Despite the tiny size of the island, Jamaican music has long been a powerful force on a global scale. Even ignoring the deity that is Bob Marley and his reggae legacy, the island boasts a wealth of extraordinarily popular genres such as dancehall and dub, as well as having a long history of folk music, and lesser known, yet highly influential genres such as mento.
Mento draws from many of Jamaica’s folk music styles, and primarily began as the music of slaves on the plantations – it was the sound of rural Jamaica in the 1940s, and can be said to resemble Trinidadian calypso. Many of the recordings we have today are thanks to Stanley Motta who in the 1950s identified the popularity of calypso, and therefore the potential popularity of mento, and so recorded artists such as Count Lasher, George Moxey and Lord Fly.
Given that it makes up a relatively small proportion of the island’s population, the influence of Rastafari religion on Jamaican musical culture, both locally and globally, is way out of proportion. Rastas hold reasoning sessions, in which they discuss religion, life, and politics, and smoke plenty of marijuana . These events are called grounations and, like any religious gathering, music is an important part of celebrations. Foot-stamping and slow drumming feature heavily. Count Ossie was a master Rasta drummer, and his band, Count Ossie and his Mystic Revelation of Rastafari, have made some extremely compelling recordings of grounations,which also feature players who went on to play with The Skatalites – showing the profound influence of Rastafari on Jamaican musical culture.
Sound systems were an extremely significant development in Jamaican music, and helped to develop the Jamaican record industry. When radios finally became affordable to the majority of Jamaicans, there was a boom in the popularity of American R&B. Sound systems were essentially mobile street parties – DJs would load up their vans with speakers and a generator and play music into the early hours. In the early days of sound systems they would play mainly American R&B, but soon the music played began to have a more local flavour. Soundsystem chiefs Vincent ‘King’ Edwards, Clement ‘Sir Coxsone’ Dodd, Arthur ‘Duke’ Reid and Cecil ‘Prince Buster’ Campbell, soon began to dominate the scene and became the island’s top record producers. At the close of the 1950s, Chris Blackwell founded Island Records, which featured releases from many of these top producers, and in 1964 recorded Millie Small’s ‘My Boy Lollipop’, which went on to become an international ska hit.
With R&B as its basis, Ska cuts out the on beats of the shuffle, leaving a lilting series of off-beats. It uses the same line-up as R&B – piano, guitar, bass, drums as well as a few brass instruments. The music’s fast tempos mixed with powerful horn solos quickly took off in both Jamaica and Britain, and were associated with discontent. Emerging around the same time as Jamaican indepence, the music became an expression of those left destitute in fast-growing shanty towns with ever-increasing unemployment in areas such as Trench Town: giving way to the birth of the rudeboy. The Skatalites were the masters of Ska, being incredibly prolific and boasting one of the world’s finest, and yet sadly troubled trombonists, Don Drummond.
Even more than ska, rocksteady became the sound of the rudeboy. The horn lines faded from prominence, and the music slowed, allowing for the introduction of vocalists to the previously instrumental music. Typical of rocksteady is the track ‘007’ by Desmond Dekker, which became a chart hit in both the UK and America – in this track you can hear that the bass has become more important, and the rhythm guitar is playing a steady off-beat – something that would develop into an important feature of reggae. Other prominent Rocksteady bands were Honeyboy Martin & The Voices, The Wailers, and The Claredonians
The space-like, atmospheric, mystical nature of Dub music was introduced to the world by Augustus Pablo. His record ‘King Tubby Meets Rockers Uptown’ became a Dub milestone. Not to be ignored are also the contributions of Errol Thompson.