THE HISTORY OF SKA
Submitted By Simon Smith (if you borrow this please let the author know)
"Ska is an odd looking word: short punchy, almost funny. So is the music at times, a light, bouncy, horn infused grandfather of reggae." (Niel Strauss, The Sound Of New York: Ska. Ska? Yes, Ska. The New York Times. 1995)The history of ska music is interesting as since its birth ska has continued to develop into many different styles. In forty years ska has enjoyed three waves of popularity around the world. This essay attempts to trace ska musics history, the roots, the birth, the styles and, hopefully will offer you some interesting facts.
EARLY JAMAICAN CULTURE
To fully understand the origins of
ska and trace its unique musical elements we must understand some
important parts of Jamaican history. The island of Jamaica was
first visited by Europeans in 1494 by Columbus. The British won
the right to colonize and began shipping slaves from the west
coast of Africa to work on newly set up plantations. By 1807
there were over two million Africans in Jamaica working on
English plantations in the most brutal systems of slavery in the
world.The slaves tried hard to hold on to their African
philosophy and established their own system of beliefs and values
in their slave communities. Some forms of African music, such as
the Burru were allowed by the white masters who believed it would
help the slaves to work faster. At times the slave musicians were
also called upon to entertain the white masters. The type of
entertainment provided by the slave musicians followed a carnival
tradition and allowed the oppressed performers to dress and act
like kings, queens, lords and ladies for the amusement of the
white masters. In the 1960s this tradition was continued by
performers who adopted royal titles such as Prince
Buster Lord Tanamo, Duke Reid to name a
few.
Often this carnival type of entertainment
was combined with the Quadrille which was a dance set popular in
Europe in the late 18th century and was taken to the slave
colonies by plantation owners. The dance was transformed by the
black population where it exhibited a more distinctive African
bounce quality as well as an expressive tone of derision.
Critical social commentary has been important aspect of ska
lyrics since its earliest inceptions. After the emancipation of
slaves in 1834, Jamaica experienced a revival that gave birth to
two religious sects that had an influence on the birth of ska.
Pukkumina maintained African derived elements in its rituals and
used body sounds such as clapping and stamping for rhythmic
support. Over breathing was also used as both a two beat vocal
percussion rhythm and to induce a trance like state in the
performers. The characteristic "hup, hup, hup..." and
"Ch-Ka-Ch-Ch" vocal percussion is still a feature in
ska music. Examples can be heard in The Skatelites Guns of
Navarone, Madness version of One Step
Beyond and more recently Pete Porker in Chemical
Imbalance. The other religion was called Zion Revival and
was popular in areas of Jamaica with a concentration of
Europeans. Revival music is characterised by improvised vocal
harmonies and changing patterns of rhythm in clapping and
stamping and drumming that accompany the songs. European elements
such as brass band music, brought by British troops; and sea
shantys, brought in by British sailors also influenced the sound
of revival choruses. There are literally hundreds of choruses
used to accompany all occasions such as Let us Break Bread
Together, a thanksgiving song and Dip Dem,
Bedward a baptismal chorus.
MENTO
Mento is generally considered to be a fusion of African rhythm and European tunes and was most popular in the 1940s and 50s. It is an acoustic music that was often performed in streets. It is performed on portable instruments such as guitar, banjo, African thumb piano (kalimba) and bongos. Musically, mento is similar to the Caribbean Rhumba style. The basic rhythm follows the 3+2+2 pattern and there are strong accents on the last beat of each bar. Dis Long Time Gal, Water Come a Me Eye and Banyan Tree are example of traditional mento songs. Mento tunes are used over and over again with new lyrics commenting on topical situations and sometimes innuendo such as the Jolly Boys "Touch Me Tomato".
THE JAZZ INFLUENCE
The brass band tradition originally brought
to Jamaica by British Troops gradually became incorporated into
some areas of Kingston. Most importantly was the music program at
Alpha Boys Catholic School, in West Kingston. Alpha Boys was a
catholic reform school where morals and strict order ruled, but
more importantly it had a great brass band. Although mento was
popular amongst the lower classes, Kingstons small middle
class population had been familiar with American and English Jazz
since the 1930s. The teachers at Alpha Boys included Jazz
in their music education program. Many well known Jamaican
musicians were educated at Alpha Boys including Tommy McCook, Don
Drummond (The Skatelites) and Rico Rodriguez (The Specials).After
leaving school some Alpha Boys began performing in Jazz Big Bands
that drew on the influence of American stars like Duke Ellington
and Count Basie. But it was the smaller American Rhythm and Blues
(R&B) bands that became the most important influence to
Jamaican musicians. American R&B radio programs broadcast
from Memphis, Maimi and New Orleans were able to be picked up on
AM radios in Jamaica. These programs were refreshing and relevant
to Jamaican audiences who had grown tired of BBC radio replays
favoured by the National broadcasting company Radio
Jamaica.
SOUND SYSTEMS & THE JAMAICAN RECORDING INDUSTRY
Growing radio audiences led to the birth of the Jamaican recording industry. At the same time portable dance music operators running Sound Systems competed for public popularity. Sound System operators were an enormous influence on Jamaican youth as they controlled what people listened to and the import of R&B recordings. The two most important were Duke Reid and Clement Dodd. Reid was known as the Trojan after the Trojan flat bed truck he used to transport equipment. It is believed the Dodds nickname Coxsone was taken from his favorite Yorkshire cricket player. Throughout the 1950s these two conducted a musical war. This war escalated to the point that rough nuts known as Dance Hall Crashers were employed to attend the competitors sound system parties, trash the joint and fight with the club goers. These club goers were called Rude Boys and they were the primary listeners and fashion setters in the dance hallscene. More about rude boys later.
THE BIRTH OF SKA
Like mento before it, ska was born
out of a combining musical elements. Both mento and jazz were
combined to produce a new style that was initially called
Shuffle Popular shuffle hits were recorded by Neville
Esson, Owen Grey and the Overtakers. The newly set up recording
studios were always on the look out for the next new sound. With
the popularity of American R&B artists like Fats Domino and
Louis Jordan
many Jamaican
performers incorporated the 12 bar blues chord progressions and
boogie bass lines with mento guitar rhythms. Increasing emphasis
was placed on the offbeat rhythms of mento. The offbeats became
shorter and more detached. These distinct syncopated rhythms were
sounded on guitar and piano. The new style of music became known
as ska. The first person to record this ska rhythm
was Ernest Ranglin when performing with Cluet Johnson (Clue J .)
and the Blues Buster. One day he was trying to get the guitars to
play something, and him say "make the guitars go Ska!,Ska!,
Ska!" And thats the way the ska name was born (Bunny
Lee in Johnson and Pines. 1982 .49) [Tracey's note: "We didn't have anything to do with
naming it ska. It was other studio musicans who began to call it
ska." - Ranglin dispels a rumor. As seen in an interview on http://ska.about.com/musicperform/ska/library/2000/aa040700a.htm The ska rhythm was derived from the shuffle
and boogie beats from New Orleans that were so popular in local
dance halls. Combining it with local styles like mento and burron
rhythms, a new style was brewed which would become Jamaica's
first original popular music. ]Clue J was well known for greeting
his friends with a call of "Love Skavoovie" . Many
believe the name of ska is a shortened form of this greeting.Ska
quickly became the most dominant form of music in Jamaica. Its
success coincided with the independence and the departure of the
English in 1962. There was a new attitude towards indigenous
music. Ska was already enormously popular in Jamaica and music
producers attempted to export it to the rest of the world, a move
that was supported by the government. It was the national music
of Jamaica and was demonstrated to the the world at the 1964
Worlds Fair in New York.
The Jamaican delegates included Byron Lee
and the Dragonaires, Jimmy Cliff , Prince Buster and dancers
Ronnie Nasralla and Jannette Phillips who taught the world the
moves for the Backy Skank, the Rootsman
Skank and the Ska. Early ska dance movements
and some lyrics were influenced by the religious revival era.
Songs such as Wings of a Dove performed by both The
Blues Busters and The Wailers, Oil in My Lamp by Eric
Morris and King of Kings by Jimmy Cliff are revival
tunes with lyrics that are sped up. Israelites by
Desmond Dekker also features revival characteristics in the
lyrics. Other ska lyrics were pop orientated and feature very
little Jamaican patois. These songs were either nonsense lyrics
such as Eric Morris Humpty Dumpty and
Solomon Gundie or romantic such as Delroy
Wilsons Dancing Mood, which was one of the
first songs to bridge the gap between ska and its slower
successor Rocksteady (more later). In stark contrast are the
political ska lyrics that reflected the social concerns of rude
boys.
RUDE BOYS
As mentioned earlier these youths
were the primary listeners to ska in Jamaica. They were
rebellious out of work and reacted against economic tensions.
They emulated Hollywood gangster fashions by wearing black
suits, thin ties and pork pie hats, the type
of look that is still seen today in Taritinos movies
Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction. Rude
Boys often lived outside of the law and were also sometimes
called Scofflaws (people who belittle the law). Ska
lyrics at the time reflected the life and times of Rude Boys.
Some examples include The Soul Brothers Lawless
Street, The Heptones Gunmen Comin to
Town, Desmond Dekkers 007 Shanty Town,
Dandy Livingstones A Message to You Rudi and
Prince Busters Judge Dread who handed out 400
year sentences to Rude Boys. Clement Dodd backed a young group
who envisioned themselves as rudies - The Wailers (pictured from
left to right) Bob Marley, Bunny Livingstone (Wailer) and Peter
Macintosh (later shortened toTosh). It was a picture of Peter
Tosh from an early Wailing Wailers album that inspired the Jerry
Dammers Two Tone artwork, more later. The way rude boys danced to
the music also influenced the ska sound. They rhythmically pumped
their arms back and forward and adopted a more menacing posture
than the traditional style demonstrated by Ronnie and Jannette.
As a result the music became more menacing. Bass lines became
more syncopated rejecting the easy going walking boogie style.
More evidence of the continualevolution of this musical style.
ROCKSTEADY TO REGGAE
By 1966 in Jamaica many audiences had grown tired of the insistent ska beat and tempo. Around 1966 the beat of ska was slowed and rocksteady was born. Some say that it was a particularly hot Jamaican summer that led to this more relaxed style but the real reason for this change can be traced once again to the continuing influence of American R&B. By the mid 60s R&B was developing into the smoother soul styles of Motown, Memphis and Philadelphia soul. Jamaican musicians responded to this with their own slower smoother styles. The most notable hit of the rocksteady era was The Tide is High by The Paragons. In the 80s this was covered by Blondie and was one of their biggest hits. The influence of another religious revival, Rastafarianism led to further musical developments of ska and rocksteady and reggae was born. As we know Reggae has dominated the Jamaican music scene since.
THE BIRTH OF BRITISH SKA
Ska went to England with the immigrants of the early 1960s and was initially known as Bluebeat. The first international ska hit was My Boy Lollipop by Millie Small. It was recorded in England in 1964 for Island Records and featured a young English Mod Rod Stewart, just beginning his own music career on Harmonica. Ska gained popularity amongst the Mod scene and several hits followed including Guns of Navarone by the Skatalites, Carry Go Bring Come by Justin and The Dominoes, and Rudy, A Message to You by Dandy Livingstone. In 1969, The Israelites by Desmond Dekker became the first Jamaican produced recording to become a number one hit in Britain. Other big ska chart hits in 1969 included Monkey Man by Toots and the Maytals, Long Shot Kick De Bucket by The Pioneers and Liquidator by The Harry J Allstars. It is interesting to note that these hits had all been recorded several years earlier in Jamaica and gradually crept into the UK charts over a long period of time.
TWO TONE

In 1979 ska enjoyed a revival of popularity. Initially the ska revival was an English phenomenon, but gradually spread to the rest of the world, including Australia. The most notable bands associated with the second wave of ska popularity were The Specials, Madness, The Beat, and The Selecter. All these bands recorded their first albums for Two Tone Records, a label established by The Specials keyboard player Jerry Dammers. The label was named after the two tone tonic suits worn by the original ska stars of the 1960s and also reflected the multi racial membership of the bands signed to the label. The trade mark of the company was based on a negative photo of Peter Tosh from an early Wailing Wailers album cover. This Rude Boy logo became affectionately known as Walt Jabsco. The Two Tone artists relied heavily on the first wave ska stars attitudes and philosophy. The Specials took their name from the "special" one off recordings made for the early sound system operators in Jamaica and Madness are named after a Prince Buster song. The bands did not attempt to conceal their musical dependence either. They quite rightly believed that if it was a good song you might as well play it. At the time, some fans believed that the cover versions were actually originals. Listed below are some of the classic cover versions by Two Tone bands.
TITLE OF SONG |
ORIGINAL PERFORMER |
COVER BY |
| Rudi, A Message to You | Dandy Livingstone | The Specials |
| Too Hot | Prince Buster | The Specials |
| Carry Go Bring Come | Justin Hinds & the Dominoes | The Selecter |
| Whine & Grine | Prince Buster | The Beat |
| Cant Get Used to Losing You | Alton Ellis | The Beat |
| Madness | Prince Buster | Madness |
| One Step Beyond | Prince Buster | Madness |
| Guns of Navarone | The Skatalites | The Specials |
| Monkey Man | Toots & The Maytals | The Specials |
The popularity of these cover versions led to a demand for the original recordings and suddenly Symarips Skin head Moonstomp was in the charts exactly ten years after its first release. Also interesting is the fact that Prince Buster has made more money from royalties paid by cover artists than he ever made from his own album sales.The two bands also paid tribute to the original ska performers by using musical material from the original recordings. This music was adapted, rearranged and used as the basis of a new original tune. Sometimes, just the lyrics of songs were used to inspire a new song. Listed below are some examples.
| ORIGINAL SONG | ARTIST | ADAPTION | ARTIST |
| Al Capone | Prince Buster | Gangsters | The Specials |
| Judge Dread | Prince Buster | Stupid Marriage | The Specials |
| Earthquake/Freezing Up/Orange Street/Ghost Dance | Prince Buster | The Prince | Madness |
| Longshot Kick De Bucket/Liquidator/Skinhead Moonstomp | The Pioneers | Skinhead Symphony | The Specials |
Despite the fact that it relied on pre-existing ska songs, the sound of the Two Tone era was fresh and new. The punk rock era had set new musical rules and second wave ska incorporated this energy. Two Tone recordings are characterised by faster tempos, fuller instrumentation and a harder edge than original 60s ska. All the Two Tone bands were young and from working class backgrounds and so the lyrics reflect their concerns: school, work, politics, crime, racism and having fun.
THE THIRD WAVE.
Although enjoying a massive revival
in Britain, Europe and, too a lesser extent, Australia, Two Tone
ska did not make an impact in America. Bands such as Madness and
The Specials were considered too English probably due
to their lyrics reflecting their own political and social
concerns and the English dance hall type antics of the live shows
that was far removed from the demur American stadium rock popular
at the same time. Recently ska has enjoyed another wave of
popularity. The third wave exists in many forms and combines many
different styles of rock with ska rhythms and instrumentation.
Bands such as Hepcat, New York Ska Jazz Ensemble, Jazz Jamaica
and The Stubborn All Stars play traditional first wave styled
ska. In contrast is the
sound of Operation Ivy, Rancid, Voodoo Glow
Skulls and Reel Big Fish who favour a harder ska-core
sound that is heavily influenced by punk. And there are thousands
of bands playing every style in between. Although the sound of
these bands is varied, the musical characteristics of the
original ska can still be heard although sometimes it is not as
obvious.As in the other ska eras, the third wave ska revival has
created an interest in two tone bands. Many of these bands are
re-releasing original vinyl albums on CD and performing again to
enthusiastic audiences. Some of the original ska hits are still
enormously popular today. Imagine the delight of Lord Tanamo when
Im in the Mood for Ska eventually made the UK
charts in 1990, twenty five years after its first release. In
1995, members of The Specials recorded an album of old ska covers
with Desmond Dekker and this in turn led to the release of
Todays Specials (1996) and more recently the
excellent Guilty til Proved Innocent album
(1998). Today ska bands like The Skatalites, Toots and the
Maytals,The Specials, Mighty, Mighty, Bosstones and many others
enjoy popularity all around the world. In Australia, The
Allniters most popular in the mid 80s with their cover of
Montego Bay are enjoying popularity once again with a
new younger crowd and The Porkers enjoy a large following as a
regular performer on the Australian festival circuit and have
recently performed on the US Vans Warped Tour.
SKA BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bergman, B. 1985, Reggae and Latin - Hot Sauces, Blandford, Dorset.
Conolly, Y. (Ed) 1981, Mango Spice , A & C Black publishers Ltd, London.
Davis, S. & Simon, P. 1983, Reggae International, Thames and Hudson, London.
Haywood, I. & Davies, N. 1981 The Specials Illustrated Songbook , Plangent Visions Music Ltd, London.
Johnson, J. & Pines, J. 1982, Reggae - Deep Roots Music, Proteus, London.
Leonard, Hal. 1992 The Jamaican Musc Songbook, Hal leonard Co, Milwaukee.
Marshall, G. 1990, The Two Tone Story, S.T Publishing, Scotland.
Marshall, G. 1993, Total Madness, S.T Publishing, Scotland.
Middleton, R. 1990, Studying Popular Music, Open University Press, Great Britain.
Warner, K. 1982, The Trinidad Calypso, Heinemann, London.
Williams, P.1995, Youre Wondering Now - A history of the Specials, S.T Publishing, Scotland