As part of my ongoing quest to document the origins of the American ska and reggae scene of the mid- and late 1980's, I am profiling key musicians and bands who played an important part in giving birth to a uniquely American ska and reggae sound. One of those bands was The Tribulations who hailed from upstate New York and would serve as the roots for the very popular American reggae band John Brown's Body.
I remember The Tribulations with a mix of awe and envy. My band Bigger Thomas played a show with them at the legendary Wetlands in the early 1990's. During the sound check, I remember thinking that the band had great energy, a great look and a seriously focused determination to make reggae music on their own terms. They played a unique version of reggae (along the lines of my band's sound with ska, that mixed in their various influences and made it their own.) It also helped that they had two charismatic front men -- Kevin Kinsella and Elliot Martin -- and a killer horn section.
Ithaca, New York gave birth to The Tribulations in the late 80’s when Kinsella and his best friend and band bassist Josh Neuman founded the band as teens. Kinsella recalled hearing reggae for the first time while in Ireland in the late 80's as he related in an interview:
I was 15 years old. I got my musical calling from when I was living in Ireland. That is when I got the word that I was going to play music. Not that I knew at the time, but that is definitely where I got the calling. I was living over in Ireland for some time because my father is from there. (Bob Marley’s) Legend had been released and I heard that song "One Love (People Get Ready)" and really just moved me so deep. It stayed with me. I came back to America and bought his records. I didn’t know what to make of it. I thought it was Christian funk music. I put the record down and I thought it sounded like a Christian Rick James. I kept coming back to it though. In my hometown of Ithaca, New York, where I was born and grown, there was a great reggae show every Thursday. There was a club owner in town who actively brought in the legends of reggae music. I used to go down when I was 15 or 14 years old and see groups like the Meditations and Gladiators, The Itals, Culture. That fostered such a deep reverence of love for reggae music and the message of righteousness. I saw these people as prophets.The Tribulations cut their chops as a young band playing gigs around Ithaca, and eventually were given the opportunity to open up for the legendary group, Toots and the Maytals which gave the band the break it needed. When Neuman graduated from high school and went off to college in Boston, The Tribulations pledged to stay together and a few of them relocated with him. While in Boston, the core of the band recruited new members. Many of the new members were brand new to reggae music. According to Kinsella, "The majority didn’t know anything about reggae, so we literally taught them the ABC’s. Of course, it was reggae through our eyes, and seeing that we weren’t Jamaican, I think it lent a unique flavor to our music."
As the band played more shows, Neuman decided to quit school and The Tribulations went on tour full time. Kinsella explained, "We wanted to play South by Southwest in 1991, so we set up a tour on the way down, and another on the way up-after that, we just kept going." In 1992, the Tribulations entered the Yamaha Soundcheck Competition along with 4,000 other bands from around the world making it to the finals which garnered the band massive international publicity. The competition also gave them the opportunity to record "The Gate" which was the first of two albums the band would record and release.
Following the success of the Yamaha Soundcheck Competition, Kinsella decided to quit the band. "I was young and felt we should have been further along. I thought we deserved more, I guess, and figured it would be better to go out gracefully. I didn’t want to become a ‘bar star,’ so I just decided I was stepping out."
After leaving the Tribulations, Kinsella began to seek the more spiritual side of roots reggae, and along with other members of The Tribulations founded John Brown’s Body. "We got recentered spiritually and musically and knew what we wanted. We just thought it would be better to come with a new name and come fresh." said Kinsella. John Brown's Body is now considered one of the premiere American reggae band's and Kinsella, who left the band to pursue a solo career remains a formidable reggae talent as well.
Below is rare video footage of the band performing a show in Ithaca, NY in 1988:
Finally, a very special treat! I discovered a free, downloadable track from the long out-of-print "The Gate" cassette only release. Enjoy!
The Tribulations - The Gate
Big ups!
ReplyDeleteAwesome post...but just to let you know - that video was definitely not from 1988 ...more like 1991, in case anyone cares....
ReplyDeleteHowdy ya'll, i remember seeing the Tribs at a frat party or two at Cornell my freshman year, '93. Thanks for the blast from the past and The Gate download, cheers!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the download. The songs Mr. Mason and Hurt Child still float though my head all the time.
ReplyDeleteYeh. Some of those songs still linger in my head, too, and the sound was so distinct. Hate to think that they are gone, so THANKS for resurrecting them!
ReplyDeleteDoes anybody know where i can replace a copy of tribulations cd from 90's or get my hands on it somewhere? Cooperray70@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteIs there a way of getting a copy of cd from 90's as tribulation, someone stole mine, i miss it so much, seen and hung witkh them while in newport rhode island several times, even back stage. Love the music, need to hear that cd.
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