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Roots reggae
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| Roots reggae | |
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| Stylistic origins | |
| Cultural origins | Jamaica |
| Derivative forms | Dub |
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| Music of Jamaica | ||
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Roots reggae is a subgenre of reggae that deals with the everyday lives and aspirations of Africans and those in the African Diaspora, including the spiritual side of Rastafari, black liberation, revolution and the honouring of God, called Jah by Rastafarians.[1] It is identified with the life of the ghetto sufferer,[2] and the rural poor. Lyrical themes include spirituality and religion, struggles by artists, poverty, black pride, social issues, resistance to fascism, capitalism, corrupt government and racial oppression. A spiritual repatriation to Africa is a common theme in roots reggae.
History
[edit]The increasing influence of the Rastafari movement after the visit of Haile Selassie to Jamaica in 1966 played a major part in the development of roots reggae, with spiritual themes becoming more common in reggae lyrics in the late 1960s.[1] Important early roots reggae releases included Winston Holness's "Blood & Fire" (1970) and Yabby You's "Conquering Lion" (1972).[1] Political unrest also played its part, with the 1972 election campaign of Michael Manley targeting the support of Jamaica's ghetto communities.[1] Increasing violence associated with the opposing political parties was also a common lyrical theme, with tracks such as Junior Murvin's "Police & Thieves" and Culture's "Two Sevens Clash".[1]
The heyday of roots reggae is usually considered the latter half of the 1970s – with artists such as The Abyssinians, Johnny Clarke, Cornell Campbell, Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, Burning Spear, Dennis Brown, Max Romeo, Horace Andy, Hugh Mundell, and Lincoln Thompson, and groups like Black Uhuru, Steel Pulse, Israel Vibration, The Gladiators and Culture – teaming up with producers such as Lee 'Scratch' Perry, Bunny Lee, Joseph Hoo Kim and Coxsone Dodd. The Sound system (Jamaican) was of unequalled importance in spreading reggae and dub, with the diaspora represented by leading sound system operators such as Jah Shaka, who, in turn, went on to profoundly influence many in Britain and the world, influencing early punk rock musicians in London, as well as definitively shaping later bass dominated genres such as Jungle music and Drum and bass. The experimental pioneering of such producers within often-restricted technological parameters gave birth to dub, and is seen by some music historians as one of the earliest (albeit analogue) contributions to modern dance music production techniques.
Roots reggae became popular in Europe in the 1970s, especially among left-wing white youths in Western Europe.[3] The Wailers' popularity in Europe opened the door for other artists, and roots reggae artists became popular with punk rock fans.[1] When Jamaicans turned to dancehall, a lot of black, white and mixed roots reggae bands were formed in Europe.[1] Later on roots reggae made its way into the United States with the migration of Jamaicans to New York. This took place with the reforms made to American immigration laws in the early 1960s. Along with localised traditions and food, reggae music was inevitably brought as well, contributing to the New York City soundscape, such as the development of hip hop.[4]
While roots reggae was largely overtaken in popularity in Jamaica by dancehall, several artists from the original era, such as Culture, Burning Spear, and Israel Vibration continued to produce roots reggae, and artists like Beres Hammond and Freddie McGregor continued the use of roots reggae, as a musical style and thematically, through the 1980s. In the 1990s younger Jamaican artists became interested in the Rastafari movement and began incorporating roots themes into their music. Most notable among the new generation of "conscious" artists was Garnett Silk, whose positive spiritual message and consistent use of roots and rocksteady riddims gave him cross generational appeal with Caribbean audiences. While other notable dancehall stars like Capleton and Buju Banton became devout Rastas and changed their musical direction as a result.[1] Other modern roots artists and bands also emerged at this time, including Luciano, Junior Kelly, Morgan Heritage, Anthony B, and Sizzla.[2]
Africa as myth
[edit]Similar to the oversimplification and limitations of the terminology middle passage, the roots reggae displays Africa as a mythical paradise that functions primarily as a motivating symbol, imagined origin, and semantic center. "More so even than earlier sounds, roots reggae always seemed to invite itself directly to Africa, brazenly insisting upon itself as the continent's primary echo, if not recursive mirror". The mythical Africa articulated in roots reggae is shaped by desire, nostalgia and trauma under the pressure of local Caribbean politics. While an imagined Africa is used as an inspiration for resistance and revolution against "Babylon" (corrupted capitalist colonial culture), Africa's actual complexity and contradictions are not investigated.[5]
Roots reggae vs. traditional reggae
[edit]Traditional reggae and roots reggae, a subgenre that evolved from traditional reggae, while sharing a common Jamaican heritage, exhibit distinct characteristics that set them apart. Traditional reggae encompasses diverse themes, including love, everyday life, and dancehall culture, whereas roots reggae tends to focus its lyrics on social consciousness.[2] Traditional reggae rhythms vary widely, featuring both upbeat and slower tunes. In contrast, roots reggae is marked by a deliberate one-drop rhythm and a slower tempo. Rooted in a deep social and political consciousness, its lyrics often tackle issues of poverty, oppression, and spirituality, influenced by the Rastafarian movement.[6] Musically, roots reggae maintains a specific sonic identity, characterised by deep basslines, skanking guitar patterns, and the inclusion of horns.[1] While these distinctions exist, the lines between reggae and roots reggae can be flexible, and the two genres share a significant overlap within the broader reggae musical landscape.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i Thompson, Dave (2002) Reggae & Caribbean Music, Backbeat Books, ISBN 0-87930-655-6, p. 251-3
- ^ a b c Barrow, Steve and Dalton, Peter: "Reggae: The Rough Guide", Rough Guides, 1997
- ^ Lloyd Bradley and Dennis Morris (2002) Interview with Bunny Wailer in the documentary Reggae: the Story of Jamaican Music. BBC2 2002
- ^ Marshall, Wayne: Follow Me Now: The Zigzagging Zunguzung Meme. http://wayneandwax.com/?p=137
- ^ Chude-Sokei, Louis. When Echoes Return: Roots, Diaspora, and Possible Africas (a eulogy). Indiana University Press. Issue 104, 2011, pp. 76–92 (article)
- ^ Woods, Orlando (March 2019). "Sonic spaces, spiritual bodies: The affective experience of the roots reggae soundsystem". Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers. 44 (1): 181–194. Bibcode:2019TrIBG..44..181W. doi:10.1111/tran.12270. ISSN 0020-2754. S2CID 149593028.
External links
[edit]Roots reggae
View on GrokipediaRoots reggae is a subgenre of reggae music that originated in Jamaica in the late 1960s, characterized by its close ties to Rastafarian philosophy, which reveres Ethiopia's Haile Selassie I as divine and promotes African heritage alongside resistance to perceived Western oppression known as "Babylon."[1]
Emerging from precursors like ska and rocksteady, it gained prominence in the 1970s amid Jamaica's post-independence era, featuring syncopated rhythms such as the "one drop" pattern—where the emphasis falls on the third beat—and lyrics in Jamaican Patois or Iyaric addressing social injustices, black consciousness, repatriation to Africa, and spiritual awakening.[1][2]
Pioneering artists including Bob Marley and the Wailers, Peter Tosh, Burning Spear, and the Abyssinians propelled the genre through albums emphasizing militant spirituality and critiques of colonialism, achieving global reach via Marley's international breakthroughs like Exodus (1977), which fused roots elements with broader appeal.[1][2]
Its defining sound, marked by prominent bass lines, offbeat guitar "skanks," and Nyabinghi drumming derived from Rastafarian rituals, influenced subsequent styles like dub and dancehall while embedding causal links between music, cultural identity, and political mobilization in Jamaica and the diaspora.[1][2]
Reggae as a whole, with roots reggae at its core, received UNESCO recognition as Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2018, underscoring its empirical role in shaping expressions of resistance and unity.[1]
Musical and Thematic Foundations
Defining Characteristics and Instrumentation
Roots reggae features a deliberate, slower tempo, generally ranging from 60 to 80 beats per minute (BPM), which contributes to its meditative and grounded feel compared to the brisker paces of earlier Jamaican styles like ska (often 140-160 BPM) or rocksteady (around 100-120 BPM). This tempo supports the genre's hallmark one-drop rhythm, a drumming pattern where the bass drum strikes on the first beat and the snare emphasizes the third beat, while the second and fourth beats remain sparse or absent, shifting focus from the traditional backbeat to a syncopated, forward-leaning pulse that underscores the off-beats.[3][4][5] The rhythm section is dominated by a heavy, melodic electric bass guitar, with lines often designed to evoke a steady heartbeat through deep, resonant tones and repetitive motifs that anchor the track's foundation. Rhythm guitars—typically electric, though occasionally acoustic—deliver the iconic skank pattern via choppy upstrokes on the off-beats, providing textural propulsion without overpowering the groove. Keyboards or organs add bubbling fills and chordal washes, while horns (such as trumpet, saxophone, or trombone) appear sporadically for punchy stabs or melodic accents, enhancing density without dominating. Drumming frequently incorporates nyabinghi elements, drawing from traditional ensembles featuring a large bass drum for foundational thumps, a mid-sized funde for mid-range patterns, and a smaller repeater (or akete) for intricate, improvisational flurries, creating layered polyrhythms that mimic ritualistic intensities.[6][2][7][8] Production techniques distinguish roots reggae through innovations in multitrack recording, adopted widely in Jamaican studios during the 1970s with the shift from two-track to four- and eight-track setups, enabling isolated remixing of elements. Producers like Lee "Scratch" Perry and King Tubby pioneered dub effects, applying liberal reverb, echo delay, and fader automation to create spatial depth and rhythmic abstraction, often stripping vocals or instruments to highlight bass and drums in instrumental versions. These methods, executed on analog consoles with spring reverbs and tape delays, yielded a raw, immersive sonics that prioritized low-end frequencies and echoic trails over polished clarity.[9][7][10]Core Lyrical Themes and Rastafarian Influence
Roots reggae lyrics predominantly revolve around themes of spiritual awakening and redemption, framed within Rastafarian theology that posits Haile Selassie I, Emperor of Ethiopia from 1930 to 1974, as the returned messiah prophesied in biblical texts such as Revelation 5:5, where the "Lion of Judah" symbolizes divine kingship.[11] This cosmology infuses songs with prophetic urgency, urging listeners toward enlightenment and moral uprightness against spiritual decay. Repatriation to "Zion"—interpreted as Africa—serves as a recurring motif of liberation from diaspora oppression, reflecting Rastafarian calls for physical and symbolic return to ancestral roots.[12] Central to these narratives is resistance to "Babylon," a Rastafarian term denoting the corrupt Western capitalist system and colonial legacies of slavery and exploitation, critiqued as mechanisms of black subjugation dating back to the transatlantic slave trade's Middle Passage.[13] Lyrics advocate black empowerment through cultural reclamation and defiance of authority, often invoking natural sacraments like ganja (cannabis) for meditative insight and the "ital" lifestye emphasizing unprocessed foods and holistic living to purify the body and mind.[14] Apocalyptic warnings drawn from Revelation underscore imminent judgment on Babylon, positioning roots reggae as didactic prophecy rather than mere entertainment. Unlike commercial reggae variants, which frequently prioritize romantic or party-oriented content akin to dancehall's lighter deejay toasting, roots reggae maintains a stark departure through its insistent focus on socio-political critique and Rastafarian orthodoxy, embedding messages of resistance against poverty, racial injustice, and governmental overreach in every track.[15] This prophetic style, prevalent in 1970s recordings, prioritizes collective uplift and spiritual warfare over individual escapism, ensuring lyrics function as tools for consciousness-raising amid Jamaica's post-colonial struggles.[16]Historical Evolution
Roots in Jamaican Predecessors (Ska and Rocksteady)
Ska emerged in Jamaica during the late 1950s and early 1960s as an urban popular style fusing mento, American rhythm and blues, and jazz influences, characterized by fast tempos around 140-160 beats per minute, prominent horn sections, and a distinctive offbeat guitar "chop" accentuating the second and fourth beats.[17][18] This energetic sound aligned with the post-independence euphoria following Jamaica's 1962 separation from British rule, where sound system operators like Clement "Coxsone" Dodd played imported American records to crowds, fostering local adaptations that captured national optimism amid initial economic growth from bauxite and tourism.[19][20] By the mid-1960s, socioeconomic pressures—including rising unemployment, inflation exceeding 10% annually, and urban migration leading to overcrowded slums like Kingston's Trenchtown—eroded early independence gains, prompting a musical slowdown as dancers favored less frenetic rhythms in hotter Kingston nights and amid social unrest such as 1966 strikes and ghetto violence.[19][1] Rocksteady, dominant from approximately 1966 to 1968, reduced ska's horn reliance in favor of pared-down instrumentation emphasizing bass lines, snare drum accents on the third beat, and soulful vocal harmonies, while retaining the offbeat skank pattern but at tempos of 70-90 beats per minute for greater emphasis on lyrical delivery and emotional depth.[21][22] This contraction in rocksteady's ensemble and tempo provided the mechanical bridge to reggae's emergence around 1968, as producers experimented with further rhythmic emphasis on the one-drop pattern—where the accent falls primarily on the third beat, de-emphasizing the first—allowing space for pronounced bass and guitar skanks that defined early reggae cuts.[20] Toots Hibbert of Toots and the Maytals is credited with coining "reggay" in their June 1968 single "Do the Reggay," produced by Leslie Kong, which explicitly named the evolving style amid Kingston's sound system competitions.[23] Simultaneously, Coxsone Dodd's Studio One label, established with a Brentford Road facility in 1962, solidified reggae's foundational recordings through sessions featuring reduced horn sections and proto-reggae rhythms, training artists in the genre's sparse, vocal-forward mechanics before its 1970s maturation.[24][25]Peak Development in the 1970s
The 1970s represented the zenith of roots reggae's maturation, propelled by Jamaica's escalating political turmoil between the socialist-leaning People's National Party (PNP), led by Michael Manley, and the more conservative Jamaica Labour Party (JLP), which fueled gang-linked violence claiming hundreds of lives annually, particularly intensifying after the 1972 elections and peaking during the 1976 polls that necessitated a state of emergency.[26] [27] Global oil price shocks from 1973 onward, quadrupling import costs for energy-dependent Jamaica, compounded by IMF-mandated austerity programs starting in the mid-1970s—enforcing spending cuts, wage freezes, and devaluation—deepened urban poverty and inequality, channeling discontent into roots reggae's raw, confrontational lyrics decrying Babylon's systemic exploitation and advocating repatriation to Africa.[28] [29] Pivotal releases crystallized this surge, with Bob Marley and the Wailers' Catch a Fire (April 1973) marking roots reggae's commercial export via Island Records' polished production, which sold over 15,000 copies in the UK alone and introduced militant tracks like "Concrete Jungle" to international audiences, bridging local consciousness with global rock markets.[30] Burning Spear's Marcus Garvey (December 1975), produced at Randy's Studio, amplified pan-Africanist fervor through repetitive chants honoring the Back-to-Africa movement founder, influencing subsequent roots ensembles with its stark, percussion-driven minimalism.[31] Peter Tosh's solo debut Legalize It (June 1976), recorded at Treasure Isle and Randy's, defied ganja prohibition with its title anthem, embodying roots reggae's unyielding critique of colonial legacies while achieving crossover airplay in the US.[32] Production innovations at Kingston studios like Lee "Scratch" Perry's Black Ark (operational from 1973) introduced psychedelic tape effects, reverb experimentation, and remixing that birthed dub as a stripped-down, echo-laden counterpart to roots vocals, evident in Perry's work with artists like the Congos.[33] Channel One Studios, founded by the Hoo Kim brothers in the early 1970s, advanced "rockers" rhythms—faster, bass-heavy beats via house band the Revolutionaries—powering hits for groups like Black Uhuru and cementing the era's sonic density.[34] Island Records' distribution amplified this output, exporting over 20 roots titles by decade's end and enabling reggae's penetration into Europe and North America, where sales of Jamaican imports rose from negligible to millions annually by 1978.[30] This apex culminated in tangible sociopolitical interventions, such as Marley's One Love Peace Concert on April 22, 1978, at the National Stadium in Kingston, drawing 32,000 attendees amid 800 murders that year; Marley compelled Manley and JLP leader Edward Seaga to clasp hands onstage during "Jammin'," a televised gesture credited with a temporary 60% drop in violence over the following months, though underlying factionalism persisted.[35] [36]Decline and Post-1970s Transformations
In the 1980s, roots reggae experienced a marked decline in domestic dominance as Jamaican producers and audiences gravitated toward dancehall, a sparser, faster-paced variant emphasizing digital riddims, deejay chants, and minimalistic instrumentation over the genre's traditional live band setups and offbeat skanks.[37][38] This shift was propelled by sound system clashes in Kingston's dancehalls, where hyper-local, energetic tracks suited economic austerity, political violence under successive PNP and JLP governments, and a youth culture seeking escapist, brash entertainment amid rising unemployment rates exceeding 25% by mid-decade.[39][40] Dancehall's computer-generated beats, introduced via synthesizers and drum machines like the Casio MT-40, reduced production costs and enabled rapid releases, contrasting roots' resource-intensive sessions and aligning with global trends in electronic music.[41] Bob Marley's death from melanoma on May 11, 1981, at age 36, served as a symbolic terminus for roots reggae's mainstream viability in Jamaica, as his international stardom had anchored the style's visibility, and his absence coincided with dancehall innovators like Yellowman dominating local charts with profane, party-oriented singles.[42] Yet, ensembles like Black Uhuru persevered, with their 1980 album Sinsemilla—featuring potent Rastafarian advocacy tracks such as "Sinsemilla" and "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner"—achieving crossover success on Island Records, peaking at No. 62 on the Billboard Reggae chart and influencing global perceptions through its fusion of dub effects and militant lyrics.[43][44] Revival initiatives in the 1990s sought to reclaim roots' conscious ethos via artists like Garnett Silk and Luciano, whose albums emphasized spiritual redemption and anti-materialism, drawing from Rastafarian principles to counter dancehall's slackness subgenre.[45] Commercial metrics, however, underscored persistent favoritism for ragga-infused dancehall, with hits from Shabba Ranks and Buju Banton topping Jamaican sales and UK charts—such as Ranks' As Raw as Ever (1991) selling over 500,000 units—due to their accessible, slang-driven hooks and alignment with hip-hop crossovers, sidelining roots' slower, didactic tempos.[46] Reggae's inscription on UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage list on November 29, 2018, encompasses roots reggae's foundational role in expressing resistance and identity but highlights the genre's post-1970s hybridization, including dancehall's integration of electronic and Caribbean elements, reflecting adaptive evolution rather than stasis.[47][48]Key Artists and Cultural Milestones
Pioneering Figures and Groups
Bob Marley and the Wailers were instrumental in establishing roots reggae's core sound during the early 1970s, evolving from prior harmony-driven styles to incorporate heavier basslines, spiritual lyrics, and Rastafarian militancy. Their partnership with producer Lee "Scratch" Perry yielded the 1970 album Soul Rebels, which introduced proto-roots elements through dub-influenced production and themes of resistance.[49] Tracks such as "Get Up, Stand Up," recorded in 1973, crystallized this shift by directly challenging social injustice and promoting self-reliance, setting a template for the genre's lyrical directness.[1] Marley’s recordings have surpassed 75 million units sold globally, underscoring their foundational reach.[50] Following the Wailers' disbandment in 1974, Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer pursued distinct solo trajectories that further defined roots reggae's radical and introspective facets. Tosh amplified political confrontation in his output, advocating marijuana decriminalization through performances like his 1978 One Love Peace Concert address, where he highlighted ganja's sacramental role in Rastafarian practice amid Jamaica's repressive laws.[51] Bunny Wailer, meanwhile, released Blackheart Man on September 8, 1976, blending nyabinghi rhythms with personal Rasta narratives to exemplify solo roots expression.[52] Other ensembles solidified roots reggae's harmonic and thematic framework, including Burning Spear (Winston Rodney, born March 1, 1945), whose late-1960s recordings emphasized African repatriation and cultural pride, influencing the genre's pan-African focus.[53] Harmony trios like the Mighty Diamonds, formed in 1969, integrated Rastafarian ideology into streetwise vocals, while Culture—established in 1976—delivered socially incisive tracks rooted in Kingston's realities.[54][55] Israel Vibration, originating from Kingston's marginalized communities, advanced resilient, spiritually charged group singing in the roots vein.[56]

