Ska music, that peculiar and danceable predecessor
of reggae which combines calypso, R&B, swing, and boogie
woogie, has proven a remarkably durable musical genre. First
created in Jamaica, the infectious dance music has seen
three distinct eras of popularity in three different countries.
The first, in Jamaica, gave us the Skatalites and their
remarkable Studio One sessions as well as other seminal
artists like Desmond Dekker. The second took place in England
in the late ‘70s and brought about the Two Tone movement,
spearheaded by bands like the Specials, the Selecter, the
Bodysnatchers, and the English Beat. The most recent wave
of ska has finally brought the genre to the United States
where The Slackers, Mighty Mighty Bosstones, (early) No
Doubt, and the Rock Steady 7 have all given the ska beat
new life.
Both the second and third waves of ska have
produced some good bands and some great music, but if you
want to really hear the music played with respect for its
deepest roots, you need to go to the source, and that is undoubtedly
The Skatalites. Reunited in 1983, the band has ever since
toured the world bringing ska’s happy beat and message
of unity to Japan, South America, and all points in between.
The band has continued to tour and record ever since, and
their influence is remarkable when one considers that the
original edition of the band only lasted for 14 months in
the 1960s before breaking up into two separate units and going
their own ways.
So, what does this veteran band have to offer
today’s listeners on its latest CD, From Paris With
Love? A lot. The band is more musically sophisticated
than many of its contemporaries were and than pretty much
all of its present day imitators are. While the second wave,
Two Tone ska bands were well aware of the history of the music
and such originators as The Skatalites and Prince Buster,
most American third wave ska bands are only vaguely aware
of the fact that this music is a blending of Jamaican calypso
and mento music along with American boogie woogie, swing,
and jazz. As a result, most current “ska” music
is one dimensional and cartoonish, indeed bands like the Mighty
Mighty Bosstones and No Doubt are much more pop bands with
some ska influence that has faded as they’ve achieved
more mainstream popularity. The Skatalites’ current
front line of tenor man Cedric Brooks, trombonist Will Clark,
alto sax player Lester Sterling, and trumpet player Dizzy
Moore have all honed their chops on jazz, soul, and R&B.
Brooks, Clark, and Sterling all cut their teeth at the Alpha
Cottage School, a military-style school run by Roman Catholic
nuns that developed a large number of excellent musicians.
Without Alpha School, it is doubtful whether there would have
been such an explosion of great music in Jamaica in the 1960s,
music that offered joyful self-expression and a national identity
to the newly independent country. The horn section players
offer solos that show their wide musical education but are
never self-indulgent or uninteresting, and the whole group
swings in a way that defies explanation.
From Paris With Love was recorded live
in the studio between tours. “It’s basically a
live recording” says manager and keyboard player Ken
Stewart, the youngest member of the revitalized band. “We
arrived in Paris on Christmans Day and did 15 tracks in 16
hours. In the studio, we turned off all the processors and
we didn’t do any overdubs.” That gives the recording
a warm analog sound and makes it feel like vintage ska even
though it was recorded in a state of the art studio. The set
is a mixture of classic material like “Guns of Navarone”
with excellent new material like “Lester’s Mood.”
Particularly interesting is the playing of Cedric Brooks,
in whose playing can be heard the influence of Sonny Rollins,
and Will Clark, who is not Jamaican and fills the spot of
original trombonist Don Drummond. Dizzy Moore, an original
member of the band, offers the standout composition “Glory
to the Sound,” which has a bluesy quality and sounds
a bit like something you might hear at a New Orleans jazz
funeral. This kind of performance is head and shoulders above
anything being done by most bands that fly the ska flag.
If you are a Skatalites fan, you may or may
not consider the current lineup to be on a par with the original,
classic band, but that’s nitpicking. This group has
a lot to offer listeners, and they’ve done nothing to
compromise the ska band sound they originated. If you are
a hapless Bosstones fan who’s never heard (or heard
of) the Skatalites, then this album may be a good place to
begin to learn about the history of ska, rock steady, and
reggae as well as of this remarkable band. There are some
great compilations of the original group out there, but this
documents the group as it stands today and proves that they
can still offer a hot skankin’ sound with the best of
them.