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Reggae in Jazz
Reggae in Jazz
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Although
was attributed to
when it was originally released as an LP in 1976 on
'
imprint, it was never truly a
album. A tenor saxophone player,
was a pivotal member of Jamaica's legendary
in the mid-'60s, a band that, although they were together for only 14 months, completely defined the instrumental template for ska, mixing in big-band jazz sensibilities with Latin and samba rhythms and buru drumming to create the first of Jamaica's many distinct pop styles.
next assembled
when
disbanded in 1965, an equally influential session band that had a big hand in slowing down ska and morphing it into Jamaica's next rhythmic phase, rocksteady. During the early '70s
worked with a variety of Jamaican producers, including
, the younger brother of famed island producer
. The younger
is the one who assembled
, bringing in previously recorded rhythms, many from his brother, and tracked
's sax over maybe a half dozen of them. The rest of the LP's tracks were cobbled together from organ instrumentals, melodica pieces, and whatever other interesting flotsam
had at hand. The result was hardly jazz but it was very, very Jamaican, with strong and chugging rocksteady rhythms, and while
does take a few horn turns here and there, it was hardly his album, being, truthfully, a showcase for what
could do as a producer. There's a wild, loose, and edgy feel to the album, and it's full of those odd, eerie instrumental gems that Jamaican producers are famous for, including, in the case here, the opener "Grass Root," which features ensemble horn lines, the delightfully woozy and relentless "Wild Bunch," and the two-part organ instrumental "Collin." Again, it isn't jazz, but it is something else again. ~ Steve Leggett