Showing newest posts with label Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry. Show older posts
Showing newest posts with label Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry. Show older posts

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Don Letts- Social Classics Volume 2 - Dread Meets Punk Rockers Uptown (2001)

For me, punk still works on a day-to-day basis. It's an ongoing dynamic, and, if you're brave enough and smart enough, you can be part of it. I could have chosen an easy path and followed the herd, which is very much in vogue now. Instead, I revelled in individuality.
Don Letts -The Guardian, Saturday 4 April 2009.

Londoner Don Letts has quite a CV.
As a 19 yr old he was running the clothing store Acme Attractions, which drew in many stars of the proto punk scene. He became a friend of Bob Marley in 1976. When the legendary Roxy club opened, Letts was the first house DJ, and his playlists of reggae had a lasting influence on the punk clientele, particularly The Clash. Letts later appeared on the cover of the Black Market Clash LP (the rasta seemingly facing off a legion of coppers in Brixton). In 1978 he made his first film, The Punk Rock Movie, the most authentic document of the early punk scene.
Letts’s first foray into the music industry itself was a brief spell as manager of The Slits (he got them a supporting slot with The Clash). He was associated with early Basement 5 before they made it on to vinyl and in 1978 recorded an EP, Steel Leg v the Electric Dread, (with Keith Levene, Jah Wobble, and Steel Leg).
In 1984 he teamed up with Mick Jones and former Basement 5 bassist Leo Williams to form Big Audio Dynamite.
As a director he has made videos and documentaries for a diverse range of artists, including Tony Christie, Franz Ferdinand, George Clinton, The Jam, Sun Ra, Gil Scott-Heron, Elvis Costello, Musical Youth, The Pretenders and , of course, The Clash.

About this record: Social Classics Volume 2 - Dread Meets Punk Rockers Uptown (2001)
On the sleeve: Selected by DJ Don Letts. The soundtrack to London's legendary Roxy Club December '76 - April '77.
Don Letts wasn't the bringer of Reggae. Paul (Simenon) was into reggae, Joe (Strummer) was into reggae and John (Rotten) was into Reggae. They were turning me onto tunes. It wasn’t always the other way around. It was one of the reasons we got on. Don’t forget that early skinheads were into reggae, Trojan and ska. Black music was and will always be rebel music…Both reggae and punk was rebel music.
Don Letts- Punk77 Oct 2005.


Despite this modest assertion there is no underestimating the importance of Don Letts in introducing the punk generation to reggae. What we have here is
a compendium of some of the finest reggae records that were finding their way to London from Jamaica in the early and mid seventies. A great compilation (ideal for the car?)
There’s a good interview with Mr Letts here.


Sunday, October 4, 2009

Kung Fu Meets The Dragon- The Mighty Upsetter (Lee Perry)- (1975)

I'll let the great Mr Perry himself introduce this one- here are his sleeve notes:
Good evening and greetings you people of the universe-this is Lee Scratch Perry- The Mighty Upsetter- madder than the mad, dreader than the dread, redder than the red, dis yah one heavier than the lead. We are here at the turntable terranova, it means we are taking over. We’re taking over the air, we’re taking over the mounts, we’re taking over the star, we’re taking over the sun, we’re changing time, we’re changing power, we’re changing space, we are doing things that His Majesty sent us to do in this Armageddon.

Augustus Pablo- melodica
Boris Gardiner- bass
Earl Smith- guitar
Mickey ‘Boo’, Benbow- drums
Bobby Ellis, Dirty Harry- horns
E. Sterling- piano
Lee Perry, Skully- percussion


Friday, July 24, 2009

Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry- From The Secret Laboratory (1990)


The yellow sticker on the case tells me that I paid $29.95 for this disc in The Sound Tunnel- that would have been Cairns, Queensland early 1997.
Judging by the cover it looks like the mighty Scratch has dubbed himself king of his adopted Switzerland.
A truly great record on which Mr Perry is backed by Dub Syndicate and Roots Radics, and shares the production credits with Adrian Sherwood.

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry- Reggae Greats (1980)


If you only ever get one Lee Perry LP this should be it.
If you only ever get one reggae LP this should be it.
If you were only ever going to get one LP you could do worse.
I’m not going to try to eulogise the eccentric genius of Perry here- that would take millions of words.
A few weeks back I predicted a heatwave- stock up on summer sounds to help stay cool- start here.
All tracks recorded at the legendary Black Ark Studio, Kingston, JA- 1975-1977.