Thursday 15 February 2024

Gather Together

Some roots music to soothe the soul, courtesy of Alpha & Omega.

Christine Woodbridge first met John Sprosen when she moved to Plymouth in the early 1980s. John had been looking for a musician to work with and, according to Christine, "It just clicked instantly, there's no other way of putting it. It was just one of these mystical things that was meant to be, I suppose."
 
Alpha & Omega "just came out of nowhere really, because we never set out with any real intentions." Christine plays bass, John the melodica, guitar and 'everything else'. After a few tryouts, Alpha & Omega's debut single Gather Together was released on 7"in 1985. It's relatively modest impact and scarcity since (depending on where you read, between 100 and 500 copies were pressed) doesn't bother Christine greatly. “It was horrible, and I sung.”
 
I first became aware of Alpha & Omega in 1994 when they provided a couple of remixes of Darkheart by Bomb The Bass. This was back in the days of multiple formats and (at least) 2 CD singles per release. I'd originally made a beeline for the 2nd CD which featured two Sabres Of Paradise versions but I was eventually drawn to the companion piece as I loved the song so much. Against stiff competition, Alpha & Omega's contributions - a vocal and a dub - were excellent. 

At this point in time, the duo were already six albums in, releasing a least an album per year since 1989. There were two more in 1994: Safe In The Ark and The Signs, Alpha & Omega sharing a side of vinyl with Iries In Roots, providing original tracks and dubs of the latter.

There must now be 30+ Alpha & Omega albums, not including compilations or last year's Record Store Day collection of unpublished versions from the vaults, Ancient A&O. Yet they're arguably one of the unsung heroes of the UK reggae and dub genre.

John never performs on stage, although Christine has toured occasionally over the years. Interviews are also rare, but there are a couple of brief ones (including the above quotes) available at Rebel Base (2009) and Dub-Stuy (2007).

I've got a pitifully small collection of Alpha & Omega albums, none on vinyl, and a handful of their remixes, including the aforementioned Bomb The Bass, Judy Green, Aketi Ray and John's son Ben Sprosen aka Alpha Steppa
 
I've collated an 11-track selection, spanning three of their four decades, omitting the debut which provides today’s post title (as I don't have it!) but hopefully giving a flavour of how consistent, and consistently great, Christine and John have been throughout. The influences are clear but they have created their own musical legacy that's up there with the greats. 
 
1) It's Critical: Alpha & Omega Meets Ras Tinny ft. JahYu (2016)
2) Poor Man's Dub (Version) (1992)
3) Bind Us Together Dub (Unpublished Version) (1993)
4) Talk To Me (Dubplate Mix) (Indica Dubs Meets Alpha & Omega): Judy Green (2014)
5) Over Hills and Mountains (1994)
6) Kayagum (Alpha & Omega Remix): Alpha Steppa (2010)
7) Under Contention (ft. Daddy Teacha) (1994)
8) Kongoman (ft. Jonah Dan) (2003)
9) Darkheart (Alpha & Omega #2 Dub): Bomb The Bass ft. Spikey Tee (1994)
10) Mirror Dub (Alpha & Omega Remix): Aketi Ray (2017)
11) Back Against The Wall Of Babylon (2000)
 
1992: The Sacred Art Of Dub: 2 
1994: Darkheart EP: 9
1994: Safe In The Ark: 5
1994: The Signs (Alpha & Omega Meets Iries In Roots): 7 
2000: Mystical Things: 11
2003: Spirit Of The Ancients: 8
2010: Kayagum EP: 6
2016: No Beginning No End: 1 
2014: Talk To Me EP: 4 
2017: Mirror EP: 10
2023: Ancient A&O (Unpublished Versions 1989-1993): 3

Gather Together (47:07) (KF) (Mega)

2 comments:

  1. Solid mix today Khayem! Love A&O and their consistent sound and high quality and volume output. This will be a great listen today, thank you for sharing. Love the backstory as well, I didn't know that much of their history.

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    1. Thanks, Mooz. I feel like I've barely started with Alpha & Omega but everything I've experienced since those Bomb The Bass remixes 30 years ago has been quality.

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