Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Fats Domino was a Rock-n-Roll Pioneer (and the Godfather of Ska?)

Antoine "Fats" Domino passed away on Tuesday. I have always been a student of the history of American popular music -- in particular jazz, blues and rock -- and Fats was right there at the birth of rock-n-roll. But did you also know he is considered by some to be the Godfather of Ska Music, the Jamaican-born precursor to rocksteady and ultimately reggae?  Wikipedia (okay, maybe I should not use it as a primary source, but I am feeling a bit lazy) describes his contribution pretty concisely:

As the supply of previously unheard tunes in the jump blues and more traditional R&B genre began to dry up in the late 1950s, Jamaican producers began recording their own version of the genres with local artists.[2] These recordings were initially made to be played on "Soft Wax" (a lacquer on metal disc acetate later to become known as a "Dub Plate"), but as demand for them grew eventually some time in the second half of 1959 (Believed by most to be in the last quarter) producers such as Coxsone Dodd and Duke Reid began to issue these recording on 45rpm, 7-inch discs. At this point the style was a direct copy of the American "Shuffle Blues" style, but within two or three years this had morphed into the more familiar Ska style with the off beat guitar chop that could be heard in some of the more uptempo late 1950s American Rhythm and Blues recordings such as Fats Domino's "Be My Guest" (a hugely popular record on Jamaican Sound Systems of the late 1950s). This "classic" Ska style was of bars made up of four triplets but was characterized by a guitar chop on the off beat — known as an upstroke or skank — with horns taking the lead and often following the off beat skank and piano emphasizing the bass line and, again, playing the skank.

Listen, and you can hear what the author(s) is talking about.



Rock-n-roll pioneer, unwitting inspiration for ska, New Orleans musical icon, and yet for some reason, the image that keeps running through my head is of Richie.

Wednesday, March 15, 2017

Hurray for the SouthBy

South by Southwest is in full swing.  Today is the first big day of the music festival, and it was a beautiful day.  I was working, but only a couple of miles from Waterloo Records.  When I saw that Hurray for the Riff Raff was opening the first day of Waterloo's popular Day Parties, I thought I'd better go check it out, especially since I had just finished reading a very positive review of the band's latest LP, The Navigator, on Pitchfork.com.  The new album is indeed a solid, interesting, genre-bending affair.  Pitchfork summed it up with this: "The band's sixth LP demands more seats at the table. It's a powerful folk concept album from a Nuyorican runaway who grew up obsessed with West Side Story before being liberated by Bikini Kill."  I don't know about you, but it sounds fascinating to me!

My instincts were true, as the Waterloo show was worth it.  The sun was shining, and the crowd was big enough to show the band has fans but small enough to make it relaxing.  The laid-back crowd also made it easier to film the show.  Which I did.  Except for the last song, thanks to a dying battery on my camcorder.  Check out Hurray for the Riff Raff playing a number of songs from thee band's new LP, and if you dig, go check out the whole album.