Showing posts with label Horace Andy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Horace Andy. Show all posts

Monday, 1 September 2025

No Sleepy 'Til Biddinghuizen

Horace Andy with Dub Asante Band and Matic Horns in concert at the 
Lowlands Festival in Biddinghuizen, The Netherlands on Sunday 17th August 2025, in the 'lunchtime slot', 12:30-13:30.

The festival's own promo blurb (admittedly auto translated to English) takes what I will diplomatically describe as an unusual approach from the start...

Reggae legends abound, 
but many are dead and buried. 

Fortunately, Horace Andy isn't, 
even though the singer with the 
instantly recognisable high-pitched voice 
has long since surpassed the seven crosses 
and his dreadlocks have turned white-gray. 

The Jamaican's iconhood is undeniable, 
if only for his all-time classic "Skylarking" 
and a career spanning six decades. 
Many Lowlanders will know him 
as the regular guest vocalist for Massive Attack, 
but nothing is more powerful than 
Horace Andy's own shows.

Unsurprisingly, Horace's hour-long set speaks for itself.

1) untitled (Dub Asante Band intro)
2) It Must Be Hell
3) Spying Glass
4) Man Next Door
5) Fever
6) Problems
7) Money
8) Elementary
9) Safe From Harm
10) Skylarking 
11) Cuss Cuss
12) Leave Rasta 

Tuesday, 29 July 2025

Culture Clash

Listening again to Monkey Mafia's dub-infused cover of Creedence Clearwater Revival at the weekend, go me thinking about another of Jon Carter's excursions into Jamaican culture.

This in turn prompted a delve into the archives of my old blog, and an album review from 11th February 2007, namely Two Culture Clash, an intriguing compilation first issued 23rd August 2004. 

What did my younger self think of it? Over to, er, me.


This Wall Of Sound release purports to be an innovative creative pairing of electronic music producers with (predominantly Jamaican) reggae/dancehall greats. The sleeve notes even go so far as to sniffily dismiss other efforts as a “half-baked, ham-fisted assemblage of dancehall vocals grafted onto electronic beats in a studio on the other side of the Atlantic”

So, has bringing the producers to Jamaica and locking them in a studio with the island’s “lyrical wordsmiths” produced the “unprecedented” success that writer David Katz clearly believes it is? Well, of course not. 

There are some undeniably great moments on this album, but be under no illusion that Two Culture Clash has resulted in something completely new. Instead, the producers seem to have moulded their sound to complement the performers, most of whom dish out the lyrical clichés that both characterise and damn the musical genre. 

If you can accept that this won’t be the earth-shattering, life-changing album that the hype suggests, then you can settle back and enjoy nearly an hour’s worth of good music. 

How Do You Love? is a deliberate shot at the charts, with Jon Carter bringing out the best in vocalists Patra (who guested on his Monkey Mafia single Work Mi Body) and Danny English*.

The two Jacques Lu Cont tracks - …And Dance and Na Na Na Na – are perhaps the album’s dancefloor highlights, with a minimal, pulsing beats that prove impossible to resist. General Degree provides vocals on both, but the addition of Ce’Cile on the latter is like a pumped up version of Cookies by Ciara


It should be no suprise that Roni Size doesn’t disappoint on Knock Knock, a muscular rhythm suiting Spragga Benz’s rough monotone delivery, whilst West London Deep’s Rudie No! featuring Big Youth comes on like The Specials in space. 

There are inevitably a couple of disappointments. Kid606 seems uncharacteristically restrained on This Anuh Rampin’ and it’s left to Switch on the subsequent Love Guide (featuring Ms. Thing) to take the sound in an abstract direction that the Kid is usually more than capable of. 

Phillipe Zdar (Cassius/Motorbass) injects Get Crazy with an infectious, pulsating rhythm, let down only by Innocent Kru’s tired (and tiresome) lyrics. But these are small gripes. 

Elsewhere, Howie B. and Horace Andy team up for Fly High, a dub extravaganza that is arguably the best song that Massive Attack never recorded, whilst Justin Robertson’s retro dancehall ballad Save Me closes the album. 


Showcasing a vocal from Nadine Sutherland and Ernie Ranglin, Save Me is guaranteed to send a shiver down your spine… and get you skanking uncontrollably. 


As long as you skip the sleeve notes' hyperbole , then Two Culture Clash is a great album. It's not as ground breaking as it's instigators think it is, but it is worth more than a casual listen.


As a 2025 footnote, I recall buying this CD via eBay for a few quid, as part of my quest to plug gaps in my collection of Justin Robertson's music (which I'm still trying - and failing - to do today). A look on Discogs reveals that you can still easily pick up a copy for less than a fiver, postage included.

* I was sad to discover when creating the artist links that Danny English aka Donald Cox died on 23rd January this year, aged just 54. 

Sunday, 27 July 2025

Covered Dub

Back in April, I posted Under Dub Covers, a selection of reggae and dub cover versions and it was well received, so here's the follow up!

Fourteen tracks this time, a 50/50 split between reggae and dub, 60s-90s and 21st Century, but 100% certified excellent. Well, the tunes, if not the sequencing!

Some of my all-time favourite singers are featured, opening with Pat Kelly and Marcia Griffiths, taking in Horace Andy, Dennis Brown and Jackie Edwards and, more recently, Shniece McMenamin.

Sly & Robbie, Adrian Sherwood and Lee 'Scratch' Perry feature heavily throughout, whether up front or in the studio.

This week in 1985, I Got You Babe by UB40 "with guest vocals by" Chrissie Hynde first entered the UK singles chart at a modest #22. It was Top 5 a couple of weeks later and #1 a couple of weeks after that. 

There was a dub version on the flip side but no extended version on the 12", so I've taken the liberty of creating my own edit for this selection. I've literally spliced the dub intro and outro with (most of) the vocal version. A dub sandwich, if you will, crackles and all.

1) Stoned In Love (Cover of 'I'm Stone In Love With You' by The Stylistics): Pat Kelly (1979)
2) It's Too Late (Cover of Carole King): Marcia Griffiths (1974)
3) A Wonderful Version (Cover of Louis Armstrong): Rhoda Dakar ft. Natty Campbell (2023)
4) Safe From Harm (Album Version By Adrian Sherwood) (Cover of Massive Attack): Horace Andy (2022)
5) Night Nurse (Dub With Vocal) (Remix By Mick Hucknall) (Cover of Gregory Isaacs): Sly & Robbie ft. Simply Red (1997)
6) To Love Somebody (Album Version By Lee 'Scratch' Perry) (Cover of Bee Gees): Busty Brown (1969)
7) The Model Dub (Cover of 'Das Modell' by Kraftwerk): Prince Fatty ft. Shniece McMenamin (2020)
8) Chase The Devil (Adrian Sherwood Dub) (Cover of Max Romeo): Dubblestandart ft. Lee 'Scratch' Perry, Coshiva & Emch (2014)
9) I Got You Babe (Dub Sandwich Re-Edit By Khayem) (Cover of Sonny & Cher): UB40 ft. Chrissie Hynde (2025)
10) Long As I Can See The Light (Adrian Sherwood's Dub Lighting) (Cover of Creedence Clearwater Revival): Monkey Mafia ft. Shirzelle (1998)
11) Dock Of The Bay (Cover of '(Sittin' On) The Dock Of Tthe Bay' by Otis Redding): Dennis Brown (1972)
12) Everything I Own (Dub Version By Stewart Levine) (Cover of Bread): Boy George (1987)
13) All Shook Up (Cover of Elvis Presley): Jackie Edwards (1979)
14) Exodus (Dubvisionist Dub) (Remix By Felix Wolter) (Cover of Bob Marley & The Wailers): Tackhead (2011) 

1969: The Upsetter: 6
1972: Superstar: 11
1979: So Proud: 1
1980: All Shook Up EP: 13
1987: Everything I Own EP: 12
1997: Night Nurse EP: 5
1998: Long As I Can See The Light EP: 10
2011: Exodus EP: 14
2014: Dubblestandart In Dub: 8
2015: Play Me / Sweet And Nice (Expanded Edition): 2
2020: Disco Deception Dubplate LP: 7
2022: Midnight Rocker: 4
2023: What A Wonderful World EP: 3
2025: I Got You Babe (bootleg MP3): 9

Covered Dub (59:23) (GD) (M)

You can find Under Dub Covers here


A few cover versions that didn't make today's final selection were produced by the legend that is Dennis Bovell. That didn't sit right with me so, as compensation, I've restored links to the two DB-themed selections that I've previously posted. With the above, that's pretty much four hours of dub nutrition!

Thursday, 26 June 2025

Balearica Discodelica

For no other reason than it's Thursday when I thought it was Friday, a six-song selection of choice Cosmodelica cuts, courtesy of Colleen Murphy.

The half dozen versions span one of her earliest excursions in 2009 through to a red hot remix of a 70s classic, released a couple of weeks ago, touching on multiple points of excellence along the way. 

I haven't yet heard Colleen's take on The Cure from their recently released Mixes From A Lost World album, but I'm confident that it will have turned Robert Smith's frown upside down!

1) Stop Apologising (Cosmodelica Extended Mix): David Holmes ft. Raven Violet (2024)
2) God Gets A Little Busy Sometimes (Cosmodelica Remix): Izo FitzRoy (2023)
3) Holiday Romance (Cosmodelica Holiday Drama Mix): Detachments (2010)
4) I Wanna Get Over (Cosmodelica Remix): Street People (2025)
5) When The Rain Falls (Cosmodelica Remix): Horace Andy & Ashley Beedle (2009)
6) Berlin (Cosmodelica Remix): A Certain Ratio (2021)

Balearica Discodelica (45:14) (Mega)


The eagle-eyed amongst you will have noticed that the usual second link to KrakenFiles is absent. This is what happened when I tried to log in this morning:


I will look for an alternative: Box has been a pain in the arse previously and other blogging buddies seem to lean towards GoogleDrive or DropBox, so I will have a secondary link up and running from the weekend.

Friday, 18 April 2025

The Long Good Friday

If you're expecting a Bob Hoskins inspired compilation of crime fuelled carnage, then I'm sorry to disappoint you. 

If you're looking for an eclectic clutch of long songs on the Good Friday public holiday, then you're come to the right place!

What better way to start than the original version of Stairway To Heaven by Led Zeppelin? My introduction to the song didn't come via the radio: way too long for Tony Blackburn to play it on his Radio 1 request show. No, it unexpectedly came in my final year at secondary school, watching my bemulleted Biology teacher strumming and strainig to emulate both Page and Plant in one fell swoop. He had two erstwhile accomplices, both also on guitar as I recall and both PE teachers, who also stepped in to teach a science class when the regular was off sick or on hols. A memorable performance, for all the wrong reasons.

Idiot Wind - and Blood On The Tracks as a whole - is something that I came to relatively recently, after years of subconsciously avoiding a deep dive into Bob Dylan's catalogue. I don't regret the long wait - I plenty of other good (and bad) music to discover in the meantime - but I'm glad I got there in the end. A great song, and a great album.  

From Dylan to disco and I Will Survive by Gloria Gaynor, a song that for a long time was diminished by its ubiquity: a UK #1 for four weeks in 1979, twelve weeks in the Top 30; a staple of wedding parties (which always seemed odd to me!), themed discos and karaoke ever since. I've since come to appreciate it again for the fantastic song and vocal, though I'm a sucker for the version featured here. Not only the full length disco mix, but sung in Spanish! What's not to love?

My musical education and enlightenment has grown exponentially since joining the blogging community, with particular thanks to the roll call of other head music listed to the right (if you're viewing the web version). Shaving Is Boring by Hatfield & The North is one such treasure, which I was introduced to by The Swede on his excellent blog Unthought of, though, somehow on 30th May 2022. You can find the original post (and link) here but if it's your first visit there, stick around and treat yourself to some fabulous words, music and wonderful photos from The Swede's own collection. Hatfield & The North's inclusion here is not just a thank you but a belated happy birthday to The Swede, who is currently celebrating in New York. Here's to you, sir!

A brace of reggae greats next, with Jimmy Lindsay and Horace Andy, the latter making his second appearance here this week. Jimmy is a legend of Black British music, not least with Cymande and as a solo artist with a cover of The Commodores' Easy, but also not without trials and tribulations. Jimmy's website hasn't been updated for many years, but there's an entire page dedicated to "the people who have ripped [him] off"Where Is Your Love is the title track of his debut solo album, released in 1979.

Horace Andy needs no further introduction, and the song featured here is one that wasn't included in Wednesday's selection. Both sides of a Prince Jammy-produced Jamaican 7" from 1977, which were joined together for inclusion on an excellent 1997 compilation of A-sides and dubs called Good Vibes. Not to be confused with the similarly-titled Musical Youth song ("Dennis, come back with my apple pie!") a few years later.

Back to the disco for the final two tracks. This is the second appearance of Do You Wanna Go Party by KC & The Sunshine Band in a Dubhed selection. The first was as the opener of an all-disco compilation called Someone Taught Me How To Dance Last Night that I created and posted in September 2023. I figure a nineteen month gap is reasonable enough, so here it is again. When KC & The Sunshine Band were hot, they were hot!

In a similar vein to the Gloria Gaynor pick, Moskow Diskow by Telex is another ubiquitous song that I've chosen to present here in a foreign language variation, this time French. This 12" version has also featured in a previous Dubhed selection, by sheer coincidence posted in 2023 the day after the one featuring KC & The Sunshine Band. Spooky!

I hope you have an excellent (or should that be eggs-cellent?) Easter weekend, whatever it means to you and whatever you plan to do. More music here tomorrow and every day, as usual.

1) Stairway To Heaven (Album Version): Led Zeppelin (1971)
2) Idiot Wind (Album Version): Bob Dylan (1975)
3) Yo Viviré (I Will Survive) (Spanish 12" Disco Version): Gloria Gaynor (1979)
4) Shaving Is Boring (Album Version): Hatfield & The North (1974)
5) Where Is Your Love (Album Version): Jimmy Lindsay (1979)
6) Youths Of Today / Jah Youths (Dub): Horace Andy (1977)
7) Do You Wanna Go Party (Album Version): KC & The Sunshine Band (1979)
8) Moskow Diskow (French 12" Version): Telex (1979)

1971: untitled aka Led Zeppelin IV: 1
1974: Hatfield And The North: 4
1975: Blood On The Tracks: 2
1979: Do You Wanna Go Party: 7
1979: I Will Survive / Yo Viviré EP (US promo 12"): 3
1979: Moskow Diskow EP: 8
1979: Where Is Your Love: 5
1997: Good Vibes: 6

The Long Good Friday (1:00:25) (KF) (Mega)

Wednesday, 16 April 2025

All That's Written Is Not So

Sixty-two minutes of Horace Andy for your listening pleasure, proof if needed that I don't need a birth, marriage or untimely passing to celebrate a great artist.

Horace Keith Hinds turned 74 in February and is as vital as ever, not least a stunning live performance with Massive Attack at last year's ACT 1.5 event in Bristol and a brace of Adrian Sherwood-produced albums, Midnight Rockets and Midnight Scorchers.

It was Massive Attack's Blue Lines album that was my proper introduction to Horace Andy's music, and I've been trying to keep pace since, with his extensive back catalogue and prolific contemporary recordings.

This 14-song can't hope to be comprehensive, and leans heavily on collaborations from this century, though it easily demonstrates how consistently brilliant Horace has been throughout his career and why he's considered a giant in the genre.

1) Control Yourself (Single Version By Horace Hinds): Horace Andy (1978)
2) Careful (Album Version By Adrian Sherwood): Horace Andy (2022)
3) Money Money (Remix By Tad A. Dawkins & Sylvan Morris): Horace Andy (1980)
4) (Exchange) (Version): Massive Attack ft. Horace Andy (1998)
5) Just Say Who (Gaudi Rootikal Remix By Daniele Gaudi): Almamegretta ft. Horace Andy (2008)
6) Babylon You Lose: Horace Andy & Ashley Beedle (2008)
7) Airbag (Cover of Radiohead): Easy Star All-Stars ft. Horace Andy (2006)
8) If I (Album Version By Horace Hinds & Everton Da Silva): Horace Andy (1977)
9) Papa Was A Rolling Stone (Album Version By Mad Professor) (Cover of The Temptations): Horace Andy (1997)
10) Girl I Love You (Album Version): Massive Attack ft. Horace Andy (2010)
11) Fly High (Album Version By Howie B.): Two Culture Clash ft. Howie B. & Horace Andy (2004)
12) Skylarking (Album Version): Horace Andy + Sly & Robbie (2006)
13) Racing Away (Album Version By Duncan Bridgeman & Jamie Catto): 1 Giant Leap ft. Grant Lee Phillips & Horace Andy (2002)
14) Hymn Of The Big Wheel (Album Version By Massive Attack & Jonny Dollar): Massive Attack ft. Horace Andy, Mikey General & Neneh Cherry (1991)

1977: In The Light: 8
1980: Showcase: 3
1991: Blue Lines: 14
1997: Good Vibes: 1
1997: Roots And Branches: 9
1998: Mezzanine: 4
2001: 1 Giant Leap: 13
2004: Two Culture Clash: 11
2006: Livin' It Up: 12
2006: Radiodread: 7
2008: Inspiration Information: 6
2008: Vulgus: 5
2010: Heligoland: 10
2022: Midnight Rocker: 2

All That's Written Is Not So (1:02:39) (KF) (Mega)

Sunday, 24 November 2024

Dub Disco


Continuing with yesterday's extended 12" tip, here's seven songs stretched out into discomixes and dub excursions by some of the finest producers ever to step on this planet.

I'd love to say that my shelves are crammed with well-loved and oft-played reggae and dub 12" vinyl. Sadly, not the case. Thankfully, so much has been released on CD and digitally in the last two or three decades that I've been able to regularly satisify my voracious appetite for the music and the artists and producers that created it.
 
Another hour long selection, the shortest version on here clocking in at eight and a half minutes, the longest just shy of nine and three quarters, all solid gold. And a reminder of when UB40 were really good.
 
I usually list the EP or album that the song originally appeared on. This time, I've listed the compilation that I first discovered the version on. Physical copies still out of print in many cases, but possibly slightly easier to track down...and afford.
 
Enjoy!
 
1) Prophecy (Discomix By Lloyd Coxsone): Fabian (1977)
2) Know Love (Discomix By Lee 'Scratch' Perry): The Twin Roots (1977)
3) Pure Ranking (Discomix By King Tubby): Horace Andy (1979)
4) Liberated Woman (Album Version By Mad Professor): Ranking Ann (1982)
5) Rasta Train (Discomix By Lee 'Scratch' Perry): Raphael Green & Dr. Alimantado (1977)
6) All I Can Say (Album Version By Bullwackie): Love Joys (1983)
7) The Earth Dies Screaming (12" Version By Ray 'Pablo' Falconer): UB40 (1980)
 
1982: A Slice Of English Toast: 4 
1983: Lovers Rock Reggae Style: 6
1997: Good Vibes: 3 
2005: Trojan Roots & Culture Box Set: 5
2012: Lee 'Scratch' Perry & Friends: Disco Devil: The Jamaican Discomixes: 2 
2014: 12"/80s New Wave: 7
2015: Island Records Presents Reggae Discomixes: 22 Essential Extended Mixes: 1

Dub Disco (1:02:00) (KF) (Mega)

Monday, 2 September 2024

ACT 1.5

Massive Attack organised and headlined the ACT 1.5 climate action accelerator event up on The Downs in Bristol on Sunday 25th August. The last bank holiday of the summer and potentially Massive Attack's last ever hometown gig.
 
It promised to be a historic event for lots of reasons and it pretty much delivered on every single one of them. 
 
Last week, in a couple of unintentional cliffhanger posts, I reflected on the support shows from DJ Milo and Sam Morton (Thursday), Lankum and Killer Mike (Friday). 
 
I also mentioned that there were various interactive events and speakers at t'other end of the site. The main stage also included a number of guests in between performances, to the audible grumbles of some in the audience, questioning why Massive Attack had to do all this "political stuff" when they should just focus on the music. Well... duh. 
 
I think they were in the minority and hey, there was always the option of listening and exercising the right to disagree. Better still, there were the ridiculously long queues for the food stalls where you could bemoan the wait for a crepe instead of hearing what Dale Vince or Mick Lynch had to say. 
 
It's fair to say that those that are still smarting from the Tories' defeat at the General Election and found having to use the train and e-bus to get to this event will have found much to irk them throughout the day...

The last speaker, introduced by Massive Attack ahead of their set, was Motaz Azaiza. Motaz is a Palestinian photojournalist whose stark and heart rending images of the ongoing conflict can be found on Instagram and formed the backdrop of his brief but impassioned speech on stage. 
 
And then there was nothing left but the final gig of the day and arguably the main reason why thousands of people were here. I first - and last - saw Massive Attack perform in Bristol's harbourside ampitheatre on 2nd August 2004 and it was unfortunately a rather underwhelming experience.
 
Fate threatened more of the same as, for the first time all day, and right at the start of the set there were problems with the big screens on either side of the stage, requiring several reboots before being fixed some minutes later. After some gloomy but dry skies, we were also treated to one hell of a downpour. We'd come prepared and the sea of smart phones filming was replaced by an ocean of hoods as people suited up, determined not to let "a bit of wet" dampen their enthusiasm for what was happening on stage.
 
What I wasn't quite prepared for was that, being a specs wearer, pretty much all that happened for the next couple of hours was refracted though dozens of rain drops on my lenses. I got with it and embraced the DIY psychedelic experience, but it does mean that none of the photos here today are mine...!
 
The set opened with the brooding menace of Risingson before Horace Andy took to the stage for Girl I Love You, which turned out to be the only song from 2010's Heligoland to make the setlist. Fourth album 100th Window fared worse and was entirely absent from the show.
 
Mezzanine was unsurprisingly much better represented, not least because it features several songs with Elizabeth Fraser, who takes up position for Black Milk, the third song of the night. It was almost too much to bear...
 
...which was evidently the case for my friend's brother and his mate, as they decided to duck out at that point! Maybe it was the rain, maybe it was the munchies, I don't know, but it definitely wasn't because the collective onstage were not giving their all. We said our goodbyes and I turned back to the stage.
 
After a version of 2016 song Take It There (not, as far as I could tell, featuring a surprise appearance from Tricky), 3D introduced the third and final guests of the evening. 
 
Young Fathers performed three songs in a row. I think the first one was called Gone, though there's a track on their recent collaborative Ceasefire EP (which I haven't heard) called Give, so it might well have been that. The second, which according to t'internet is called Minipoppa is a brief couple of minutes that in the context of the set almost felt like an interlude or reprise, sitting between the songs either side.
 
 
The third song was Voodoo In My Blood, which I recognised from it's appearance (with Take It There) on the Ritual Spirit EP. I've not had the opportunity to see Young Fathers live until now, so this felt like a bit of a 'mini gig' treat and they did not disappoint.
 
How do you follow that? Well, with Elizabeth Fraser returning for a spine-tingling, spare version of Song To The Siren, the Tim Buckley song she originally covered with This Mortal Coil in 1984. Forty years later, her voice incredibly, impossibly surpasses all expectations. I never could have imagined that I'd be standing in an audience, immersed in a sonic hug of such immense proportions that I would swear I was literally uplifted at one point. There are no words to adequately describe the effect of Fraser's singing live.
 
Almost as a palette cleanser after this most nourishing of performances, Massive Attack got as close to a balls-out rock show as they could, with the pairing of Inertia Creeps and their take on John Foxx-era Ultravox, with a version of Rockwrok that's apparently been a set staple for several years now. Despite that, pretty much everyone, me included, fell for the false ending and started clapping and cheering enthusiastically before the song launched into it's frenetic final half.
 
Horace Andy was then back for his second and final song of the evening, what else but Angel. Horace celebrated his 73rd birthday in February and his is another voice that has lost none of it's power and effect over the decades. I'm biased because I think he's a superlative artist in his own right, but Horace is such an integral part of Massive Attack that it's impossible to think of them without him. The version of Angel here tonight only reinforced that fact. 
 
We were then into a couple of classics from 1991's ground breaking, genre smashing debut Blue Lines. As the opening rumbling bass of Safe From Harm kicked in, I wondered briefly if Horace Andy might remain on stage, as the song is covered on and inspired the title of his recent album, Midnight Rockers. 
 
It wasn't to be but with the accomplished performances of Safe From Harm and Unfinished Sympathy, it is clear that singer Deborah Miller has made the songs her own. I suspect that this brace of songs is the payoff that many in the audience have been waiting for and they really delivered the goods, with the expected reaction.
 
Against my desire but listening to my better judgement, I decided to leave at that point and head to the e-bus pick up point a 10-minute walk from the site. At the time, I think I'm being overly cautious but my car is parked about 10 miles away, itself another 10 miles or so from home, so if I don't make the train, I'm stuffed.
 
This seemed like an eminently good choice almost from the second I turned around and tried to make my way through the crowd. Lost in the moment, absorbed in the concert before me, I'd forgotten the reality that there were tens of thousands of people behind me. I tried to wind my way and gently push through in near darkness without stepping on toes. The added challenge was that the bars had been serving alcohol in cans all night (not the reusable, recyclable, deposit-paid glasses as advertised) so there was now also a carpet of crushed and shifting metal to navigate.
 
There was a momentary panic, when I became disoriented and seemed to be making no progress at all. I then spotted Oh Crepe! in the distance, made a beeline and followed the line of food stalls up the side of the site. I crossed over to what I thought was the exit, only to find it was the urinals! I corrected course and eventually found my way out, across The Downs and onto one of the two waiting e-buses. By way of compensation, my escape was soundtracked by Karmacoma and then, waiting for the bus to depart, the soaring voice of Elizabeth Fraser on Teardrop.
 
The only song I missed altogether, as the bus headed back to the train station, was the set closer and Fraser's third song from Mezzanine, Group Four. I would have loved to stay for the entire show, though hearing post-gig tales of trying to get out, onto buses and trains home, I don't think it would have been quite such a happy ending for me!
 

As the train left the station and for the rest of my journey home, I was buzzing. ACT 1.5 was a (excuse the pun) massive undertaking, yet proof that it can be done and should be a way forward for concerts and events now and in the future. Robert Del Naja and Grant Marshall, I salute you.
 
Even looked at purely for the lineup, sixty quid for nearly six hours of live music and DJing was worth every penny. But it delivered so, so much more.
 
I've recreated the ACT 1.5 set below which can't hope to replicate the atmosphere though it does indicate what a finely curated sequence of songs this was. In the absence of studio versions but in the interest of providing a full experience, I've included several live bootlegs from Massive Attack's show in Stockholm a few months ago. The sound quality inevitably dips on several of these, although Elizabeth Fraser's performance on Song To The Siren remains astonishing good.
  
1) Risingson (Underdog Mix By Trevor Jackson) (1997)
2) Girl I Love You (Album Version ft. Horace Andy) (2010) 
3) Black Milk (Album Version ft. Elizabeth Fraser) (1998)
4) Take It There (ft. Tricky) (2016)
5) Gone (Live @ Rosendals Tradgard, Stockholm, Sweden ft. Young Fathers) (2024)
6) Minipoppa (Live @ Rosendals Tradgard, Stockholm, Sweden ft. Young Fathers) (2024)
7) Voodoo In My Blood (Single Version ft. Young Fathers) (2016)
8) Song To The Siren (Live @ Rosendals Tradgard, Stockholm, Sweden ft. Elizabeth Fraser) (Cover of Tim Buckley) (2024)
9) Inertia Creeps (Manic Street Preachers Version) (1998)
10) Rockwrok (Live @ Rosendals Tradgard, Stockholm, Sweden) (Cover of Ultravox) (2024)
11) Angel (Blur Remix By Damon Albarn & Graham Coxon ft. Horace Andy) (1998)
12) Safe From Harm (12" Version by Massive Attack, Jonny Dollar & Nellee Hooper ft. Shara Nelson) (1991)
13) Unfinished Sympathy (Perfecto Mix By Paul Oakenfold & Steve Osborne ft. Shara Nelson) (1991)
14) Karmacoma (Portishead Experience - Remix By Geoff Barrow & Adrian Utley) (1994)
15) Teardrop (Mad Professor Mazaruni Vocal Mix ft. Elizabeth Fraser) (1998)
16) Group Four (Album Version ft. Elizabeth Fraser) (1998)
 
ACT 1.5 (1:20:13) (KF) (Mega)
 
I've also reactivated the recreation of Massive Attack's 2004 show in Bristol, which I previously posted in November 2021.
 
 
As mentioned, none of the photos in this post (except the train from Bristol) are mine. I attempted a couple of shots early in the set, but the rain and my inability to focus through my rain splattered specs rendered them completely unusable. So, a big thanks to those that did and posted them on Twitter!
 
Propetto Isso, "The rest is nuance": Elizabeth Fraser facing the audience
Jerry Hicks, local lad and "blacklisted TU activist": Ceasefire Now!
Rebecca, "you can take the girl out of Stockport, but...": Am I Unique? and Horace Andy
André Pattenden, photographer extraordinaire: Young Fathers (for NME)
Simon Parker, "UCU Member / Dad / Disgruntled": Elizabeth Fraser
Blue6oy, from "That there London": riseupagainstfascism
 
And a belated thank you to @oniktimreh ("No tolerance for narcissists"), who supplied the photo of Killer Mike and The Mighty Midnight Revival in Friday's post.

Monday, 19 August 2024

Dub Americana


There's a link between Jeb Loy Nichols and last Friday's headliner Horace Andy, in that the former wrote three songs on the latter's 2023 album Midnight Rocker: Try Love, Today Is Right Here and Easy Money.
 
The other connections are that both Jeb and Horace have worked with dub maestro Adrian Sherwood and had albums released on the On-U Sound label.
 
Jeb's connection with Sherwood goes way back. Jeb was born in Lander, Wyoming, going on to live in Missouri, Texas and New York City before moving to London in 1981, sharing an East End squat with Adrian, Ari Up and Neneh Cherry.

His CV makes for an enviable read: art director for Pressure Sounds reggae reissue label; guest vocalist for Groove Armada (What's Your Version? on 2007 album Soundboy Rock); print and fabric designer for Paul Smith; compiling the celebrated Country Got Soul series in the early 2000s. Oh, and music that got a ton of great reviews, but fewer sales.

In 1990, Jeb formed the Fellow Travellers with his wife, Lorraine Morley. His debut solo album, Lovers Knot, came in 1997 with second album Just What Time It Is, coinciding with a move to rural Wales in 2000.
 
These days, Jeb spends his time as a "writer, musician, artist, worrier, reader, sleeper, tree planter, squirrel watcher."

I can't comment on Jeb's achievements as a tree planter or squirrel watcher, but since my purchase of his On-U albums last year, I've rapidly become a fan.


 
 
 

 

 
 
 

Friday, 16 August 2024

This Sound Rule Dancehall

No introduction or justification needed for Horace Andy. It's it's Friday, it must be Feverish, from his 2022 album Midnight Scorchers.

A companion to the same year's Midnight Rocker, both produced by Adrian Sherwood, and re-released as a double album, Rockers & Scorchers at the end of 2022.

They're both stunning albums but don't just take my word for it, what did Horace and Adrian think at the time?

“I’ll be sitting at home listening and full joying it on my Speaker Box dem!’" 

“I’m very happy with the way 'Scorchers’ has turned out; for me, it’s the perfect accompaniment to Midnight Rocker."

What neither mention is that each album also features a couple of really great cover versions.

 
 
 
Happy Friday, everyone!