West Coast holds many ska-core
bands, but also Hepcat, Ocean 11, Mobtown, Los Hooligans and Jump With
Joey. Replacing skacore's grinding guitars
are rows of horns and a retrospective view of ska music makes for a ska
music as far from rock music as possible. While
ska-core can appeal to ska fans as well as mainstream rock fans, the new
traditional ska asks the listener to accept ska on
its own level. Some modern ska bands who don't necessarily play traditionalist
ska have formed side projects which do. Moon
Record's NY Ska-Jazz Ensemble are members of several bands who play a more
rocking Ska (the Toasters, the Scofflaws)
as well as some who play in the more traditional vein (the legendary bed-rock
of 1st wave, the Skatalites.) The Stubborn
Records All-Stars, also based in NY, is a traditionalist outfit that includes
members of Skinnerbox, the Slackers, the Insteps
and the Scofflaws. Most recently, the Moon Stompers have come together
from several different acts in the Moon Records
stable to record mostly instrumental theme and incidental music for the
cartoon program 'Kablam!' on the
Nickelodeon network.
These super groups indicate
that ska music is going in several directions, and ska-loving
musicians want
to experience as much of it
as possible - and ska is too big for one band to do that! As mentioned,
ska's original influences vary from
R&B and Jazz to Swing and early Rock. As a mutant offspring fusion
of this and native rhythms, the precise start point of
ska is tricky to pin down, though
this has not prevented many preeminent artists and figures from laying
claim to parentage. Stepping
back into the mists of time, we ask - what was the first instance of ska?
Recently, Prince Buster-produced "Oh Carolina"
(1960) by the Folks Brothers has generated a lot of attention because of
a modern dancehall hit of the same name, but
the burru drumming and various percussive elements make this closer to
mento or calypso than anything else. "Easy
Snappin'" by pianist Theophilus
Beckford in 1959 has been pointed to by some academics as the first ska
song. The slowed down
boogie beat and the driving bass of Cluet Johnson marks a startling difference
from what came before.
Some music, such
as Cuban born Laurel Aitken's
"Boogie In My Bones" (1959) is R&B with definite Caribbean
inflections but its a stretch
to call it
ska. In speaking with Studio One chief producer and leader Clement Coxsonne
Dodd, "Easy Snappin'" and Beckford were too
R&B to be classified as ska. Coxsonne point's to the classic "Push
Wood" by calypso vocalist Jackie Opel (1955) (which
is incorrectly listed as
"Sit Down Servant" on Opel's best of LP) as the first ska. If this track
was indeed recorded in 1955, the thumping
off-kilter rhythm is very much ska, though the naughty lyrics are definitely
in the calypso school. As for the term 'ska', it
is generally accepted that Cluet Johnson coined the term. Bassist Johnson
and the Blues Blasters were Coxsonne Dodd's
house band in the 50s and
earliest 60s before the rise of the mighty Skatalites. In explaining the
'ya-ya' sound of the music & rhythm
being made, the word 'ska' popped out. This may because he greeted all
his friends as 'skavoovee', perhaps imitating American
hipsters of the era. Lester Sterling, founding member of the Skatalites,
confirms the Cluet Johnson story, but
discredits the Bluesblasters
and even his own Skatalites as the inventors of the style. He credits the
inspiration fro the ska beat to
the interesting guitar playing going on in the Boots Randolph Big Band
coming over the radio from the US. (Frighteningly enough,
Boot Randolph is responsible for "Yakety Sax", otherwise known as the Benny
Hill Show Theme.)
The native music of
Jamaica was mento. With the
culture of the west seeping in through colonization (Jamaica was first
colonized in 1655, and was a
member of the English
Commonwealth up to 1962)
and the music of the west pouring in through radio waves, Jamaican
music owes a huge debt to
African American music, whether it was the Jazz of Coltrane and Gillespie,
or the blues of Howlin' Wolf
and Robert Johnson, or the R&B rock of Little Richard and Chuck Berry
or the soul of the Motown and Stax labels, the Jamaican
music scene ate it up, loved it, and turned it around into what is known
as ska, rock steady, reggae, dub and
dancehall. |