Saturday, September 3, 2011

Remembering The Ska/Reggae Sounds Of Amazulu



Amazulu were a guilty pleasure.  Arriving on the UK music scene in the early 80's just as 2-Tone had run its course, this 6 piece multi-racial band of mostly self-taught musicians initially launched themselves as a serious reggae and ska band long before they morphed into a new wave pop cover band.  In fact, the original version of the band drew attention with their political tinged songs, capturing  the attention of noted music Svengali Falcon Stuart (who discovered X-Ray Spex and took Adam Ant mainstream) as well as BBC radio DJ John Peel who was an early fan and recorded two radio sessions with the band.

The band's first single was the political tinged 'Cairo' backed by 'Greenham Time' which was an ode to the women protesting the placement of U.S. Cruise missiles at Greenham Common military base in the early 80's. Despite their relative lack of musical experience, 'Cairo' is a catchy if serviceable slice of early 80's era reggae and the edgy video was miles from the the lush pop videos the band would later produce.  The B-side 'Greenham Time' is the more interesting of the two tracks.  Its a chant down Babylon/feminist reggae rocker that would have sounded right at home on The Slits first few albums. (download the long out-of-print track which was a John Peel favorite at the bottom of the post.).




Amazulu's reggae growing bona fides brought them to the attention of Jerry Dammers and Dick Cuthell (taking a much deserved break from recording The Special AKA 'In The Studio' LP) and Dennis Bovell who took the production reigns behind the band's single release of 'All Over The World' backed by the sunny 2-Tone sounding ska of 'Moonlight Romance'.  Though the single failed to chart, the band and 'Midnight Romance' were prominently featured performing a more ska sounding version of the song in an episode of the 'Young One's' which guaranteed them national exposure and set them up for the pop success they would have with later material like 'Excitable', 'Don't You Just Know It' and the smash 'Montego Bay'.  Watch a television performance and a rare live performance of the track below:



 

  Amazulu - Greenham Time

1 comment:

Steve from Moon said...

Interesting and cool! I was just reading about them in Pauline Black's autobiography last night...