If you never ear about Secret Archives of the Vatican, best guess is that you never used “ethnic”, “esoteric” and “eclectic” in the same sentence.
The Sleeper Has Awakened!
Category: dUb
On Reggae as true world music
Thirty years after the release of The Harder they Come, the narratives and the images that the movie presented in 1972 remain a central aspect of a broader Jamaican narrative. In the interim, the political scene in Jamaica has experienced volatile and often violent changes.
Large multinational corporations like Sony and MCA have replaced the Mr. Hiltons of the early 1970s, Jamaica has become a bridge for transporting cocaine between South America and the U.S., and “Uzis have replaced hand guns.”
The tourist industry continues to thrive, achieving more and more isolation from the daily lives of most Jamaicans, and Jamaicans continue to migrate to Britain and the U.S. As reggae has spread through the world, like most music of “the black atlantic,” it has undergone tremendous transformations and mixed with rap and other forms of music.
As Maureen Sheridan reports, “reggae today is a true world music. From Siberia to the Seychelle Islands, from Agadir to Tokyo, the talking drum and bass of Jamaica have spread their seductive message, and there are no signs of its movement slowing down.”
Some social theorists and arts intellectuals speculate on the power of popular music style like reggae and rap to trigger social consciousness and radical change.
However, this analysis of The Harder They Come illustrates the precarious balance between music as a revolutionary force and the cooptation of cultural products for “producing, reproducing or destroying the representations that make groups visible for themselves and for others.”
Ultimately, the effectiveness of a cultural product like reggae does not rely in itself as an artistic form, as Herbert Marcuse would argue.
Instead, the subversive potential of the arts lies in the practices and the struggles over meaning around which they are produced and consumed. When new cultures encounter each other and when political processes force different cultural practices, symbols, and values to intersect and interact with each, as in the case of India or Jamaica, interstices
that emerge are the true “location of culture,” defined as an active process of negotiation, redefinition, and re-presentation.
Found in THE LAST “REDEMPTION SONG,” SELLING JAMAICA, from:
Reggae, Ganja, and Black Bodies: Power, Meaning, and the Markings of Postcolonial Jamaica in Perry Henzell s The Harder They Come
by Rubn A. Gaztambide-Fern ndez (2002.), Review of Education, Pedagogy, and Cultural Studies.
Art source: Words in the Bucket.
Onomatopoeia as the beginning of music
Each shaman melody is the tune of the shaman helper-spirit, who has an animal-like form. That is why the onomatopoeic sounds play the important role in the musical composition of shaman rituals – the sounds of voices of a reindeer, a swan, a goose, a loom, a bear, a wolf are available to hear on recordings” .
Onomatopoeia is actually the beginning of music, the first appearance of the musical ability of man. According to ethno-musicologists, in this fashion, the songs of shamans retain memories from the times of the original emergence of music.
An important characteristic of healing shaman music is that the helping spirits of the individual shamans themselves each have their own distinguishing tune, sometimes more than one, and this is the case in distant South America as well as in Eurasia.
Thus it is barely surprising that the power of the individual shamans was measured by the number of songs they knew. In other words, the shaman’s power was in his songs and the power of the instruments was only an additional force.
Found in: On Shamanic Origin of Healing and Music, from SHAMANS AND SYMBOLS
PREHISTORY OF SEMIOTICS IN ROCK ART by Mihály Hoppál.
International Society for Shamanistic Research. Budapest. 2013.
Art source: Shamanic Drumming
VIS Idoli – Vetar I Zastave – Fokus Remix
Original badboy Fokus a king specialist in Balkan drum n bass arena comes up with freshness of old school again.
Sleepy Time Ghost & Bazza Ranks feat. Shumba Youth & Natty Campbell – Rip it up – FLeCK Remix
My main man FleCk been rippin up any jungle stage anywhere for last years since tears so here comes video to brand new tune out on Irish Moss.
BriZion – Good Over Evil (Chapter II)
Straight outa Dub Strand studio comes Chapter II of Good Over Evil by heavyweight stepper BriZion. Nuff tracks and dubs (Verse I, II and III) for a lovely price of one pizza, so quench your dubbing hunger.
Exo Fam Remixed by Dubmatix
Another ODGPROD delivery, this time with mighty king Dubmatix remixing Exo family.
JUNGLE WARS 2019
Amid heap of real good regular and special jungle tunes out there, real raw and bloody jungle wars rages on in year 2019. leaving sounds dead and maimed so do not get caught ina di crossfire. Just search for #junglewars2019 everywhere.
Bob Marley – Is This Love – Dubmatix Re-Vision
Catch this Dubmatix re-vision of Bob Marley classic. Rocking regular in any Jah Billah set since when!
Dubolik/Homegrown Sound meets Jacin – Dub Culture/Restless Melodica Dub
Released in playlist style of old punk 10″ “split” format, here track list is shared by Dubolik and Homegrown Sound in combination with Jacin’s melodica. Folowed by dub and a version, this comes out to you for free on dub fueled AmpliFyah Music!
