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23 Fun Reggae Facts

3/8/2016

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Commentary and Analysis by Mitch Santell

Each and every day I source globally to track how the growth of Reggae is evolving. Do you realize that there are more forms of Reggae now than there were when Bob Marley's Legend album was released in May of 1984?

Now read 23 Fun Reggae Facts:


  1. In the Caribbean, February is Reggae Month
  2. The Rastafari practice of Ital – all about life energy - means many reggae musicians are vegetarian, including the late, great Bob Marley. Because meat is dead, Rastafarians believe it works against life's energy
  3. Bob Marley's band The Wailers was once sacked on tour as a support band because they were proving much more popular than the main act
  4. Marley's last words to his son? "Money can't buy life."
  5. 'Skinhead' reggae, faster and louder than normal, arrived in the late '60s when a bunch of reggae artists started writing lyrics and music targeted at the growing skinhead movement... which in those days had nothing whatsoever to do with racism. Quite the opposite
  6. Skinhead reggae bands include Toots & the Maytals, John Holt, and The Pioneers
  7. Bob Marley had numerous legitimate children - it could be eleven, but it could be more... while it seems a bit out of order over here, Rastafarians believe in free love
  8. Like many reggae artists Bob Marley believed cannabis was a healing herb and he was keen to support its legalization
  9. Reggae developed after rocksteady, which in turn was born of ska. The chords are usually played on the off beat, AKA the skank. It's played in 4/4 time with really simple chord progressions and loads of heavy bass
  10. Reggae has spawned more than 15 different musical forms in total
  11. Queen Elizabeth once presented Beenie Man with the 'reggae artist of the year' award'
  12. Some say reggae came about partly by accident when reverb on an amp coincidentally mimicked the chord on the offbeat. It sounded great and the rest is history...
  13. What's the best ever selling reggae album? No surprise really, it's Bob Marley's Legend
  14. What is roots reggae? It's a spiritual subgenre of reggae, with lyrics often talking about 'god'. Bob Marley's music was mostly roots
  15. What about dub? Dub is another reggae subgenre, this time about re-mixing material. For example Mikey Dread and Augustus Pablo
  16. Bob Marley was shot in 1976, a few days before he was due to play a concert to promote peace between violent rival factions in Jamaica
  17. In 1994 Bob Marley was included in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
  18. What is Lovers Rock? It's a love song-based reggae subgenre which started in the 1970s in South London
  19. What is dancehall? It involves a DJ rapping and singing over a raw, fast reggae-inspired rhythm
  20. In the early days it was pretty dangerous playing reggae. Most of the original artists were shot at one time or another by violent rival gangs and some even died
  21. These days there are mopre than 2000 reggae festivals held every year, right across the world
  22. What is Reggae en Espanol? It's Spanish reggae and it's one of the planet's most popular kinds of music, particularly so in the Caribbean and South America
  23. What is Reggaeton? It blends reggae and dancehall music, and is particularly popular in Latin America

    Link here: http://bit.ly/1RQ8OTg

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Reggae News for March 3, 2016

3/2/2016

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Commentary and Links by Mitch Santell

Each and every day we search the globe for Reggae Music that we feel would be of interest to our listener’s. This is what we found today:


One - World Reggae Contest winners Chainska Brassika head to North East
A rising UK band who were recently named as winners of the first World Reggae Contest are heading to the North East for a gig this weekend.


Read more: http://www.sunderlandecho.com/what-s-on/gigs-music/world-reggae-contest-winners-chainska-brassika-head-to-north-east-1-7761752#ixzz41m6cDJ46

​
Two- Welcome to the Scorchers - ska group coming to Standord-le-Hope

SKA up-and-comers the Scorchers are promising to set the Welcome Club ablaze in May withanight of reggae and rocksteady. The Kent four-piece have a new singer at the helm, rising star Jessica Lee Brown, and she will be singing 1960s covers, along with original tunes.

Read more here: ​http://bit.ly/1RHAVnD

Three - Natty on his new album and why he loves Devon and Cornwall

Read more: http://www.plymouthherald.co.uk/Natty-new-album-loves-Devon-Cornwall/story-28829533-detail/story.html#ixzz41mCOWHdz
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The Power of Reggae Music.

3/2/2016

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Commentary and Analysis by Mitch Santell

Each and every day I am blown away at the power of Reggae Music. Why do I think that? Answer: The majority of Reggae Bands that you will hear are real musicians and do not use “auto-tune” in order to make their record. There is an “real feeling” and the “majority of people who are exposed to this music….end up on their feet.

Here is an introduction to Reggae if you are new to the format:

       The origin of the term reggae is still open to debate. Some believe it is a distortion of the word "streggae", which is patois slang got prostitute, while others believe that Reggae was just a made-up name with no origin.

        In the late 50s and early 60s, Jamaican musicians combined the musical stylings of a Jamaican folk style called mento with American Jazz, especially R&B, to form ska. Ska was similar to R&B in that the drum beats were emphasized on the second and fourth beats. By 1966 the songs and tempo began to slow down to a style called rocksteady and by 1968 the tempo switched again and the one-drop rhythm came to form and reggae was born.

        From the very start, Reggae began to be influenced by Jamaica's Rastafari religion. This doesn't mean that every Reggae musician is a Rasta, but ever since Bob Marley spread Jamaica's national sound around the world, Reggae and Rasafari have almost become one- much like the music and marijuana. Jamaican music that emerged in the late 1960s and early 70s is called roots reggae. Many other styles began to emerge out of roots reggae including rockers, a late '70s variant characterized by the high-hat heavy "flying cymbals" sound, and the U.K.-birthed lover's rock, a style heavy with romance capitalized on by crooners like Gregory Isaacs.
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        The Reggae music has also spread beyond the borders of Jamaica to inspire musicians worldwide. It spread to Australian Aboriginal bands to Western superstars like Elvis Costello and the Police. What started as scrappy music from a smaller island called Jamaica is now a major part of the world's musical vocabulary.


Read the rest here: http://bit.ly/1RHAVnD


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