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Tercer episodio de la Tercera Temporada de Paroxis Histérica, dedicado a hacer un recorrido por el reggae jamaiquino y el ska británico a través de las artistas que aportaron tanto a estos géneros y desde esos inicios denunciaron la violencia contra las mujeres, incluyendo la violencia sexual. Grandes artistas con posturas políticas muy claras y contundentes: Doreen Shaffer y The Skatalites, Margarita Mahfood, The Bodysnatchers, Pauline Black y The Selecter, Saffiyah Khan y The Specials.
Join Chris Watts as he looks back at another fantastic weekend of music! Interviews with Neville Staple, Derrick Morgan, Rhoda Daker, Doreen Shaffer and Owen Grey
Many months after our first Jump Up Records tribute, we finally have a second part! This time we are taking a look at the labels releases between '98 & 2000, the last grasp of the ska boom. Spoilers, Jump Up is still around and thriving! But this episode features some of our absolute favorites from that era, from the best label out there. Featuring the music of Runforyerlife, First Grade Crush, The Stand, Thumper,Orangetree, Doctor Manette,Hot Stove Jimmy, Dr. Ring-Ding & the Senior Allstars (featuring Doreen Shaffer), The Porters, and The Telegraph!
¡Bienvenidos a la trinchera! Hoy quitamos el polvo a los temas de Ska Original. Repasamos todos aquellos temas que viajaron de Jamaica a Inglaterra en la decada de los 60 i 70. Música de combate, música ecléctica y selecta, esa es la razón de ser de este programa emitido cada miércoles a las 20 horas en www.ipopfm.com Playlist: 01. Lord Tanamo – I’m in the mood for ska 02. Blues Busters – I dont’ know 03. Joe White and Chuck – One nation 04. Toots and the Maytals – Chatty Chatty 05. Frank Cosmo – I don’t want you 06. The Gaylettes – Son of a Preacher Man 07. Stranger and Patsy – When I Call Your Name 08. The Wailers – Rude Boy 09. Dandy Livingstone – Rudy, a message to you 10. Tony and Louise – Brixton, Lewisham. 11. Byron Lee and the Dragonaires – Frankestein Ska 12. Millie Small – Be my Guest 13. Lee Perry and The Soulettes – Please Don’t Go 14. Andy & Joey – Love your Company 15. Doreen Shaffer and The Skatalites – You’re wondering now 16. Doreen Shaffer and the Moon Invaders – Groovin’ 17. Soweto – Girl, I’ve got a date
¡Bienvenidos a la trinchera! Hoy quitamos el polvo a los temas de Ska Original. Repasamos todos aquellos temas que viajaron de Jamaica a Inglaterra en la decada de los 60 i 70. Música de combate, música ecléctica y selecta, esa es la razón de ser de este programa emitido cada miércoles a las 20 horas en www.ipopfm.com Playlist: 01. Lord Tanamo – I’m in the mood for ska 02. Blues Busters – I dont’ know 03. Joe White and Chuck – One nation 04. Toots and the Maytals – Chatty Chatty 05. Frank Cosmo – I don’t want you 06. The Gaylettes – Son of a Preacher Man 07. Stranger and Patsy – When I Call Your Name 08. The Wailers – Rude Boy 09. Dandy Livingstone – Rudy, a message to you 10. Tony and Louise – Brixton, Lewisham. 11. Byron Lee and the Dragonaires – Frankestein Ska 12. Millie Small – Be my Guest 13. Lee Perry and The Soulettes – Please Don’t Go 14. Andy & Joey – Love your Company 15. Doreen Shaffer and The Skatalites – You’re wondering now 16. Doreen Shaffer and the Moon Invaders – Groovin’ 17. Soweto – Girl, I’ve got a date
Comencem el programa amb un tema de Buju Banton. En l’apartat de novetats punxem els darrers singles de Doreen Shaffer “First Lady of Ska” i Susan Cadogan “Truth Talkin'”. Escoltem un tema de The Bartenders, un tema del nou single … Continua llegint →
Comencem el programa d’avui recordant a Bob Marley and The Wailers. En l’apartat de novetats escoltem els darrers singles de Doreen Shaffer & The Steadytones i Monty Neysmith with The Bishops. Presentem la nova edició de Daddy Rude Records: Sputnik … Continua llegint →
"Boogie Woogie Bass Man" (Podcast Title) Podcast Topic: Tonight was the eve of Chuck Berry's 90th birthday. Chuck had as much to do, if not more than anyone else, with the creation of rock n roll. There were white hillbilly singers before him. There were black blues guitarists with catchy songs before him. However when Chuck Berry played a mix of hillbilly songs (he could even yodel) and flashy blues guitar licks the black audiences apparently thought he was strange but they liked it enough to stay and watch... then white audiences started to dig on Chuck Berry. He went up to Chicago, played a few songs for Leonard Chess and the rest is rock n roll... So to tonight started with a tribute to the man, the King of Rock n Roll, still alive and turning 90. The first cut is a mix of 2 Dead tapes of the same show in Buffalo '79- one with the introduction and the other recorded with particular expertise. Played Chuck doing a live version of this song of his later in the show... Les Sultans' live version of Carol comes a record released of their farewell show in their home town of Montreal in 1968. The Stones' BBC - recorded rendition of Don't Lie to Me is a relatively obscure Chuck cover from these earliest and most famous disciples of Chuck. Ted Daigle is a Canadian rockabilly singer from way back. I have this on a compilation l.p. of rare early Canadian rock. Lady Daddy & the Bachelors- featuring a pre- Bobby Taylor & the Vancouvers era Tommy Chong! From a Vancouver sixties rock compilation l.p. The Animals- hot show from their home town in 1963, surprisingly well recorded for the era, compared to some other early sixties live rock albums... Rob Tyner Band- live in Detroit in 1977, I learned the date years after I bought this album, a dodgy French bootleggish import called Do It, which presented itself as a live MC 5 album of a 1972 show. Ronnie Hawkins- after sharing royalties from a slightly altered version of Chuck Berry's 40 Days, shared with the gangster who owned Roulette Records, Ronnie released this live version from 1982 crediting Chuck Berry. It was released through Max Milk, I believe. Chuck himself- Come On & You Can't Catch Me are regular released versions. A couple of the others are from the boot l.p. America's Hottest Wax featuring fifties outtakes. Maybelline and Roll Over Beethoven are from a live to air radio broadcast from New York, August 1956- serious vintage! Things I Used To Do was a heavy blues performance from Belgium in 1965, while Bon Soir Cherie comes from the Paris Olympia in 1965. There were other live cuts, some from Toronto 1969 and a live jam with Bo Diddley followed, for the t.v. Audience, by a question- and- answer period with the audience- in the stands! He yells at various members of the audience to yell out their questions... Different times.. Finally, we bid Chuck goodnight with Peter Tosh playing a typically searing version of Johnny B Goode, inKingston Jamaica in 1982. post Chuck- we heard some local live reggae from the mid nineties, Doreen Shaffer leading the Skatalites through You're Wondering Now, great version from the Comfort Zone... Kept the JA-soul style with a Jay Douglas show from a few years ago, and wanted to pursue a Stax Records feature to round out the show. With that in mind, I played The Liquidator and I'll Take You There which took us all to Memphis (although, to digress I feel I must mention the lyrics were allegedly composed by Al Bell on a visit to Little Rock after his brother was killed there) - Listened to a few Stax tracks including an Otis cut live from the Whiskey A Go Go and some non- Stax tunes from Packy Axton, an integral, so to speak, part of the Stax story from the early days. I have been on a Stax kick lately, talking about the label from information glommed largely from Rob Bowman's book and some of his many liner notes written for and about the label. Let the good times roll... Grateful Dead - The Promised Land - live Buffalo 79 les Sultans - *Carol - Live Montreal '68 l.p. rolling stones -don't lie to me - live bbc ted daigle - *sweet little sixteen little daddy & the bachelors - *too much monkey business the animals - gotta find my baby - live newcastle 1963 rob tyner band - back in the usa-live 1977 ronnie hawkins - *forty days-line in th uk 1982 chuck berry - come on chuck berry - twenty one blues chuck berry - one o'clock jump chuck berry - maybelline-live aug 1956 chuck berry - roll over beethoven chuck berry - the things that I used to do-live belgium 1965 chuck berry - bonsoir cherie-live france 1965 chuck berry - let me sleep woman chuck berry - the promised land-live toronto 1969 chuck berry - you can't catch me chuck berry - hofstra university peter tosh- johnny b goode-live kingston,ja 1982 (* = Canadian) Veritable Infusion: CIUT.FM Mondays 8-10pm, A party featuring rare cuts of funk, reggae, jazz, soul, blues, traditional & modern African music. Your donations pledged through paypal go 100% directly to CIUT.FM fund-drives and support community Radio. Original Broadcast: October 17, 2016
Sterling attended the Alpha Boys School. Originally a trumpeter, he is predominantly known as a player of alto saxophone. He was a member of the Jamaica Military Band in the 1950s and played trumpet in Val Bennett's band in 1957. In the late 1950s and early 1960s, Sterling played as a studio musician, along with most of the future Skatalites members, in bands such asClue J & His Blues Blasters. Sterling is a founding member of The Skatalites (playing alto saxophone), one of only two (the other is Doreen Shaffer) still alive. After The Skatalites originally disbanded in 1965, Sterling played with Byron Lee & the Dragonaires and recorded several solo singles for the London-based producer "Sir" Clancy Collins. His debut solo album, Bangarang, was released on Pama Records in 1969. Sterling rejoined the Skatalites in 1975. Sterling was awarded the Order of Distinction in 1998 in recognition of his contribution to Jamaican music. Sterling's brother is keyboard player Keith Sterling. Lester is the only living foundation member of the original Skatalites band was honored by the USA chapter of JAVAA - "JAVAA USA.ORG" at their first awards ceremony held in Brooklyn New York in April 2013. That event was launched under the distinguished patronage of the consulate general of Jamaica Mr. LaMont, Mr Sterling was given a pioneers awards in the field of music for his contribution since 1964 and continues to doing it.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lester_Sterling caribbeanradioshow.com caribbeanradioshow@gmail.com
Arranquem el programa d’avui amb el “Sugar sugar” de Doreen Shaffer. En l’apartat de novetats: punxem l’últim single dels Hypocondriacs. Escoltem el primer single del nou treball de Jr Thomas & The Vulcanos. Parlem del nou EP de Miserable Man … Continua llegint →
Episode 5 - Ready Steady! Happy New Year! (belated) Winter is in full swing now, so whats better than some sweet Jamaican Tunes to remind you that spring is only 3 months away............. Playlist files: Skatalites - Ball of Fire (3:00) Delroy Wilson - Can't You See (2:34) The Slackers - Stereo On Clancy Eccles - Darling Don't Do That (2:46) Freddie McKay - Picture On The Wall (3:33) Conquerors - Lonely Street (2:16) Zodiacs - Walk On By (2:24) Alton Ellis - I'll Be Waiting (2:04) Green Room Rockers – Wagon Wheel (4:11) Justin Hinds - Drink Milk (2:31) Larry Marshall - Money Gal (2:50) Prince Buster - Madness (2:34) Don Drummond - Occupation (2:48) Doreen Shaffer & The Bashments - If We Didn't Meet (5:01) Clarendonians - Sweet Heart of Beauty (3:45)
“Before reggae there was rock steady, and before that, ska,” writes Cedella Marley in the foreword to Heather Augustyn’s 2010 book Ska: An Oral History (McFarland, 2010). By way of interviews with dozens of ska musicians, Augustyn traces the history of the music from its Jamaican roots, through its 2Tone revival in 1970’s and 80’s England, to its current regional popularity in the United States. She interviewed Derrick Morgan, Doreen Shaffer, Laurel Aitken, Toots Hibert, Judge Dread, Roddy Radiation, Dave Wakeling, Pauline Black, Kix Thompson, and Buster Bloodvessel to name just a few. The book provides a solid understanding of ska as a music with roots in American jazz and soul mixed with the indigenous music of the Carribean. Augustyn’s interviews also highlight the importance of Jamaica’s status as a former colony in the creation of English ska as well as providing an insight into the music’s reflection of British and Jamaican race and class relations. Most importantly, Ska gives voice to many of the artists responsible for the creation of one of the most enduring musical genres of the last fifty years. Heather Augustyn is a correspondent for The Times of Northwest Indiana. Her work has appeared in numerous publications, including The Village Voice, In These Times, and The Humanist. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
“Before reggae there was rock steady, and before that, ska,” writes Cedella Marley in the foreword to Heather Augustyn’s 2010 book Ska: An Oral History (McFarland, 2010). By way of interviews with dozens of ska musicians, Augustyn traces the history of the music from its Jamaican roots, through its 2Tone revival in 1970’s and 80’s England, to its current regional popularity in the United States. She interviewed Derrick Morgan, Doreen Shaffer, Laurel Aitken, Toots Hibert, Judge Dread, Roddy Radiation, Dave Wakeling, Pauline Black, Kix Thompson, and Buster Bloodvessel to name just a few. The book provides a solid understanding of ska as a music with roots in American jazz and soul mixed with the indigenous music of the Carribean. Augustyn’s interviews also highlight the importance of Jamaica’s status as a former colony in the creation of English ska as well as providing an insight into the music’s reflection of British and Jamaican race and class relations. Most importantly, Ska gives voice to many of the artists responsible for the creation of one of the most enduring musical genres of the last fifty years. Heather Augustyn is a correspondent for The Times of Northwest Indiana. Her work has appeared in numerous publications, including The Village Voice, In These Times, and The Humanist. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
“Before reggae there was rock steady, and before that, ska,” writes Cedella Marley in the foreword to Heather Augustyn’s 2010 book Ska: An Oral History (McFarland, 2010). By way of interviews with dozens of ska musicians, Augustyn traces the history of the music from its Jamaican roots, through its 2Tone revival in 1970’s and 80’s England, to its current regional popularity in the United States. She interviewed Derrick Morgan, Doreen Shaffer, Laurel Aitken, Toots Hibert, Judge Dread, Roddy Radiation, Dave Wakeling, Pauline Black, Kix Thompson, and Buster Bloodvessel to name just a few. The book provides a solid understanding of ska as a music with roots in American jazz and soul mixed with the indigenous music of the Carribean. Augustyn’s interviews also highlight the importance of Jamaica’s status as a former colony in the creation of English ska as well as providing an insight into the music’s reflection of British and Jamaican race and class relations. Most importantly, Ska gives voice to many of the artists responsible for the creation of one of the most enduring musical genres of the last fifty years. Heather Augustyn is a correspondent for The Times of Northwest Indiana. Her work has appeared in numerous publications, including The Village Voice, In These Times, and The Humanist. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices