Posts Tagged ‘reggae’

CONNIE & DI MAN DEM

Wednesday, March 16th, 2011

 

Greetings! We’re back in the building once more!

Those that know will have seen that this Sunday’s session in Brick Lane is a strictly Reggae affair. DJ-wise, we come correct with that original bass music as standard. Confession is good for the soul though, so we admit to being a little shy on the live reggae tip – until now. Truthfully speaking, it’s not that we’re reluctant to showcase reggae acts, rather that there’s a distinct lack of fresh, reggae-tinged blood rising from the underground. Talking to the youth, the reason is simple: there aren’t enough role models visibly pushing the roots sound and as a result, aspiring artists aren’t viewing reggae music as a viable option. We’ll leave that discussion for another time, but for now, we’re introducing CONNIE & DI MAN DEM who’ll be bumping the live slot this Sunday.

Many will know Connie from her previous work with Heads High. What we didn’t tell you, is that before and during her stint with the Heads, she’s recorded and performed with some serious players in both the purist reggae scene, and its various chopped, sampled and looped step-siblings. Who here can say they’ve held down studio sessions with LEE PERRY and DAMIAN MARLEY and in the same breath relate tales of late night vocal booth excursions for ROOTS MANUVA and CONGO NATTY? Connie has dealt with all of these but be warned, she’s far more than the sum of her collaborations and along with her well seasoned band of musicians, she’s dropping some heat on the people dem. We’ll let her explain….

HH: How did the CONNIE & DI MAN DEM project come about?

CB: I had recorded some songs before for THC Muzik, a Jamaican label who the people may know from its association to Turbulence’s hit ‘Notorious’. They were also involved in the Rise Up documentary which was recently featured by the BBC. I actually featured in that as part of my previous band Rootz Underground but that’s a story for another time. Having moved to the UK since, I decided to bring the recordings to life and got a band together as a result. It wasn’t quite so simple, but that’s the edited version!

HH: What brought you to the UK?

CB: Apart from following my artistic dream, I was studying also – a Masters degree in Applied Theatre.

HH: You’ve amassed some pretty well respected connections between the UK and Jamaica. Lee Perry, Damian Marley, Roots Manuva, Congo Natty, Mad Professor…that’s quite a list! How were the studio sessions with Lee Perry?

CB: It was awesome! He is a true professional. He worked me to the bone though – we did seven or eight hour sessions with no breaks. Pretty tough on the voice. he knew exactly what he wanted, very specific. He’s famous for his eccentricities, but he wasn’t like that at all, apart from the mirror on his cap.

HH: He had a mirror on his cap?

CB: Yes. I didn’t ask any questions. But apart from that, the session was normal – just intense!

HH: Did you respect his work before you worked with him?

CB: Yeah definately. I had huge respect for Lee Perry. All that early work he did with Bob Marley, and so many other Jamaican artists, and the sound he managed to squeeze out of the Black Ark. He’s a living legend.

 

HH: Sticking with jamaican artists. Which singers or deejays work do you respect and have any of them had an influence on your sound?

CB: I like a lot of the old-school foundation artists. Toots & The Maytals, Desmond Dekker, I love the deejay thing too – the rhythm of it. I’m a dub poet too, so I’m really into the rhythmic delivery of words. Deejay-wise I love the sounds from the 80s right up to the present day. Yellowman, Shabba Ranks, Bounty Killer they all feature on my playlists! Going back to dub poetry, i’m heavily influenced by guys like Mutabaruka, Mikey Smith and Linton Kwesi Johnson. Poetry within a reggae construction is deep.

HH: Talking about Mutabaruka, my sources tell me that you were responsible for a poetry renaissance in Kingston before you left and Mutabaruka assisted you. Is that true?

CB: Yes. That’s true. Towards the end of the 90s, I had a great love for poetry, but the scene in Kingston was really lacking. Poetry events were few and far between. To combat that, I mobilised a vibration, got all my friends together and made it happen. We started it off in my apartment, when it grew we moved it to my garage and when it got too big for that we started renting spaces to host events. It was called ‘Voices: Spoken Word In Action’. Tha action part was important because it wasn’t just about empty talk, we were about using the words as an ignition to action.

HH: And Mutabaruka’s involvement?

CB: Yes man. We worked like Bonnie & Clyde. He was the DJ and I was the hostess. He faithfully came to every event to share his vibes and his music. It was great because people were coming for poetry and we had this icon of Jamaican dub poetry selecting the music.

 

HH:Moving to the UK, you’re affiliates include Congo Natty, Banana Klan/Roots Manuva and on the digi roots side of things Dougie Wardrop and the Top-A-Top label. How did you adapt to the contrast between Jamaica’s reggae scene and the reggae/bass music scenes in Britain?

CB:I’ve always appreciated variety so I welcomed the difference to be honest. I’m the type of person that as long as the music is produced to a certain standard, I’m with it, regardless of what genre it falls into. It was wonderful jumping into the UK sound and working with it. In reality, the Jamaican and UK sounds are coming from the same place, the same thing. The only difference is the soil in which that seed is grown. I can still carry my vibration and drop it same way. The link is always there.

HH: Talking about the Connie & Di Man Dem project, how do you feel about it and how does it compare to being a solo artist or backline member to someone else’s project?

CB: The project is a work in progress. In comparison to being a solo artist, it’s not easy leading a band. Having seven different personalities, including your own to balance and organise. So far Jah has guided it and i’ve been blessed with highly talented individuals who carry that energy to the reggae music and message which i’m presenting. Right now we’ve reached a synergy and great things are happening.

HH: What do you say to the purists, such as myself whose old-school conceptions are challenged by your music and band line-up?

CB: I would say come with an open heart. If you love music, and appreciate it’s construction then you’re going to find something in it for you. We come with a certain vibration. We’re not trying to appeal to purists, there are people there to do that already. We’re taking this roots reggae thing and bringing our vibes to it. I’m bringing my culture and my light and my band, they’re multicultural and their bringing their vibes and their light. What happens on stage is we mix it up in a nice pot and serve it up!

 

HH: The lyrics in your music are pretty powerful. Is there a particular message you’re trying to convey?

CB:Life to me is unity, love, health and standing up for your beliefs. Those things are what my music is about. There’s love and romance in there, there’s politics and polytricks, its all in there. The principles of life is the principles of the music – that’s how it must be.

HH: What does the future hold for Connie & Di Man Dem?

CB: We’re hitting the studio as we speak. Working on our debut EP. I’ve also got an album which I recorded in Jamaica thats soon to be released too. We’ve been doing a lot of club gigs recently and this summer the festivals are looking good so the future is bright.

HH: Lastly, we’re looking forward to having you perform for us this Sunday, but in the meantime, can you leave us with a mini-chart of your top three all time reggae favourites?

CB: That’s a tough one but sure…..

(After much deliberation)

1. Prophecy – Fabian

2.Trailer Load a Girls – Shabba Ranks

3.Handsworth Revolution – Steel Pulse

So, it would seem all roads lead to Heads High this Sunday for a banquet of beats, bass and lyrics with meaning. Check the flyer below for details….it’s going to be nice!

 

EVENT: BOGLEWALTZ BIZNISS…

Sunday, December 5th, 2010

 

Yes friends! We’ve reached the end of the year already, and we hope its been as good for you as it has for us! Some amazing acts have joined us each month to celebrate life, liberty (creative at least!) and live musical experimentation, and as those of you who have joined us will know, we’ve been treated to everything from deep afro jazz and space funk to raw West African drum calls and roots reggae music. We’d like to take this opportunity to thank all who have performed and attended….your support means a LOT!

For our last session of 2010, we’re taking a swerve from the usual format and instead inviting the fine souls behind London’s BOGLEWALTZ parties to share the turntables and microphone for our end of year party. Famous for bringing the house-party spirit to warehouses and tropical gardens across London town, GUYNAMITE, ANALOG JONES & D.ABLO deal with everything everything from deep synth funk to hype global crunk with a particularly nice line in 90s New Jack ( a guilty pleasure of mine!). Oh, did I mention they’re the very same crew (well two of them at least) that are behind the TWIN CITIES project?

It’s gonna be nice, so wrap up warm & join us…

 

 

Event: The Revolution will not be televised!!!

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

Greetings Brethren & Sistren – it’s been a while….so long I almost didn’t remember the password to get me here. I’ve been working hard on the OKRA project, and as such, have had little spare time to communicate via this particular channel. To tell the truth (which is usually dangerous, especially online), regardless of OKRA, blogging was losing it’s charm for me anyway. I realised that i’d reached a point in time where my actions needed to have meaning – and blogging about music just wasn’t cutting it no more. Don’t get it twisted though, the love for the music is still there, but it’s the message in the music (or vice-versa) that’s feeding me now….which brings me on to this month’s Heads High guests…

On Sunday 14th November, ASHEBER & THE AFRIKAN REVOLUTION head east to settle in for two mind-blowing sets at our monthly Vibe Bar session. Those of you who haven’t met them yet, you’re in for something special. I first heard how they stay almost a year ago when I played alongside them at a Haiti Fundraiser. When they opened with a 7 man drum call led by West African pioneer Adesose Wallace, I knew I was in for something special, but didn’t know quite what. An hour later, i’d heard searing horns, rumbling bass and vital vocal, wrapped around a framework which was constantly shifting between Afrobeat, Reggae, Funk and raw, tuff drum rhythms. In short, 90% of what I love about music, all packed into one hour. Time has passed since then, but I’m happy to finally be welcoming them to our stage…..join the revolution!!

 

EVENT: CONGO NATTY…

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

Pic: Adam Shelton

When he released “Street Tuff” with Double Trouble (Michael Menson, Karl ‘Tuff Enuff’ Brown and Leigh Guest) in 1989, it was the first most people had heard of the Rebel MC. Truth is, he’d formed Double Trouble way back in the early 80s and Street Tuff was just the furthest reaching public display of his talent. Although frowned upon as a sell-out by the Hip Hop community, the cut has since been heralded as “the birth of UK Grime” by Dizzee Rascal amongst others. So, what has that got to do with Congo Natty? Well, everything. For those who don’t know (and I hope it’s just a handful), Rebel MC aka Michael West went on to record as Conquering Lion, Blackstar, Tribe Of Issachar, X Project, Ras Project and of course, Congo Natty. What is incredible is that since we saw him bounce on to the TOTP stage armed with fashion dreads, a backing track on DAT and his Double Trouble entourage playing dummy instruments, Micheal West has consistently released quality underground music with more than just money in mind.

Check ‘Black Meaning Good’(1991), a watershed release for the Rebel as his style evolved and his lightweight raps were replaced by conscious flows, Reggae, Techno and the emerging sound of Jungle. Guest appearances came from Barrington Levy, Dennis Brown and Tenor Fly….heavyweight business! Now the UK’s underground were on-side, and comparisons to the Ragga Twins (fellow Tottenham dwellers) and Shut Up & Dance were rife, the ‘Word Sound and Power’ (1992) collection cemented Rebel’s place in the Reggae tinged corner of the UK’s bubbling dance scene. Now a manifesting Rastafarian, West set up the Tribal Bass label in 1992 and it was this which gradually mutated to X-Project and finally into the Congo Natty imprint all old-school Junglists know and love.

So, almost 20 years on, and having recorded under an array of monikers, Congo Natty continues to roll out raw breaks, deadly deep subs and vocal performances from dancehall legends like Tenor Fly and Daddy Freddy to expectant audiences the world over. Now a fully fledged rasta living between the UK and Ethiopia, the conscious content and scathing attacks on our unbalanced sytems are stronger than ever. Even better, to add a fresh twist, the Congo Natty outfit now counts a full live band amongst its ranks. As somebody who recieved early musical tutilage from the Demon Boyz, London Posse, Shut Up and Dance and the Rebel MC (I think ‘Just Keep Rockin’ and ‘Street Tuff’ were among the first singles I ever bought alongside Public Enemy’s ‘Rebel Without a Pause’), I have to give my full respect to him for keeping it moving so strongly over almost two decades.

And the punchline, Heads High are in the zone with Congo Natty this Saturday 19th July. He’ll be accompanied by Connie Bell, Lady MC (Kool FM) and a full live band. Myself and Darren Judge will be rolling out selections spanning reggae, hip-hop and perhaps a few electronic, bass movements. It’s one to make time for….

PODCASTS #19 & #20: DARREN JUDGE…

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

I’m posting this pretty sheepishly as Darren Judge did one of thess podcasts for us a full 2 MONTHS ago. He left it to me to add the jingles and I moved house/studio and am still picking up the pieces. There are still no jingles for reasons i’d better not go into, but what there is, is two HEAVY mixes put together by the man currently garnering support from the likes of Solid Steel for his CLUBB ROCK project. #19 is everything you’d expect from a British born Jamaican. Tuff Hip Hop, raw breaks and some serious Kingston town leanings. #20 sees the Judge come over all smooth & soulful….in a ghetto style. Guess you can’t be raw all the time. He promises us there are more in the pipeline but for now, wrap your ears around these.

HH PODCAST #19:

As We Enter//Nas & Damian Marley
Yegelle Tezeta//Mulatu Astatke
Struggla//Skitz ft Rodney P, Kardinal Offishal & Skibadee
Born Inna System//Skitz ft Buggsy
Kill Em With The Flow (Remix)//Skandal ft Klashnekoff & P Money
Shutterbug//Big Boi
EMC (What It Stands For)//EMC
Twilite Speedball//Mos Def
Orange Murderer//Clubb Rock
Lit Up//Flying Lotus & Declaime
Geek Down//J Dilla
914//Pete Rock ft Styles P & Sheek Louch
My Aggin (Inst)//OhNo

 

Download

HH PODCAST #20: Ghetto Love Mix

 

Download

 

Mixtape: Cal Jader vs. Latin Dub Soundsystem…

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

LDs

Lewis Parker’s late 90s UK Hip Hop landmark album “Masquerades and Silhouettes” always held a special place for me back in the day. Musically it had an epic scope and was awash with cinematic soundscapes and Jedi knight references, so I’d always wondered about the mysterious identity of it’s producer The Sea, who was behind the beats on this unlikely Hip Hop odyssey. Imagine my surprise then that almost ten years after that in my guise as a Latin music promoter and DJ I would encounter the very same one like the ‘Sea’ spearheading his own project – a collective of musicians pioneering the hybrid Latin, Hip Hop, Reggae and Dance beats of ‘Latin Dub Soundsystem’ and blazing a trail on festival stages across the UK. In the intervening years he’d spent time producing a string of reggae legends in Jamaica, as a tour DJ for the Wailers, and has been at the forefront (or should I say background) of the UK Hip Hop scene orchestrating tracks and albums for the likes of heavyweights Rodney P, Skitz, Yungun, as well as producing a (much overlooked) mini album for Benjamin Zephaniah. Indeed it was working with Zephaniah that went on to seed Latin Dub Soundsystem with the track ‘Uptown’ (included on the mixtape here) incorporating some rolling Latin keys alongside it’s skanking beat and Zephaniah’s killer vocal hook.

So Latin Dub Soundsystem are putting the finishing touches to their debut album which will feature some the UK’s finest Hip Hop talent alongside London based Latin MCs, Argentinian firebrand ragga Hip Hop MC Malena from Actitud Maria Marta (also featured on the mix) and the startlingly brilliant vocals of UK singer Eva Abraham. However in the meantime The Sea and I have concocted a mixtape of Latin, Tropical and global underground freshness from Salsa beats to Latin Hip Hop, Dancehall flavours, Brazilian mash ups, and a large helping of dubwise Cumbia bass alongside a glut of Latin Dub exclusives, unreleased remixes and mash ups! Nearly 40 tracks in just over and hour! Enjoy!

Sms Mix 03 – Cal Jader Vs Latin Dub Soundsystem by Stop Making Sense Festival on Mixcloud

Event: Heads High vs. 12 Tone. New Session…

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

HH12T_Barioblog

Sat 24th April marks the unveiling of a brand new Heads high vs 12 Tone session in the centre of our fair city. Having raised our east-end party the right way, the good people at Soho’s newest venue, Barrio Central have invited us to embark on a fresh leg of our beats, bass and brass tour with them. Erase all memories of the soundsystem at their sister venue Barrio North though. We’re assured that they’ve done the right thing with BC and come correct with the sound. You know we’ll do the same with our performance, and entry is free so it’d give us a warm glow inside to see some familiar faces in the place.

Podcast #17: Duke Etienne

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

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Easter weekend. Four days off and very few excuses not to record a podcast so here it is. Heavily inspired by the ritual bank holiday dig through the collection, a selection taking in rootikal dubwise, golden age pirate radio anthems, fresh boom-bap and forthcoming 130 BPM sub bass excursions…..enjoy:

 

Download Duke Etienne Podcast #17

The Observers//Organ Satta
Big Youth//Love Jah Jah Children
Horace Andy//Lets Live In Love
Jah Bunny & Ras Elroy meet Dougie Conscious//Dub 2
King Tubby//Antique Dub
ELUCID//Laser Days
SBTRKT//Inamillion
Blackpocket//U’re a Star (Martyn Remix)
Hem ft. Terrible Shock//On a Mission (Shortstuff Remix)
Ragga Twins//18″ Speaker
Pursuit Grooves//Whisper
U.N.I. ft. H.O.P.E & Shawn Jackson//Cali Soul
Ski Beatz ft. Mos Def//24 Hour Karate School
Bullion//Don’t Talk
Madlib//Floating Soul
Dabrye//Magic Says
Chico Mann//Levanta
Pursuit Grooves//Cosy
Portformat ft. Blaktroniks//It’s On (Swede:art Remix)
Erykah Badu//Turn Me Away (Get MUNNY)
Georgia Ann Muldrow//So Far
Ski Beatz ft. Mos Def & Whosane//Taxi

Podcast #15: Duke Etienne

Monday, March 1st, 2010

congotronics1

After an inexcusably long hiatus, the Duke drops some fresh gems on y’all. Detroit House, Hip Hop, Raw Roots music from Africa to the Caribbean? It’s all here:

Duke Etienne Podcast #15

 

Tracklisting

John Roberts//White
Chez-N-Trent//All about You
Bookworms//African Rhythms
Donaeo//Riot Music (Shy FX Mix)
Marcé//Ca Ca Ye (Frankie Francis Edit)
Georgia Ann Muldrow//Jina Langu Ni Afrika (my Name Is Afrika)
Brittany Bosco//Black Keys
Will – I – Am//Money
Pal Joey//Breakin’ Necks
House Shoes//The Makings
Georgia & Dudley//Shine On
Dabrye//I’m Missing You
Reggie B//Spoken Lenny
Flying Lotus//Quakes
Jay Electronica//Exhibit A (Transformations)
Fatima//Higher
Black Joy Edits//Edit 10
Red Earth Collective ft. Manasseh//Hard Times Dub
Vincent Taylor//Living A Lie
Connie Bell//Vampires
Midnite//Enter
Nneka//Africans
Baloji//Karibou Ye Bintou

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