Bristol Archive Records Blog

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Ujima Radio to partner Bristol Archive Records

Saturday, March 31st, 2012

Hot news: Ujima Radio (98 FM) has forged a partnership deal with Bristol Archive and Sugar Shack Records to promote its releases, the artists and their tunes to the world.

We start with our April releases which includes Joshua Moses, Black Roots, AMJ Dub Collective and Cool Runnings

More information and detail soon

The Politics Of Envy – Out This Week

Saturday, March 24th, 2012

Mark Stewart, frontman with the Pop Group, the maverick’s maverick has a brilliant new album new album and tour exploring the possibilities of sound, The Politics Of Envy is out this week and is backed up with a mini tour. We chat to him.

26 March 2012: Glasgow – King Tut’s tickets £12.50

27 March 2012: Manchester – Ruby Lounge tickets £12.50

28 March 2012: London – The Scala tickets £13.50

Mark Stewart defines the word maverick.

In the decades since punk and his legendary band, The Pop Group, he has made a series of records that have combined a whole rush of cutting edge musics to create his own style. His new album, The Politics Of Envy, is his best for years- a mash of dark disco, post punk, skewed electronics and punk spirit- it’s dark, heavy and political but somehow also really pop.

Still fascinated by the cutting edge he has gone to the musical frontiers and collided all the flux of new styles into a composite new whole. The Politics Of Envy is a frenzy of anarchic, confrontational sound with some key collaborations with a series of names that help to define the adventurous spirit of the album from cult film-maker Kenneth Anger, Keith Levene (Clash/PiL), Richard Hell (Television, Voidoids), Lee “Scratch” Perry, Gina Birch (The Raincoats), Tessa Pollitt (The Slits), Douglas Hart (Jesus And Mary Chain), Factory Floor, Daddy G (Massive Attack), all of Primal Scream, Youth (Killing Joke) and Bristol new blood Kahn.

The lead off track, Autonomia featuring a shared vocal with Bobby Gillespie is a modern anthem- the kind of music you expect in these end times and it comes with a really cool video with the two singers wandering through the modern meltdown looking like the hippest wise guys in town.

Mark Stewart has made some serious records in his career and he is also a serious operator but he also has a completely unexpected mad sense of manic humour, a six foot plus rush of energy and ideas, too intelligent for the run of the mill mainstream, too maverick to fit in anywhere, it’s this feral energy and high IQ that makes him fascinating and with the album and a series of upcoming gigs he makes a welcome return to the front-line where we need this kind of loose talk.

Conversation with Mark is an adventure in itself, he can switch from the deadly serious to the almost childlike funny with a series of machine gun gags, he still has the bristol burr of his youth and has that full on lust for life that defines all the punk originals with that added air of unpredictability and danger.

LTW: How are you, Mark?

MS: Tired, but fine. It’s full on at the moment. Rehearsing full on and everything is kicking off. It’s like having to do everything round the world in three days. It’s all good.

LTW: You are about to tour. What kind of format are the gigs gonna take, are you going to be using a lot of the guests you use on the album?

MS: At the moment, I’ve got a killer new rhythm section, these guys called Arkell & Hargreaves. They were the first people I’ve ever seen that can reproduce Future Bass and Dubstep noises with real instruments. I’ve nicked them from this grime outfit called True Tiger. The bass player can get the deepest sub bass low end wobble you’ll find. In the rehearsals the sound is like astronauts in one of those wind tunnels. His bass playing is like sucking your face off! And this drummer is amazing. I’m really excited about it, these kids are mental. The sound they make is mental. The drum and bass sounds mental. Sometimes I forget to sing because I’m just nodding my head.

Then we’ve got Dan Catsis who’s the bass player in the Pop Group, but in fact he’s a really good guitarist as well. Before the Pop Group he was in a Bristol punk band called the Glaxo Babies. They did this great song called Christine Keeler and I saw him play it with a dildo on his guitar. Apart from Levene, he was one of my favourite guitarists from that period. We got him to play bass in The Pop Group, but he’s playing guitar on this stuff, it sounds mental.

And then we’ll have guests coming in and out. In London, Bobby Gillespie and Andrew Innes from Primal Scream are getting up, and hopefully Doug from the Mary Chain and probably Levene. I think when we play L.A. Kenneth Anger will get up, or Richard Hell in New York, it just depends on who’s around at what ever, just different things.


LTW: It’s quite a complex line up of guests but the album retains your personality and works within the spirit of adventure that was the true punk ideal.

MS: The songs on the record started as punk songs anyway. I just used Daddy G’s voice or Lee Perry’s voice or other people’s voices as textures instead of samples but underneath they are my punk songs- so it’s quite easy to do it live. Playing live is always different to the studio anyway. We always experiment in the studio and try new things. Live, though, it’s gonna be very punky.

LTW: The album has got a lot of collaborations on it, do you just go through your address book and put an album together? You’ve obviously known a lot of these people for a long time.

MS: Yes, My Little Black Book! For me it’s like coming home to my family. I remember way back in the punk days when we used to come down to the Roxy with the Cortinas and I remember hanging out with different people there like Don Letts. I met Keith Levene there the day Elvis died. We were supporting the Cortinas at the Roxy with the Pop Group and I went outside to have a cigarette. There was this kid just leaning against the wall and I ended up chatting to him about UFOs. I really got on with him and thought he was just a random stranger. A couple of years later I saw him playing with Public Image! I’ve always had a lot of time for him, I think Keith Levene is one of the lost legends from the whole English punk thing. So many of the people I work with come from chance meetings like that.

I was going to call this album ‘Fountains’, it’s a bit of an experimental title, it means people that have been fountains of knowledge and information and nutrients to me since I was a kid. I remember when I was about 12 or 13 and I went to this all day Kenneth Anger screening and some of his films just completely and utterly blew my mind. Then I remember reading about Richard Hell and the Neon Boys, and dreaming about working with Richard. And it’s these people that educated me. Like Lee Perry- the guy’s a shaman. Underneath it all I am just a little fanboy, standing next to these people, I’m still the little kid listening to their records in my mum’s bedroom. When we started doing the artwork to the back cover and they got everyone’s names on there, I was thinking what is my name doing in with all these people. Mental!

LTW: When the guests came down to do the recording, did you have an idea of what you wanted them to do, or did you just say to them ‘Here’s the track, do it’?

MS: It’s weird, there’s been some random procedures to it, and the thing has developed on my travels. The vocals on that Bowie cover I did, I organized a big conference in all these galleries in the old area of Lisbon, as a hommage to Kenneth Anger. I recorded that vocal while he was doing a performance piece. These friends of mine from this Dada collective called Mechanosphere did all the treating of it. Some other stuff was recorded in these mental run down bits of Vienna, other bits were done in Berlin. With hard drives it’s like a little diary, a travel log, you pick things up and capture the moment of the people when you’re hanging out with them. With the technology now it’s not like you go to some residential studio and ponce about, you just capture things of the moment and try to capture the magic.

I had ideas that I wanted to use Lee Perry in a kind of War of the Worlds thing as a Richard Burton voice-over thing on the track Gang War. With Kenneth I wanted to bottle his magic so I got him to play the theremin. I was using people as samples of their spirit. We got Keith Levene to play guitar, he hadn’t played guitar for about 10 years. He was doing all this cyber stuff- he’s got this thing called ‘Destroy all Concepts’. He’s back on form now, sounded amazing. Douglas Hart, who has been making films for ages, was playing this weird Indian Ragga stuff which is great. I wanted Gina Birch’s energy and her shouting. I was using the skills of the people to tell my story.

LTW: It’s such a complex sounding process and weirdly, somehow, it almost sounds like a pop record.

MS: Yes, fantastic, that’s what it’s meant to be. And touch wood, with Daddy G’s help and the Primals’ help, suddenly we’re on the BBC, we’re being playlisted, suddenly all these doors are opening which I wasn’t really aware of. I think it’s good to engage with the mainstream at this moment, as an antidote, maybe to have someone saying something else is out there. I know when I was a kid if the New York Dolls hadn’t been on the Old Grey Whistle Test I’d be working in a factory, music can make that difference. They are playing my songs on big chat shows on American TV now, it’s mad.

LTW: The mainstream and the underground are so mixed together there’s no point boxing yourself in one or the other.

MS: Exactly. There’s a real vacancy at the moment for something like this, a scarcity of mad ideas. There are cool people deep in the middle of the machine, there’s punks all over the world running things, taking over. It’s crazy the kind of people you hook up with, maybe all this will make a difference.


LTW: The line has gone really bad now. Are you holding the phone funny?

MS: Yea Yea. I do everything funny John! That’s what she said to me last night!(laughs)

MS: Live we are going to mix it up as well. In Glasgow we’ve got this kid called Twitch from this dance collective called Optima. They’ve got this really cool label, people in Germany love their stuff. Twitch did a remix of Autonomia. He’s doing a mad set when we play in Glasgow. And Adrian Sherwood is doing all the mixing. Jez Kerr from A Certain Ratio has got a brilliant new solo project, I saw some of it by chance and I love it. So he’s going to open up in Manchester.

In London we’ve got this noise artist friend called Russell Haswell. he does this post-conceptual noise art stuff, he’s absolutely brilliant. I’m DJing, Bobby Gillespie is DJing. Bobby and Innes from the Primals are getting up on stage, Adrian is mixing it all, there’s lots of different things going on.

LTW: So like on the album, there is a lot of diversity at the gigs?

MS: Completely. Every single song to me is like a mini movie, a jigsaw. Sometimes I change genre halfway through a song. For example back in the day when I made an album called ‘As the Veneer of Democracy Starts to Fade’, from one song my mates in Bristol went off and had ideas for trip hop, but on the same song Trent Reznor and Al Jourgensen said it inspired them to make industrial music. I don’t see where that’s coming from! I’m interested to see what new genres people will start calling some of these things. I love it when they start thinking of weird titles, especially in a foreign language.

LTW:When you work with other people is it like working with different genres, trying to balance opposite ideas to create something new.

MA: I need to be excited about something. If I’m in some club in Berlin and I hear these new bass wobbles, some post-dubstep or whatever, I just think ‘I want that bass!’ I spent ages looking for this plugin called Massive, it makes the most wobbly flatulence inducing, bowel pounding bass noise I’ve ever heard, and it’s better than sex. But I don’t want to play it in the dubstep style, I played it in a Black Sabbath style with the heaviest sub bass instead. We’re having to bring in special reinforced sub bass sound systems for the tour that they use on big raves and stuff. The bass has got to make you wobble. If I’m excited about something like that, I get in the mood to start hollering on the top of it. Underneath I’m like an MC really. As much as my punk roots, I grew up in blues dances and stuff, where people would just get on the mike and start shouting out nursery rhymes and sea shanties.

LTW: Bristol has always had an eclectic music scene, does that feed into where you’re coming from?

MS: Yeah, my uncles were bouncers in the Fifties, and when the Teds used to wear their drapes they used to have razor blades behind the lapels. So when my uncles had to throw them out, they cut their hands to pieces and I grew up with that. One of the legendary lost bands of the Bristol music scene is this band called Johnny Carr & The Cadillacs, who one of my aunties went out with. My mum and dad had a Skiffle thing called the Eager Beavers, so they were a really big influence and there was also all these other musics about.

LTW: The black scene really overlapped into the white scene in Bristol didn’t it. The white kids had punk and the black kids had the blues, in other cities they were separate.

MS: There’s no difference, I don’t see colour myself. All the black kids came to the punk gigs, we had Asian punks, black punks, dwarf punks. Punk was a completely mixed scene, like the football. Bristol is such a small place so there was only one late night club. We all went there. It’s big enough to be a city but small enough that everybody has to get on. I can’t really explain it but it’s still going on. I’m down there quite a lot. I’m loving all this bass stuff that’s coming out of there like Joker and Appleblim, there’s some great stuff coming out of Bristol at the moment.

LTW: Despite the fascinating guests on the album and genius sounds employed you have an interesting take on the role of the musician…

MS: With punk, we thought everybody was equal, anybody could come on the stage. I don’t see how a musician is different from a sparkie or somebody who works or makes baskets. Troubadours used to be like the local village newspaper, they just spread information around. I don’t hold the role of musician any higher than somebody who works in a cafe. In Bali they have a saying ‘We have no art, we do everything well’. People put musicians on a pedestal and think they’ve got answers. I think if you have got a role as a musician, it’s good just to be honest and not try to make out that you’re perfect. It’s a bonding thing really.

LTW: When we were younger, the pre-internet musician had a certain role or space but that’s kind of blurred now isn’t it.

MS: I’m not really a critic, I can’t analyze it. I’m quite happy to provide a service, a good night out. I remember going to the early Pistols and Subway Sect gigs in London. I remember taking Patti Smith to see the Clash the first time she came over. She didn’t even really know there was a London punk scene. I thought they were just great places to meet people. I’d be chatting to all these people; film makers and poets and it’s a good space. It’s not just about the band, it’s about the people you meet and get on with, it’s a social experiment. You create an area for people to meet for a few hours. Like a free pirate spaceship.

The Free Pirate Spaceship comes to land this week with these gigs and the album- see you there earthlings…

Taken from John Robbs site – Louder Than war:

http://louderthanwar.com/mark-stewart-an-interview-new-album-and-tour-exploring-the-possibilities-of-sound/

The Cortinas – UK Tour 2012

Wednesday, March 7th, 2012

It is with regret that The Cortinas have had to cancel their proposed tour dates this summer.

 

Due to circumstances beyond their control the band have made the disappointing decision.

 

They hope to revisit the idea at some stage in the future, until then the reunion is off.

 

Mike Darby

www.bristolarchiverecords.com

 

 

Dan Ratchet – Rise Up

Saturday, February 18th, 2012
Dan Ratchet 12″ Vinyl (Limited Edition) ARC254V
Recorded in London and mixed at Dynamic Studios, Jamaica 1986
Produced by Simbarashe Tongogara
Never released until now – 11th June 2012
Pre-sales will be up soon at www.bristolarchiverecords.com and all major and minor overground and underground mainstream and reggae distribution outlets
The album drops in July 2012 with more previously unreleased material to follow later in the year and 2013 – busy time for Dan and exciting for the team
Video for Afrikana Policies will be uploaded and available in March

Black Roots confirmed for ATP

Monday, July 4th, 2011

We are thrilled to confirm that Black Roots have been today confirmed on the ATP bill for Ali Palis Sat 23rd July.

Thanks to Geoff from Portishead

New T Shirt Store goes live today

Monday, July 4th, 2011

Check our range of shirts out at:

http://bristolarchiverecords777.personalised2order.com/shop?pn=1

The Bamboo Club, Bristol 1977 – Through the eyes of….

Thursday, June 30th, 2011
Yes, Bwoy back den Bamboo did a mash up de place. Nuff niceness. Wicked Vibes. Tony and the Lurks with Junior (AKA “Dread”), Wickedest Keyboard Player ever. DJ Hank and DJ Maggi…AKA McGowan. Trust me bamboo club Bristol UK, is legendary throughout the world. Bristol was it. Traila load a girls from all ova de UK on weekends comming down a de club, wha!!! Trust me tings well irie. Latest fashion, groove, swing, rock steady, shing a ling, shuffle, skiffle, cool an deadly…wha…Bamboo did a mash it up. Bristol women de most beautiful, loving, kindess, sistrin man an man would ever set eyes on. TREASURES…respect and honor dem
Girls like sand to match every man. Bwoy if u couldn’t meet a nice girl or bwoy at bamboo…well yu jus nu ready. See it deh. Yeah mon. Bwoy, bamboo had a part design like a cave vibes all night long…lovers rock a mash up the place. Keyboard Junior, wid de Lurks a wicked local band, did a kill dem wid it. Gal dem jus a pass out fe de keyboard player. Bwoy was jus wicked. When him hit the stage…club mash up. Nuff, Nuff Niceness. Big up Bristol. Maximum respect: Lurk’s, Tony Forbes, AKA Tony Ray and Amjah Band inna Israel, Winston, Israel, Junior, AKA “Dread” yard, RIP, Charles Israel, Lennox, Switzerland, Ronald Green, Bristol UK, Larry.Wailer’s , Toot’s and the Maytals, Diamonds, Upsetters….on and on. Nuff Respect.
Here mi now…Spread de word. We are talking about an icon. Calling aII man an all crew from Bristol now scattered around the world…log on. Some a wi deh back a yard…Some a wi in a America…Europe…all over de world…a so wi dweet. Come mek wi dweet…Burning Spear…There is a mystic…Bob. Come, Come in Bristol…AII a wi…Go tell it round de world…log on. One love…One heart…Let’s get together and feel all right…Bob.
What this blog affords us is the opportunity to set things straight. We have a lot of very powerful families that came out of Bristol. The Cooke’s were one of Bristol’s earliest most influential families. Mr. Cooke was a very strong Jamaican business man owning nuf, nuff houses in Bristol, which he rented to the West Indian families when no one else would support them. Mr.Forbes, owner of a massive West Indian Grocery Store, on Grosvenor Road, St. Pauls, Ms. Forbes, Hair salon, Pops, record store, Black and White Cafe, Sonia and Denzel, Club proprietors, Keith and Mytle Thompson, big trucking company… etc.
Nuff a fi wi parents did have big house. In fact, more dan one. Weh dem a talk bout ghetto. Wi nuh know bout nu ras ghetto. A house fe wi parent’s buy back den and fix dem up. Fe wi community’s was criss…bout ghetto. Wi nu check fe nu dibby-dibby ting, scene!!! CHU.A dem did a live inna ghetto and a bade, when dem bade, in a kitchen sink…puss…oonoo ova stand. Fe wi people dem end up a own de biggest houses in a all part a bristol. Si it deh.
Speak up Bristol and represent yourselves on this forum. Half the story has never been told. It is left to us to correct the record. From the Bamboo to the blues to the calling of our destiny. Many of us left and went on to take on the world and WIN. We were well prepared. We had come from a culture and a people that did not know what it meant to give up. They struggled for us. Bled and died for us. Yes Bristol.
Teddy Bwoy know seh him can’t jesta inna fe wi area. Man like sweeny, karl and dem brudda deh would a wha…yu no weh mi a seh. So whatch ya, go tell the world..Tell everyone get on this forum and tell our HIS STORY. See it deh. Run go tell mama, papa…run come. Tell your story. Let the world hear us. FOR WE ARE BRISTOL. We not only made history…WE LIVED IT.
Calling all Rasta man, Bongo, Nyabingi, Twelve Tribes, COME DOWN SOLOMOM….SOLOMOM…Come in an log on. Jah…Rastafar I. Everliving…Ever faithfull…Ever Sure.
If you know your history you [WON'T] ask ME who the hell do I think I am. U see I am one of u. I was and continue to be a bufallo soldier. Dread locks Rasta. I have been fighting on arrival…But the lesson I learned in Bristol prepared me for survival. Love oonoo Bristol.
Go tell the world, seh wi deh yah. Good friends we have lost…Good friends we have found along the way. In this great future you can’t forget your past. Some of us survive. Thank God we are still alive. See it deh.
Kieth Maloney, King, Junior Walker, Herald Hartley, Bunny, Parker, Duckie, Duncans, Champagne…Patrick, Vivian…Twiggy…Bill…AJAX…Karl (Tarzan Son), Stone, Dulcie, Sunshine, Bankie, Burgess, Denzil, Sonia, Steven, Michael, Norma, Clements, The Reids, Winston, Cecil Decordova, Norman, Norma, Stephanie, Solomon, lookup, Monica Blagrove, Tony Forbes, Lennox, Charles, Jennifer Baker, Noel Baker, Stiffy RIP, Eubert Hartley, Bajan, Sammy Joseph, Theodore Joseph,longman, Petrona, Ronald Powell (POW, POW), Beauty Spot Frank RIP, Israel RIP, Dennis, Keith Thomson, Maggi, Hank, BIG Basil guitarist, Burcham, Ms, Forbes Beauty Shop, Mr Forbes grocery store RIP, Barry Johnson, Kaleb Johnson, Clive Johnson, Morris, Saidi, Dorren, Mava, Beverly, Carlton, Tarzan (RIP), Ajax, Mr, Barnaby, Bailey (ka ti, Ka ti), Simon, Janet (RIP), Alfreda,Mary barrant, Quinty, Raymond,Pop’s (record shop), Ken Duncan (RIP), Alan Duncan, Phillapa Forbes, RIP, Phillip Walker RIP, DOCKSI, Shark, George McCloud,…on and on…oonoo fill dem in.
I man haf fi chant. When I man tink a bout all ah dem youth deh we lose to de curse of de crack, mental and inhuman bondage; and de RAS COKE. Natural Herbal EVERYTIME…Jah know. Excuse mi while I light…Oh God I got to take a whiff. Bredren please fe give I. I man nu fraid fe tell oonoo, mi jus feel like mi eyes a run living eye water. Memories of our reality. My heart feel like it wan fe weep fe de past, and fe our future. When I think of some of the things we endured…my blood runs cold…Jus feel like mi haf fi weep. Bredren, but fi de grace of Jah, go I. All dem man deh dat fall unda de pressure oonoo nu pass dem mek dem suffer. Touch dem. Help dem if yu can. Blessed are de merciful. Jah know. JAH. RASTAFARI. SOLDIERS, I MAN UNDER DE BANNER OF HIS MAJESTY, SYMBOLIC LIONS OF JUDEA WHICH SHALL BREAK EVERY CHAIN SALUTE ALL AH OONOO. RESPECT TO DE MAX.
Can’t leave out de church people dem.: Bro and Sis Williams, Brother and Sister Clark, Bro and Sis Morris, Bro and Sis Diego, Bro and Sister Telfer, Sis Barrant, Br and Sister Jjohnson. The list goes on and on. Those that know complete the list. Tell our own story. We must tell it ourselves. Maximum Respect for all man from this era. Most a dem man mention here (and still living) inna them 50′s thru 60′s.
I heard man say that man of that era fraid fe go down town. Hey oonoo fe get de rude bwoy youth them. Them bwoy deh never fear no man. Them man step it down town to go a locarno and dem place deh with them straight razor, flick knife and switch blade and no man test. Them bwoy “the old guns” never fear no one. Don’t get I wrong, dem bradda deh, never da look fe trouble, but dem deh man deh down town used to wan tek libati, wid man an man, scene! Yeah mon. Ah su. Dem used to walk back thru town to go a Bamboo and all a dem in a de town know nu fe mess wid dem youth deh…dem youth was fearless and jus nu jesta. Dem deh youth deh mek it safe fe black man go down town. So mi nu know weh dem a talk bout…dem jus nu know. If oonoo ask the old timers dem will tell yu bout dem man deh. Bristol front line soldiers. That crew left Bristol to London and became the Sir Coxsone Downbeat sound system crew…the young LION’s; the world renowned legends; the UNTOUCHABLES. If oonna wan mek flim a dem deh man deh , if any still deh bout, oonoo need fe track down. Original Rude Bwoys. Serious ting…fe real. I man salute dem deh youth deh. Some serious Bristol youth. Fearless Posse. Dem youth deh did along wid de original Brixton crew got together and became known as de Untouchables and did a rule London, including de notorious Brixton, in the late 60′s, 70′s and 80′s. Each one tell one. Log on.
UNTOUCHABLES: (Circa 60′s thru 80′s) Junior, Herald, Valentine AKA (POUND A LIVER), longman, Israel AKA Jahu (RIP), Tani, Ewart, Facey, Henry AKA (Bacon), Rudy (RIP), Phillip, Trevor AKA (Hog), Doozer, Tex, Ika, Blackhood, Messom, Frenchie, Bradda Frankie, Nyaman Brown, Kenneth AKA (Jew Bwoy)…Nuff More. Jus can’t remember man an man. Locales:; Ram Jam, Jim Daddy, Roaring 20′s, Brixton, Peckham, Lewisham, Norwood, East, West, North and South…The Legend Sir Coxsone Downbeat…LLoydie, Festus, Blacka…YEAH MON…AH SU. Su wi dweet. Respect all original untouchables…Time is the master. From Bamboo…Worldwide still a trod it inna Babylon and ah carry de torch. Yes mi fren…mi good fren, mi de pon…Si it deh. JAH. RASTAFARI.
If anyone inna Bristol read this ah beg oonoo do a blessing fe I man. Print and distribute inna Bristol.Down a de Swan and place lke dat. Nuff a dem bradda and sista ya ever get de respect dem deserve. Oonoo hafi understand weh did a gwan in ah England dem time deh. “PRESSURE OH PRESSURE ON A… Si it deh. “Who feels it knows it.” Take a walk inna fe wi shoes before oonoo criticize. So watch ya it nu matter to I man what ever status in a life I man reach I will always love and respect all ah my bredren dem in a Bristol England. Whatcha in truth all I man would a like fe know seh all man a find peace inna dem life…trust mi I man overstand the battle and de struggle. I man would a walk in a any battle wid I man bredren from dat deh era. All who nu mention a jus seh right now memory deceive de I. But live up…All a oonoo stay strong..”Here the words of the rasta man say…babylon…” Si it deh. “THE TRUTH IS AN OFFENCE…OFFENCE…BUT NOT A SHAME…[FOR I AND I KNOW BRISTOL...WEH WI LIVE TRU] JAH LIVE CHILDREN YEAH, JAH, JAH, LIVE CHILDREN YEAH.” BREDREN LUV OONOO. JAH BLESINGS. JAH GUIDANCE. JAH LIGHT. JAH INITY. UNUH BUS DEM TUNE DEH. Epecially MYSTIC BLOWING THRU THE AIR. IF OONOO LISTEN CAREFULLY OONOO AH GO HEAR. Speak up and tell oonoo story it’s not a shame.
Be the hundred, be de tousan
Fro country and from town,
By de ship-load, be the plane load
Jamaica is Englan boun.
Dem pour out a Jamaica,
Everybody future plan
Is fe get a big-time job
An settle in de mother lan.
What an islan! What a people!
Man an woman, old an young
Jus a pack dem bag an baggage
An turn history upside dung!
Some people doan like travel,
But fe show dem loyalty
Dem all a open up cheap-fare-
To-England agency.
An week by week dem shipping off
Dem countryman like fire,
Fe immigrate an populate
De seat a de Empire.
Oonoo see how life is funny,
Oonoo see da turnabout?
Jamaica live fe box bread
Out a English people mout’.
For wen dem ketch a Englan,
An start play dem different role,
Some will settle down to work
An some will settle fe de dole.
Jane says de dole is not too bad
Because dey paying she
Two pounds a week fe seek a job
dat suit her dignity
me say Jane will never fine work
At de rate how she dah look,
For all day she stay popn Aunt Fan couch
An read love-story book.
Wat a devilment a Englan!
Dem face war an brave de worse,
But me wondering how dem gwine stan
Colonizin in reverse.
THE MOST HONARABLE LOUISE BENNETT (RIP) SISTRIN…AYASO…AH FE WI…ALL A WI.
“I rise,” is fe all a de youth dem dat follow I an I generation. Listen up my youth’s I man gwan reason wid oonoo. Back in a fe we era, tings did different. All dem did a expect from I an I was fe go wuk in a factory, Brooke’s laundry, BRI (fe empty chamber pot)(tru some nursing…but dem day deh, yu nuh see!!) lysox, frys, waterworks, dem place deh…scene!! Fe we parent’s, Jah bless dem, hold down dem type a wuk fe mek a betta future fe I an I. I an I reject dem deh ting deh an decide seh betta mus come. So man an man forward in a babylon a look fe better I an I self. Now whatch ya, we never fraid fe wuk an we do weh we havfe do fe forward I an I self.
Now whatch ya, my youths. A weh de ras oonoo a deal wid. Oonoo hav all kinda opportunity I an I never have. So tell I man why de ras oonoo a jesta. I an I blaze a trail fe oonoo. We face down nuff a dem heathen back deh pon de wall fe oonoo. Watch ya all a dem from all ova come thru an a prosper off a fe we labor. Is I an I hav fe back off babylon, fight down de evil man dem fe mek it safe fe de coolie, pakistani, arab all a dem fe a live deh. Yet dem a prosper while I an I youth dem a jesta. Oonoo no see it? Instead it look like oonoo wan play gangsta. Oonoo seem like seh oonoo wan feel seh oonoo a pretend seh oonoo a dan man. Weh de ras!!. Chu, go study oonoo ras books. Go educate oonoo self. Oonoo need fe go become solicitor, barrister, doctor, lawyer, engineer,. architect, teacher’s, entrepreneurs…stop ras jesta. I an I suffa fe oonoo. Nuff a oonoo born a Englan an nu know nuthin bout yard. Whatcha Jamaica produce a lot a champion. Bob Marley, Burning Spear, Colin Powell, Marcus Garvey…on an on. Nuff doctor, lawyer, engineer, businessmen, teachers dem all ova de world a succeed. Whe de ras do oonoo.
Stop follow foolishness. Stop a study gangstaism an how fe whine up oonoo ras waist, an go study oonoo book dem. Old guns oonoo step up an counsel dem youth yah. Mek dem overstand de consequences of dem actions. Youth man here I when I tell oonoo time wait fe no man. Mek hay when de sun a shine. Be responsible fe oonoo own future an destiny. Teachers stop a jesta wid I an I youth dem future. Fe we youth dem are precious in de eyes of JAH.
I man charge Englan (oonoo)… “who de[RAS] cap fit..” fe negligence. I man charge oonoo fe de collusion in de destruction an miseducation of I an I generation. Oonoo, know how many lives oonoo destroy when oonoo would’nt let dem study fe tek oonoo ras higher level certificate(s), because dem did black. Oonoo know how many supa star athlete, footballers, cricketer’s, athletes all oonoo deny de opatuniti because dem did black; oonoo know how many scientist, doctor’s, physicians, chemist, mathematicians, JAH…Oh JAH, wasted to de debris of socities, refuge. Oonoo….Oonoo…I man charge oonoo. JAH. LORD GIVE I STRENGTH…OH FATHER GOD.
Some of us survive. I man stan fe chant down Babylon in de name of I an I bredren who nu deh ya, or can’t chant down de perpretrators. I man a tell oonoo seh no more. I man charge all a oonoo parent’s in a Englan fe demand seh deh shitstem…school’s, “properly” educate I an I youth dem.
Youth’s oonoo nu se wha gwan. Oonoo nu se say a right deh so, in a ras Bristol, Englan, dem brutalize I an I, very souls pon de slave ship. A right deh so dem carry I an I in a shackles and hold us down in a cellar (in chains) in de bottom less pit, a wait fe massa fi put we up pon de block. A right deh so in a Bristol, Englan dem brutalize I an I bredren dem very souls. Youth man, I man a beg oonoo visit dem site deh and cite a prayer fe de souls and spirits of I an I ancestors. Youth man, oonoo hear I now, honor dem with no violence jus peaceful emancipation of your minds. All a oonoo if oonoo listen carefully, oonoo will hear… the crack of de RASSSSS WHHHHHHIP.
What we need is a spiritual healing.We need a cleansing. We need a recognition of de inhuman acts dat were legally perpetrated on I an I. Slavemasta, I an I deh yah fe collect we pay. Here I, oonoo wan de world fe come dung deh fe play olympic sports on de bones, blood sweat and tears of I an I, bredren.
Yet when I an I petition oonoo fe change jus de name a de Ras Massa name, pon de building oonoo refuse. I man a tell oonoo seh de world a come down deh fe olympic sport…JAH nah sleep. Here me now WORLD, if oonnoo wan fe come down deh den oonoo need fe know de history. Oonoo need fe ova stan weh Rasta a tell oonoo. If oonoo wan fe participate in dis continued disrespect, disregard and dehumanization of I an I by dis yah system; who prefer fe retain slave massa (COLSTON) name pon building… dat I an I build feh no pay; sacrifice blood sweat and tears inna inhuman bondage… den all Rasta can seh …what a shame an disgrace. But mek no mistake, Oonnoo a go tired fe se Rasta face…oonoo can’t keep I an from a broadcast dis disgrace!! Thank God fe internet!!!
Boycott…oonoo boycott…rise up. JAH RASTAFARI. Justice…I man call fe Justice fe I an I an I. Whatch ya man…excuse mi whilst…oh God…oh God. Didn’t I an I people before I slave fe dis yah Englan. JAH. RASTAFARI. If you for get yu past yu can never realize yu future. Oonoo owe it to oonoo self and de past fe forward in dis generation.
CHU!! My Youth’s tings a get more crucial in a Englan now. Step up. As Bob say…Get up Stand up . Stand up fe [oonoo] rights. Demand justice an equal rights. Demand a fair an propa education. Bristol…calling all Rastaman. SOLOMON…SOLOMON…I man no seh yu is a bradda dat long time now in a de struggle fe dem youth yah. Bredren, de time is NOW. Rise up. NO VIOLENCE…PEACEFULLY…demand equal rights and justice.
Soli..I an I need fe petition dem man deh fe provide a future fe I an I youth dem. Dem youth yah need quality school’s in a de community; dem youth need shelta; de youth dem hungry an a suffer; dem youth deh need jobs; dem youth deh need a peaceful neighborhood fe grow up in a. Suh watch yah Soli…it’s time RASTA. Yeah mon..it’s time. I an I can reason right ya so…scene. Spear…to far fe travel….don’t go to the river….scene. But I man will travel cross de oceans and come Rasta fe de emancipation…scene. I man tired fe see oonoo a fail dem way deh. I man nu wan fe believe seh fe we struggle was in vain.
“I rise.,” fe I man youth dem. Oonoo forward in dis
generation…TRIUMPHANTLY. “Won’t you help to sing…” LUV Oonoo. MYSTIC BLOWING THRU THE AIR….
Still I Rise
You may write me down in history
With your bitter, twisted lies,
You may trod me in the very dirt
But still, like dust, I’ll rise.
Does my sassiness upset you?
Why are you beset with gloom?
‘Cause I walk like I’ve got oil wells
Pumping in my living room.
Just like moons and like suns,
With the certainty of tides,
Just like hopes springing high,
Still I’ll rise.
Did you want to see me broken?
Bowed head and lowered eyes?
Shoulders falling down like teardrops.
Weakened by my soulful cries.
Does my haughtiness offend you?
Don’t you take it awful hard
‘Cause I laugh like I’ve got gold mines
Diggin’ in my own back yard.
You may shoot me with your words,
You may cut me with your eyes,
You may kill me with your hatefulness,
But still, like air, I’ll rise.
Does my sexiness upset you?
Does it come as a surprise
That I dance like I’ve got diamonds
At the meeting of my thighs?
Out of the huts of history’s shame
I rise
Up from a past that’s rooted in pain
I rise
I’m a black ocean, leaping and wide,
Welling and swelling I bear in the tide.
Leaving behind nights of terror and fear
I rise
Into a daybreak that’s wondrously clear
I rise
Bringing the gifts that my ancestors gave,
I am the dream and the hope of the slave.
I rise
I rise
I rise.
Maya Angelou
“Fi I, an I, an I, an I.” All a oonoo…BURNING SPEAR. To the memory of our past. And the Hope of our Future. Love Oonoo. “NO WOMAN NU CRY…NO GREAT GRANDMA…GRANDMA…MAMA…SISTA…AUNTY…SI STRIN, ALL A OONOO…OH SWEET SWEET DARLINGS…BEG OONOO…NU CRY!!!”
JENNIFER B…(SOCIAL WORKER). ALWAYS DID A CHALLENGE DE SYSTEM FE JUSTICE. IF A NU FE…? YU “ALWAY”S DID A TELL I MAN AN A WARN I MAN. ” YU KNOW A WHO. THANK YOU, THANK YOU…THANK YOU…SWEET…SWEET…DARLING…FOR ALWAYS CHALLENGING RASTA…FE DEFEND DE TRUTH.
It is important for I man fe recognize rasta don’t believe in racial prejudice in no shape or farm. In fact, I man havfe big up all a my bredren dem in a Englan, particularly Bristol of every shade, creed, color, race and nationality. Some of I man best friends were white. I man would dah trust dem man deh wid fe I man LIFE. No Rasta stand fe Innity. All man in a I man belief created equal. However, oonoo havfe unda stan, I man. “Until de philosophy, that holds one race superior and another inferior…” “Until de color of a man skin is no more significant than the color of his eyes…” I man stand fe equal rights and justice fe all man kind.
With this in mind, my thoughts run to the right honorable Princess Diana, and de significance of her son’s upcoming wedding. I man havfe big up Princess Diana. Princess Diana epitomized what is de best in us, de human race, when we unconditionally love one another. Fe I man Diana’s life can be judged by how she lived her life and what she did with her time on this earth. In the end that is all any of us have, be they Kings or, Princess, or de common man. All of us are significant and essential in Jah eyes. Blessed be de merciful. If Diana’s children continue her works upon dis earth then their living will not be in vain. I man want to thank everyone inna Englan that nurtured I man commitment to equal right’s and justice.
“One love…One heart…let’s all get together and feel alright. “HEAR THE CHILDREN CRYING…..HEAR THE CHILDREN CRYING…” OH GOSH…OH GOSH.
“EMANCIPATE YOURSELF FROM MENTAL SLAVERY. NONE BUT OURSELVES CAN FREE OUR MINDS”…BOB
IN MEMORIAL TO ALL A DEM DAT PASS AND WE LOSE ALONG DE WAY…JAH BLESS.
MYSTIC BLOWING THROUGH THE AIR!!!!
Written by visioniseethelion

The Bristol Reggae Explosion Vol 2 – The 80′s

Wednesday, June 29th, 2011

Following the critical and commercial success of “The Bristol Reggae Explosion 1978 – 1983” Bristol Archive records have dug even deeper into the city’s reggae heritage for the follow-up, “Bristol Reggae Explosion Volume 2 – The 1980s”. This time we continue our quest not only with a selection of rarities, but with several tracks that have never been previously released, by popular demand Volume 2 also comes with greater dub content.

Bristol’s top roots exponents Black Roots feature once more, “Tribal War” is a prime example of their early roots style. Whilst “Pin In The Ocean” shows the later more commercial sound they adopted in collaboration with the Mad Professor, both tracks can also be found on the label’s “Black Roots The Reggae Singles Anthology”, a career spanning overview.

Bunny Marrett wrote Black Roots’ “Bristol Rock”, the opening track on Volume 1 so it’s only appropriate and with great pleasure that we include his sole vinyl outing, the very scarce “Times Are Getting Harder”, a great slice of UK roots. When it comes to scarcity there were reputedly just 200 copies pressed of “Robin Hoods Of The Ghetto” by Cool Running, we believe it deserves a much wider audience.

The Radicals, 3-D Production and Joshua Moses will be familiar to those who have Volume 1 and return with more of the same. The Joshua Moses track is previously unreleased and appears here thanks to the detective work of Mike Darby. Another unreleased track we’ve managed to uncover is Alfred McIntosh’s “Wicked Dub” a 7 minute workout that helps give this release a greater dub flavour.

The mid part of the decade is represented by Zapp Stereo’s appropriately titled “Way Out West” and Lord John Hutchinson’s “Little Eyes”. Both tracks are previously unreleased. The albums closing track is Dan Ratchett’s “Raggamuffin Girl”. Recorded in 1989 it perfectly sums up the way Reggae music started to change direction. Dan was an ever present part of the Bristol scene in the late eighties and nineties and hopefully this will be the first of many tracks we get to license for future releases.

Rather than discuss all the tracks in detail we’ve left a few surprises for the listener to discover for themselves, but you can be sure that this release builds on the strengths of Volume 1 and explores the Bristol scene in far more depth. Hopefully it shows how the live, band based scene at the start of the decade evolved to be more solo artist based a few years later. This sowed the seeds for the explosion in studio based production companies that were just around the corner, the two volumes compliment each other perfectly, roll on Volume 3!

‘Celebrate What?’ St. Pauls Carnival 1968, Bristol’

Monday, June 13th, 2011

Check this film out

Fantastic history

http://www.thegreatbear.net/video-transfer/st-pauls-carnival-1968-bristol/

The Bristol Reggae Explosion – NOW ON RED VINYL

Monday, May 2nd, 2011

We have a limited pressing – 500 copies only available to preorder now on beautiful RED Vinyl

Enjoy!

www.bristolarchiverecords.com