— What did you dance to?
— Crazy stuff. This was before rock and roll and I loved it all. There was boogie-woogie and blues, there was jazz… people liked really wild dances. And so later I wanted to get into music and sing too.
[Lee “Scratch” Perry talking to the author in 1994; he’d become a reggae star after starting as an assistant to Clement “Coxsone” Dodd in 1961.]
On the edge of jazz and rock, the shuffle style was a product of a dance-based culture that was profoundly Afro-American, and also little-known, because hardly any white American audiences were exposed to it in its day. But that didn’t prevent the shuffle from containing some of the great R&B treasures which were recorded in both America and Jamaica. First ska, and then reggae, derive directly from it.
R&B
The first 45rpm R&B records didn’t go on sale in Jamaica until 1959, and it was early days for quite a small output which obviously couldn’t compete with the immense legacy of twenty years of American production (from which several masterpieces here are taken). Despite all its talent, little Jamaica couldn’t rival with such Forties giants as Professor Longhair, Rosco Gordon, Louis Jordan, T-Bone Walker, Johnny Otis, Little Esther, Johnny “Guitar” Watson or B.B. King. But all the same, Jamaican sound really had something going for it, right from the beginning. The undeniable originality of the shuffle played on the island owed a lot to a guitarist who went on to enjoy an international career playing mento, jazz, R&B, ska and reggae, Ernest Ranglin1. And saxopho-nist Roland Alphonso or trombone-player Don Drummond – future stalwarts of The Skatalites – had no grounds to envy the best American instrumentalists either. As for the singers, Owen Gray, Laurel Aitken, Theophilus Beckford, Bob Marley or Derrick Morgan (to name only a few) made founding records which have remained part of ska and reggae legend. These music-styles have always enjoyed very close ties with R&B, soul, gospel, funk and rap. On another scale, the A&R work of Clement “Coxsone” Dodd (Studio One), Prince Buster (Prince Buster), Duke Reid (Treasure Isle) and Chris Blackwell (R&B/Island) – the four producers at the origins of ska, rocksteady and reg-gae – holds its own in comparison with the greatest American names who inspired them, peo-ple like Nesuhi or Ahmet Ertegun (Atlantic), Julius Bihari (Modern/Meteor), Bumps Blackwell (Specialty), Sam Phillips (Sun), Syd Nathan (King/Federal) or Berry Gordy (Motown).
One Step Beyond
In 1979 there were a few British hits – The Specials’ Gang-ster or Wrong’em Boyo by The Clash (a cover of a rocksteady song by the Rulers), and also One Step Beyond from Madness (a cover of a Prince Buster instrumental) – and they launched a trend that was given the label “ska”. And ever since, this genre has continued to have adepts all over the world (the Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra, Jim Murple Memorial, Toasters etc.) Black-and-white chequered clothes and records from the London label 2-Tone were in fashion for a few months in 1979/1981 and then they abruptly disappeared. They gave way to a rockabilly revival launched by Stray Cats and the electronic pop which dominated the British scene in the early Eighties. But the short-lived British “ska” trend at least served to help people discover the original, extremely rich music which had been born in a Kingston studio at the end of 1961. Many Jamaican musicians since then have tried to claim paternity of ska; and many untruths and misleading stories surrounding its birth have continued to be published over the years. This present anthology of pieces borrowed from the legacies of America and Jamaica contains rhythm and blues which was recorded before the first ska titles, and hopefully it puts an end to the debate over ska’s real origins. We also hope it will allow listeners to discover some pieces which are all the more remarkable for the fact that they are hardly known; they will at least allow you to better understand the relations between spirituals and jazz, boogie woogie and rock and roll, swing and jump blues, and shuffle’s relation to ska, of course. Here’s the story.
Dance Hall
After the violence of the economic crisis of 1929, blues was no longer selling. In fact, from being marginal it moved straight to unfashionable. After a lot of trial and error, the Swing craze (named after the jazz rhythm used by musicians like Duke Ellington) started reaching a mass audience in The United States, and in 1935 the highly-danceable tune “King Porter Stomp”2 by Benny Goodman (a virtuoso clarinettist who was also a Jewish New Yorker and the first white bandleader to hire black musicians, namely Lionel Hampton and Teddy Wilson) succeeded in opening people’s ears to jazz. The music had rhythm; it brought dancers to their feet; and it was a dream for improvisers. So you could say that this was how dance-music really reached out to the masses, under the name “swing”.
Until then, Afro-American music styles – which stimulated the body as much as the mind – were kept at a certain distance by the white majority. Broadly, Protestant and Catholic traditions had considered for centuries that music should imperatively lift the spirit towards God. So music had to speak to the mind. On the other hand, the body was seen to be the devil’s instrument: gluttony, sex, desire, etc. To all people outside a small, elite circle, jazz and its free dance-movements were perceived as Negro/vulgar/lewd-and-vaguely-diabolical curiosities – a kind of sin and/or forbidden pleasure reserved for gigolos and whores. Until then, this music that incited people to move their bodies around unashamedly was confined mostly to the haunts of Afro-Americans, i.e. urban dance halls. The Jamaican community in New York was quite large at the time. As Mezz Mezzrow relates in his autobiography, you could find Jamaican marijuana rather easily in New York, and it was a variety which had a lot of fans among jazz musicians, including some of those you can hear in this set. A Jamaican saxophonist by the name of Lord Fly spent a good part of his career in New York before becoming a calypso singer, and there were a few chic cabaret-type places like the Cotton Club3 from which blacks were banned, but which still had a sizeable following amongst white middle-class slummers in search of a good time in the Afro neighbourhoods of New York. Places like these staged some fantastic shows with dancers and musicians, and jazz reached the summits in Afro-American favourites such as the prestigious Savoy Ballroom4 in Harlem5. World War II became a Golden Age for “dance-jazz”, particularly in Kansas City where the underworld had power and money enough to afford great bands like those of Big Joe Turner or Jay McShann (you can hear the latter here accompanying blues-shouter6 Jimmy Witherspoon, whose voice didn’t need a microphone.)
Some venues were temples for dancers and they organized lindy hop7 competitions whose main charac-teristics were free, spontaneous dances that were acrobatic (today you’d call them “acrobatic rock’n’roll”), frenetic and indeed even erotic. For most of the white majority – and for a high percentage of Blacks – lindy hop was about as decadent as you could get. Some fabulous orchestras played in these places, and the medium tempo of the music favoured dancing; it was called swing. Sales of records by Jimmy Lunceford, Lucky Millinder, Count Basie or Duke Ellington increased continually, and in the midst of racial segregation there were white orchestras – those of Paul Whiteman, Gene Krupa, Frank Sinatra8 or Glenn Miller (whose band played written arrangements with no improvising) – which responded to the growing demand for this “swing” music and consequently attracted a large part of this new market for “dance music”. Post-war, in 1945, the great American public continued dancing to the strains of popular music whose Afro-American roots were better integrated. The artists were often white: they were those who dared to adapt to the Afro music-styles that were in fashion, like the rumba, boogie-woogie or calypso of The Andrews Sisters9, the swing of Sinatra — and soon the rock of Elvis Presley10. This, incidentally, is also what happened to Just a Gigolo/I Ain’t Got Nobody by Louis Prima, a white jazz musician from New Orleans who, in 1957, became one of the rare artists to have a popular (i.e. mass-audience) hit with a shuffle piece (in fact, it was such a hit that Walt Disney studios opened their doors to him in 1967 so that he could become the scat-singing King of the Apes in the Jungle Book film.) Two other white singers featured here are Barbie Gaye and Frankie Ford, whose great 1959 hit Sea Cruise owed its success to the excellent accompaniment of a black musician, Huey “Piano” Smith. Huey’s irresistible arrangement was a pure product of Afro-American shuffle as played in New Orleans, but in the prevailing context – fashionable white “rock” dominated by Elvis Presley – Frankie Ford, as a white phenotype, was easier to promote to the media than the more sombre Huey Smith.
After the war and the Golden Age of Kansas City, jazz big-bands were increasingly costly to maintain and also on the way out of fashion; from 1945 onwards, led by Charlie Parker,11 modern jazz would favour smaller groups (commonly called combos). The new jazz – Bebop – was often played at a fast tempo which didn’t always suit either dancers or the public, but it made the sound of Count Basie and Louis Armstrong quite obsolete. What would become of dancers? What about their jazz bands? Well, most of the market would be shared by white musicians playing various kinds of popular music, from the white gospel of Stuart Hamblen to the radio-oriented pop of Jane Froman, Dean Martin or Bing Crosby. And there was also bluegrass, country music12 and its honky tonk style13. Jamaica liked country music, too: the second single from the young Bob Marley was One Cup of Coffee, a reprise of a country hit by Claude Gray in 1961. And the reverse was also true: some white Americans were listening to music whose sound was influenced by Afro-American genres such as Latin music, swing, western swing14 or country boogie15…
Jump Blues
Young Afro-Americans turned to a fashionable post-war sound when they wanted to dance, and its name was jump blues16. Rhythm and blues was in its early days, and jump blues was a young, dance-oriented branch of the tree played by bands where wind instruments were still important. There were excellent musicians around (although not many in number: there were no more big-bands, or only lesser versions), like those in the group led by the genre’s master, Louis Jordan. The tempos played were sometimes fast but most of all, in this continuity of pre-war swing, it was the tempos which made people want to dance. In New Orleans there were blues pianists like Champion Jack Dupree, Archibald, Professor Longhair (here using his left hand to play bass on the piano), plus his Memphis disciple Rosco Gordon, and they were just some of the many guardians of a piano tradition that was boogie woogie’s cousin. Although the first recordings of “Fess” (Professor Longhair) were as recent as 1949 (after Louis Jordan’s first shuffle records), it’s still more than likely that Longhair was one of the conduits, i.e. a “professor” of the shuffle style that conquered Afro-Americans in both America and Jamaica. Some of Rosco Gordon’s tunes (like his 1955 Hey Hey Girl here) seem directly influenced by Professor Longhair.
“Many, many pianists were playing that. It’s impossible to know who it really came from.” [Jon Cleary talking to the author in 2012.]
When a band wanted to bring everyone to their feet, the best way to do it was to play a shuffle, which incidentally is also the aim of this album. Shuffle numbers were basics in the “books” of jazz musicians like Louis Jordan and his Tympani Five, who pioneered the style with exquisite hits like G.I. Jive. Released in 1944, this version of a Johnny Mercer piece has references to the jargon (and rank) of U.S. troops sent to the front in Europe:
PSC the CPL the SGT the LT / CP the whole deal the MP makes you do café / It’s the G.I. jive / Man alive / It starts with the bugle blowing reveille over your head.
In the wake of the popular Louis Jordan, the shuffle’s efficiency encouraged all kinds of R&B groups to record this type of rhythm, like Roy Brown for example (Train Time Blues), a gospel singer who became one of the very first rockers (he composed “Good Rockin’ Tonight”, amongst others.) The legendary group led by trumpeter Dave Bartholomew accompanied almost every artist at Cosimo Matassa’s studio in New Orleans (Little Richard and Fats Domino included). Here Bartholomew plays his own shuffle composition My Ding-a-Ling (he was referring to his penis) which in 1972 gave Chuck Berry one of the biggest hits in his career. James “Wee Willie” Wayne, the immortal creator of “Junco Partner” – an R&B number with heroin as its theme; The Clash did a reggae version of it in Jamaica in 1980 – also used a shuffle rhythm when he was making his first record (and hit) Tend to do Business.
Wind instruments were featured heavily in American R&B in the Forties, but it was also in this period that electric guitarists began to build a reputation as soloists, under the central influence of T-Bone Walker. His disciple B.B. King would line up one hit after another, including the implacable You Upset Me, Baby (a N°1 R&B smash in 1954), which was a pure shuffle. Armed with his four-string guitar, Tiny Grimes (who recorded with Charlie Parker, Art Tatum and other jazz giants), Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown (“Just Got Lucky”, 1949) and Lowell Fulson were others who, like the extraordinary Johnny “Guitar” Watson, left markers for the electric guitar right across blues and rock.
It was rocking, it was rocking / you’d never seen such scuffling, shuffling and rocking ‘til the break of dawn / it was rocking, it was rocking. [Louis Jordan, “Saturday Night Fish Fry”, 1949.]
In Jamaica, jazz guitarist Ernest Ranglin would make a permanent contribution to Jamaican rock with a few shuffle blues titles like Easy Snappin’, Jack and Jill Shuffle or That’s Me (a Theophilus Beckford tune you can listen to here). Great American R&B orchestras like the Johnny Otis Show (here accompanying Pete Lewis, Little Esther Philips and The Robins) also adopted this rhythm, and so did little groups. In fact, jump blues and its shuffle offshoot are quite simply the first forms which were taken by what the Forties called rhythm and blues or rock and roll — as shown by the titles Rockin’ at Home, Rock Bottom, Rockin’ the Blues Away, Rock This Morning, Rockin’ All Day or Rocking in my Feet which are included here.
“In fact, all the characteristic elements of rock were already present in Forties ‘jazz’, and the magic of swing and groove to begin with – which was music that ‘rocked’. In jazz? It was more the music of rhythm. For the majority audience – meaning ‘the white public’ – the distinctions between blues, rhythm and blues, jump blues, boogie woogie, jazz and swing didn’t really exist […] In fact the principal incarnation of successful rock, in its original Forties form, was what we commonly call jump blues, characterized by rock compositions played by a jazz/R&B orchestra conceived for dancing.” [Le Dictionnaire du rock, “Jazz” section, 2013 edition.]17
The dancing shuffle of pioneering electric guitarists was also present in jazz/R&B instrumental titles recorded by T-Bone Walker (T-Bone Shuffle), Lowell Fulson (Guitar Shuffle) or Tiny Grimes and his Rocking Highlanders (Rockin’ the Blues Away). The Jamaican guitarist Ernest Ranglin was less well-known, but you can hear from Silky and That’s Me that his talent rivalled that of his famous American counterparts. Afro-American music circulated widely across America and the Caribbean; from Santo Domingo,18 merengue spread to conquer Venezuela, Haïti and other islands; Cuban and Brazilian music crossed to many countries and fused with post-war “Latin” jazz; Trinidad’s calypso19 and mento from Jamaica conquered the West Indies as far as Bermuda20 and went on to world fame with Harry Belafonte21. And similarly, the rhythm and blues of the southern United States found its place in Jamaica: heard on American stations and much-appreciated in the island’s dance halls, shuffle would be recorded in Kingston’s first studios in 1956 (it was only a two-hour flight from Miami…) The album Jamaica - Rhythm & Blues 1956-1961 in this collection has some forty Jamaican shuffles that complement this anthology. The booklet in that set gives details of Jamaican R&B history and the “sound-systems” of the dee-jays who caused dancers in Jamaica’s poor neighbourhoods to discover shuffle.
Jamaica
A whole strain of West Indian musicians came up who made contributions to the so-called jazz scene, and they were all virtually descended from the true African scene. [Duke Ellington].22
From around 1954 onwards, and probably a little earlier, there were some small clubs like the Glass Bucket in Kingston which billed local jazz musicians who were ready to play R&B styles. Most Jamaicans, however, couldn’t afford to go to places like those and, unlike Americans, they didn’t have popular dance-halls to go to either, i.e. places where they could hear jazz or R&B bands. In the poorest ghettos – where the demand for music was very high – people had to make do with imported American records, brought in first by soldiers during the war, and then by deejays who were following the trends across the water. Blues parties were organized by crews owning portable P.A. systems and amplifiers etc., which they hired out to bars where shuffle and swing were played all the time. The story of these Jamaican “sound systems” can be found in more detail in the booklet inside the album Jamaica - Rhythm and Blues 1956-1961.
Numerous American musicians, as here with Harold Land, or saxophonists Todd Rhodes (Page Boy Shuffle) and Willis “Gator” Jackson, cut shuffle instrumentals where the dominant sounds were provided by wind instruments. From around 1950 onwards, the hit Later for the Gator by “Gator” Jackson was the “theme-tune” with which Clement “Coxsone” Dodd opened and closed his dance-nights in Kingston. Coxsone rechristened it the “Coxsone Hop” so that his competitors wouldn’t be able to get their hands on the record, and it remained exclusive to his own Downbeat sound system for a long time. Dodd also kept the real title of Harold Land’s San Diego Bounce a secret: for ages it was known to Jamaicans as “Coxsone Shuffle”. Coxsone quickly went on to become the island’s most important R&B producer, switching to ska in 1962 and later rocksteady and reggae. For the first sessions he produced in 1956, Dodd brought together Clue J and the Blues Blasters, i.e. the cream of the island’s jazz-players, and asked them to carefully clone the sound of American shuffle (while still making their own voices heard, of course): Gene Coy’s Killer Diller title from 1948 would be picked up by the Blues Blasters, and they put part of its theme into their own instrumental “Milk Lane Hop”, a shuffle they recorded in 1961. “Killer Diller” also had a spoken passage which recalled the style of Jamaica’s deejays when they were emceeing behind their sound systems, and it’s certain that this influential piece inspired the island’s later deejays to become the original pioneers of rap before they exported it to New York in the Seventies. And we all know how successful that was...23
If there was one thing Jamaica liked, it was an instrumental, and jazz was particularly popular there in the Fifties. It covered the whole population, too, unlike in America where segregation was so widespread that most whites didn’t hear much jazz at all. So the first Jamaican R&B records contained a lot of shuffle instrumentals with a jazz imprint, like the Afro/Rasta manifesto African Shuffle by Count Ossie and the Wareikas, and Joker or Yard Broom with saxophonist Roland Alphonso. The instrumentals Stew Peas and Cornflakes, Silky or The Man Is Back by the great trombonist Don Drummond are all examples of that decisive influence which jazz had over Coxsone Dodd’s productions. As for Luke Lane Shuffle and Duke’s Cookies with Rico Rodriguez (a trombone-player taught by Drummond), they were produced by Coxsone Dodd’s great rival Duke Reid. Reid dominated Jamaica’s sound systems in this period, and Duke Reid’s Group was a prestigious name that appeared on several records.
Influenced by the style of gospel’s jubilee groups, a good many American R&B groups also practised the difficult discipline of vocal harmonies. There are a few splendid titles here from the Robins, Little Esther and Bill Brown with Billy Ward and His Dominoes — and not forgetting the extremely “covered” Oop Shoop from Shirley Gunter and the Queens, which exemplifies the style later called “doo wop”. With a strong presence in both America and Jamaica, black gospel and “barber-shop” or “jubi-lee” harmonies left a strong impression on rhythm and blues, and American vocal groups were particularly popular with Jamaicans. You can see just how influential they were in the Jamaican titles in this set (end of CD2 and CD3): Chuck & Dobby, Busty & Cool and Winston & Barbara were all notably marked by Shirley and Lee, a famous New Orleans duo. Ska later came to reinforce that trend with great vocal groups such as the Clarendonians, the Gaylads with Dobby Dobson, Higgs and Wilson, the Techniques, the Wailers, etc.
Laurel Aitken, Jamaica’s first rhythm and blues star, also recorded the Floyd Dixon song Hey Bartender24 included here (it was also picked up by The Blues Brothers). No More Doggin’, the first shuffle recorded by Rosco Gordon in 1952, was a big hit in the U.S.A. One of his admirers was Jamaican pianist Theophilus Beckford and he copied Rosco’s style, as you can hear on That’s Me. Theo was the N°1 pianist with Clue J and his Blues Blasters, and he played the eighth note “skank” rhythm-pattern on many of the first Jamaican R&B records (cf. discography), so his influence on ska – and the reggae to come – is not to be underestimated.
Shuffle or Ska?
Ska suddenly appeared a few months before Jamaica’s independence in August 1962 and for three years it enjoyed a Golden Age until it went out of fashion in 1965, when it metamorphosed into reggae, a genre which was to have considerably greater importance. In turn, reggae went through various mutations to become a symbol of so-called world music in reflecting a multicultural society.
Reggae’s most famous musician Bob Marley recor-ded many ska titles early in his career but his first record, Judge Not (1962), was earlier than ska: it’s a piece where the drums play a characteristic U.S. shuffle rhythm from The United States. There are ties between shuffle and native Jamaican music-forms – revivalist Negro spirituals25, gospel, mento26 (the fife you can hear in Judge Not is a good example), jazz3 and nyabinghi27 – but genuine ska is almost 90% derived from the American shuffle style steeped in jazz and jump blues. In Jamaica – where nobody could hear local music on national radio, and dance-floors were the only “media” available to popular music – the disc jockey culture was a determining factor.
Shuffle also had a direct impact on the first international ska hit. Guitarist Ernest Ranglin was deeply marked by the pioneer of the electric guitar in jazz, Charlie Christian, and Ranglin took lessons from Jamaican Cecil Houdini before turning professional at the age of sixteen, playing first with Val Bennett’s jazz band and then with Eric Dean, who had the best jazz group in Jamaica. Ranglin was one of the main actors in the first mento recordings made in Jamaica before leading the way in Jamaican shuffle (as early as 1956) and then ska. Ranglin is also notable for his recording of a ska version of Millie Small’s My Boy Lollipop, the huge international hit – it sold six million copies – which in 1964 contributed to make a fortune for its producer Chris Blackwell, who invested part of his gains in the creation of Island Records. Blackwell went on to issue Jamaican shuffle and ska in the U.K. before introducing the likes of Steve Winwood and Cat Stevens to the world, along with King Crimson, Toots, Bob Marley, U2, Grace Jones and many, many more. The original version of My Boy Lollipop is hardly known at all, but you can listen to it here: it’s an American shuffle recorded eight years earlier by Barbie Gaye, and it sounds almost exactly like Millie Small’s record. Barbie Gaye was fifteen when she recorded this song written by The Cadillacs’ Robert Spencer, and American DJ Alan Freed often played the record. It was enough of a hit for Barbie to get the chance to open for Little Richard in Freed’s 1956 Christmas show.
What’s the difference between shuffle and ska? Mainly rhythmical, because the wind instruments used, plus the gospel-influenced vocals and bluesy/jazz guitars, are almost exactly the same. The principal characteristic of R&B shuffle is a “swing” drum-pattern with a walking bass line, generally consisting of quarter notes and played on a pentatonic scale. You can find it as early as 1942 in It’s a Low-Down Dirty Shame by Louis Jordan and his Tympany Five. Shuffle – American or Jamaican – wouldn’t deviate from this, and it turned into ska in the winter of 1962. Some pieces fall exactly where the two rhythms are hinged, like One Cup of Coffee. The creation of ska rhythm by Jamaican drummer Lloyd Knibb dates from the end of 1961 or early 1962:
“It all started with rhythm and blues. Then the music changed. Coxsone called me at the studio one day and said to me, ‘Lloydie, I want to change the rhythm, you know? Find a beat.’ OK, so I went to the studio and I tried a really different rhythm. I started with the Burru style [Ed. note: the ntoré rhythm named after the drums in eastern Congo] and found myself on the second and fourth beats right at the back of the beat, and we put everything else we had right in there. The second and fourth beats were the most direct rhythm. Coxsone said ‘yeah’ and that was it. From rock and roll and rhythm and blues we went to ska. Everybody got hooked on that rhythm. And everybody recorded it, Bob Marley, One Cup of Coffee, I remember that one. Owen Gray, Delroy Wilson, Alton Ellis, you name them, they were all in there with us at some time.”28
Shuffle origins
Shuffle drums were played in a style derived from boogie woogie piano. You can sometimes hear that da-da/da-da/da-da (well in evidence here on T-Bone Shuffle from T-Bone Walker or Jamaica Blues by Azie Lawrence) which was sometimes played in chords by the left hands of some of the great Thirties boogie pianists like Jimmy Yancey, Willie “The Lion” Smith, Meade “Lux” Lewis, Albert Ammons or Memphis Slim. On drums, this basic ternary rhythm combined with a walking bass formed the roots of swing jazz or the modern “rock” jazz like Rock This Morning by Jesse Allen & James Gilchrist. Perhaps its roots go deep into the Bambara music of New Orleans or a Congolese rhythm, the ntoré30 that was probably a common feature of the famous Creole bamboulas in New Orleans’ Congo Square in the 19th century; many people from the Congo were deported to Louisiana and Jamaica shortly before slavery was abolished, and so the Bantu culture of the Congo left its mark on the whole West Indies29. The ntoré rhythm of the Congo found itself deeply anchored in Afro-Jamaican music, which has great natural affinities with swing. You can find it notably in Burru drumming, Kumina revivalist ceremonies and the nyabinghi of Rastas, who always sought to preserve the memory of slavery and strengthen their African identity. You can listen to a rare mixture of pure shuffle and these ritual Rasta drums on African Shuffle by the legendary Count Ossie and the Wareikas30. It is also present in traditional Jamaican mento31. Concerning its other musical elements in the rhythm and blues featured in this set – apart from the walking bass & drum part – the shuffle’s specificity lies with the right hand on the piano, and sometimes the electric guitar, playing brief chords on the off-beat (on the “and” when you count “1-and-2-and-3-and-4-and…”). This custom was deve-loped in shuffle in the Forties. In Jamaica it is called skank, meaning “dance” in the local patois, and it gave its name to ska in 1962 (returning to the front in reggae, which was born in 1968). A clear example of skank can be heard in records by the first giant of rhythm and blues, Louis Jordan, one of the great creators of rock and roll and jazz who, in 1942, recorded It’s a Low-Down Dirty Shame in this very danceable shuffle style. Singer/saxophonist Jordan was looking for success, and he found it; he was extremely popular (and influential) among Afro-Americans post-war. He sang remarkably well-written little stories, often funny, with music that he wanted people to dance to, music with a catchy hook in the swing spirit referred to above; Jordan recorded some invincible titles like Choo Choo Ch’Boogie (1946) or Boogie Woogie Blue Plate (1947). The lure of the shuffle (its afterbeat or offbeat) was total. In the midst of racial segregation, shuffle and its magical powers of swing managed to seduce mass white audiences, and that “shuffle” accent on the offbeat acted as an incredible amplifier for those with a desire to dance. According to Linton Kwesi Johnson – dub poet, reggae star and sociologist – “You find it in all our music, reggae, calypso, mento, the music from Martinique, Guadeloupe; you can find it in hi-life, merengue... And that attraction for the afterbeat is found in churches, with tambourine rhythms, hand-claps etc.” [Linton Kwesi Johnson speaking to the author.]32
In Afro-American cultures, in fact, African religions were mixed with the biblical religions of Methodist, Pentecostal, Baptist, Apostolic and other churches.33
“Only spirituals were sung at ring shouts and there were strict rules governing the dance-style. The feet should never cross; otherwise you’d immediately think it was non-religious. For the strictest believers, the feet should never leave the ground, with movement only obtained through a shuffle, that sliding step which, much later, became a dance-step which black dancers practised with virtuosity.”34
In The United States as in nearby Jamaica, these intense “Revivalist” religions incorporated different elements of African rituals. On the continent of North America they were present as early as the 18th century in circles where Negro spirituals freed the soul.
“Originally, the shuffle was a rubbed (flat-footed) step used by slaves at their ring shouts. Later, at the time of the minstrels, came the soft-shoe shuffle which gave rise to several variants. And that step was no doubt transposed much later into the orchestra, giving rise to a particular rhythm. That rhythm is the one produced by the left hand in boogie-woogie, with eight bass-notes in each bar – eight-to-the-bar – or in other words, eight unequal eighth-notes (quavers) played “swing.” [Philippe Baudoin, le Dictionnaire du jazz.]35
So, from tambourines to Baptist hand-claps, and from the rhythms of sliding feet to jazz tap-dancers and the rhythm and blues which you can sample here, the practice of the shuffle in its diverse forms was one of the many common denominators that joined Afro-American and Afro-Caribbean Creole traditions. The symbolism of foot-movements in Jamaican revivalist ceremonies is significantly evo-ked in the booklet accompanying this collection’s Jamaica - Folk - Trance - Possession 1939 - 1961 volume (FA5384). No doubt due to its use in the dance-steps of certain religious rituals, the shuffle originally carried behavioural notions of respect, goodness, honesty, conscience and religion. The word “shuffle” describes how playing-cards are mixed together – shuffled – in such a way that the rubbing together of the cards in rhythm has to be carried out without cheating, leaving the result to chance – or to the spirits. But cheating is of course possible when you shuffle a deck of cards:
“Why you play the bad card / now we caught you off guard / Natty dread want to shuffle / not looking for nothing to scuffle now.” [Bob Marley, Who Colt The Game, 1977].
(Protestant) Baptist churches were in the great majority in Afro-American communities in the U.S.A. between 1940 and 1960. For Baptists, who clapped their hands on the shuffling offbeat in their ceremonies, dancing per se was excluded. It was anathema. The Jamaicans’ highly-pronounced taste for dancing – and the shuffle in particular – can no doubt be explained by the strong presence on the island of the Pentecostal Church, which encouraged dancing and bodily expression; the Baptists, as were most Afro-Americans in the U.S.A., were much more sensitive about the issue. Shuffling feet were a commonplace in Pentecostal and revivalist ceremonies, and this was the offbeat to be found in Jamaica’s ska in 1962, before it went into reggae and became its signature.
Bruno BLUM
English adaptation: Martin DAVIES
© FRÉMEAUX & ASSOCIÉS 2013
Thanks to Steve Barrow, Chris Blackwell, Antoine Bourgeois, Gilles Conte, Clement Dodd, Gary Karp, David Katz, Linton Kwesi Johnson, King Stitt, Lloyd Knibb, “Dizzy” Johnny Moore, Rainford “Lee Scratch” Perry, Frédéric Saffar, Gilbert Shelton, Soul Stereo Sound System, Gilles Pétard, Roger Steffens and Carter Van Pelt.
1. Ranglin’s remarkable first recordings can be heard on Jamaica - Mento 1951 - 1958 (FA 5275).
2. Cf. “King Porter Stomp” in Benny Goodman - The Quintessence 1935-1954 (FA 244).
3. Cf. Cotton Club 1924-1936 (FA 5189), which deals with its history.
4. Cf. The Savoy Ballroom 1931-1955 (FA 074).
5. Cf. Harlem Was the Place 1929-1952 (FA 5175).
6. Cf. The Greatest Blues Shouters 1944-1955 (FA 5166).
7. Cf. Jazz, Lindy Hop, Boogie in the boxed set Anthologie des musiques de danse du monde (FA 5341).
8. Cf. Frank Sinatra - The Quintessence (FA 243).
9. Cf. Rum and Coca Cola by the Andrews Sisters in the Calypso volume of the set Anthologie des musiques de danse du monde (FA 5342) and Lord Invader’s original version on Trinidad - Calypso 1939 - 1959 (FA 5348).
10. Cf. the three volumes of Elvis Presley face à l’histoire de la musique américaine, which has the original versions of songs recorded by Elvis alongside his own recordings of them.
11. Cf. The Complete Charlie Parker in this collection.
12. Cf. Country Music 1940-1948 (FA 173).
13. Cf. Honky Tonk - Country Music 1945-1953 (FA 5087).
14. Cf. Western Swing 1928-1944 (FA032).
15. Cf. Country Boogie 1939-1947 (FA 5087).
16. Listen to The Jumpin’ Blues by Jay McShann’s orchestra with Charlie Parker in 1942, in Vol. 1 of The Complete Charlie Parker (FA 1331).
17. French edition published by Robert Laffont.
18. Cf. Santo Domingo - Merengue (future release in this collection).
19. Cf. Trinidad - Calypso 1939-1959 (FA 5348).
20. Cf. Bermuda - Gombey & Calypso 1953-1960 (FA 5374).
21. Cf. Harry Belafonte - Calypso - Mento - Folk 1954-1957 (FA 5234).
22. Taken from Duke Ellington’s autobiography Music Is My Mistress (Doubleday, Garden City, N.Y., 1973).
23. Cf. Le Rap est né en Jamaïque, Bruno Blum, publ. Le Castor Astral.
24. Cf. Jamaica - Rhythm and Blues 1956-1961 (FA 5358).
25. Cf. Jamaica - Folk - Trance - Possession 1939-1961 (FA 5384).
26. Cf. Jamaica - Mento 1951-1958 (FA 5275).
27. You can hear the nyabinghi drums in “Moose The Mooche” by Bill Barnwell with Count Ossie and the Wareikas in the anthology Africa in America (FA 5397).
28. In Le Rap est né en Jamaïque, Bruno Blum, publ. Castor Astral, 2009. Taken from Carter Van Pelt’s interview on April 23 1998 with Lloyd Knibb, who played jazz drums with Val Bennett and Eric Dean in Kingston in the Fifties, and was the principal drummer on ska sessions in the Sixties. When I talked to him at Studio Davout in Paris in 2002, Lloyd Knibb confirmed the whole story.
29. Cf. Voodoo in America 1926-1961 (FA 5375).
30. Count Ossie & the Wareikas can be found on the album Remember Count Ossie (Moodisc) and in the anthologies Africa in America (FA 5397), Slavery in America (to be released), Jamaica - Rhythm and Blues 1956-1961 (FA 5358) and Jamaica - Mento 1951-1958 (FA5275).
31. Cf. Jamaica - Mento 1951-1958 (FA5275) where this rhythm stands out particularly on Hubert Porter’s “Not Me”.
32. In the Best magazine special issue Best of Reggae, 1994.
33. Cf. Gospel Sisters and Divas 1943-1951 (FA 5053) and the three Gospel anthologies (FA 008, FA 026 et FA 044).
34. Maurice Cullaz, Gospel (Jazz Hot/L’instant, 1990), p. 40.
35. Robert Laffont, 1994.
Disc 1: USA 1942-1950
1. It’s a Low-Down Dirty Shame - Louis Jordan and his Tympany Five - (Ollie Shepard)
Louis Jordan-v, as, dir; Eddie Roane-tp; Arnold Thomas aka Tommy -p; Dallas Bartley-b; Walter Martin-d. Decca 8638. New York, July 1942.
2. G.I. Jive - Louis Jordan and his Tympany Five - (John Herndon Mercer as Johnny Mercer)
Louis Jordan-v, as, dir; Eddie Roane-tp; Arnold Thomas aka Tommy-p; Al Morgan-b; Wilmore Jones aka Slick-d. Decca 8659. New York, March 15, 1944.
3. Choo Choo Ch’Boogie - Louis Jordan and his Tympany Five 1946 - (Denver Darling, Vaughn Horton, Milt Gabler)
Louis Jordan-v, as, dir; Aaron Izenhall-tp, Josh Jackson-ts; Bill Davis aka Wild Bill-p; Carl Hogan-g; Jesse Simpkins aka Po-b; Eddie Byrd-d. Decca 23610 . New York, le 23 janvier 1946.
4. Boogie Woogie Blue Plate - Louis Jordan and his Tympany Five - (Joe Bushkin, John DeVries)
Louis Jordan-v, as, dir; Edwin Johnson aka Eddie-ts; Aaron Izenhall-tp; Bill Davis aka Wild Bill-p; Carl Hogan-g; Dallas Bartle-b; Joe Morris as Chris Columbus-d. The Calypso Boys-maracas, claves. Decca 24104. New York, April 23, 1947.
5. Rock Bottom - Gene Phillips and the Rhythm Aces - (Stanley R. Rebovsky, Herb Newman)
Gene Philips-v, g; Jake Porter-tp; Marshall Royal, Maxwell Davis, Jack McVea-saxes; Lloyd Glenn-p; unknown b & d. Modern. Produced by Jules Bihari, Los Angeles, 1947.
6. T-Bone Shuffle - T-Bone Walker - (Aaron Thibaut as T-Bone Walker)
T-Bone Walker-v, g; Willard Mc Daniel-p; George Orendorff-tp; Bumps Myers-ts; John Davis aka Wild Bill-b; Oscar Lee Bradley-d. Los Angeles, November 13,1947.
7. Killer Diller - Gene Coy and his Killer Dillers - (Eugene Coy)
Eugene Coy as Gene Coy-d. Other musicians unknown. Savoy 5555. New York City, June 30, 1948.
8. Reet Petite and Gone - Louis Jordan and his Tympany Five 1948 - (Spencer Lee, Louis Jordan) Louis Jordan-v, as, dir; Edwin Johnson aka Eddie-ts; Aaron Izenhall-tp; James Wright-ts; Bill Davis aka Wild Bill-p; Carl Hogan-g; Jesse Simpkins aka Po-b; Joe Morris as Chris Columbus-d. New York, October 10, 1946.
9. Willie Mae - Professor Longhair - (Roy Byrd aka Professor Longhair)
Roy Byrd as Professor Longhair-v, p; Robert Parker-b; John Woodrow-d; unknown perc. Atlantic 947. Produced by Ahmet Ertegün and Herb Abramson, Cosimo Matassa’s J&M Studio, New Orleans, November 1949.
10. Page Boy Shuffle - Todd Rhodes and his Toddlers - (Henry Glover)
Todd Washington Rhodes as Todd Rhodes-p, v; Howard Thompson-tp; Holley Dismukes aka Hal-as; Georges Favors-bar s; Joe Williams-b; Huestell Tally-d. Sensation, 1949. Detroit, 1949.
11. Spoon Calls Hootie - Jimmy Witherspoon with Jay McShann and his Band - (Jimmy Witherspoon)
Jimmy Witherspoon-v; Frank Sleets-as; Milburn Newman-bar s; Jay Mc Shann-p; Tiny Webb-g; Ralph Hamilton-b; Jesse Sailes-d; Los Angeles, June 10 1948.
12. If It’s So Baby - The Robins with Johnny Otis Orchestra - (Terrell Leonard aka Ty, Roy Richards)
The Robins: Terrell Leonard as Ty Terrell Leonard-v; Roy Richards-v; Robert Nunn as Bobby Nunn-v; William Richards as Billy Richards-v. The Johnny Otis Orchestra: Ioannis Alexander Veliotes as Johnny Otis-dir; Devonia Williams-p; Pete Lewis-g; Mario DeLagarde-b; Leard Bell-d. Savoy 726. Los Angeles, December 1, 1949.
13. Rockin’ at Home - Floyd Dixon - (Jay Riggins, Jr. aka Floyd Dixon)
Jay Riggins, Jr. as Floyd Dixon-v, p; Bill Ellis-ts; Sammy Benskin-g; Eddie Williams-b; Ellis Walsh-d. Modern 3083. Produced by Julius Bihari, Houston, 1949.
14. Boogie Guitar (aka Three Guitars) - The Johnny Otis Show - (Ioannis Alexander Veliotes aka Johnny Otis)
Ioannis Alexander Veliotes as Johnny Otis -dir; Pete Lewis-g; un-known-g; unknown-g; Walter Henry-bar s; Devonia Williams-p; Mario DeLagarde-b; Leard Bell-d. Savoy SJL2230. Los Angeles, November 10, 1949.
15. San Diego Bounce - Harold Land All Stars - (Harold Land)
Harold Land-ts; William S. Doty-as; Froegel Brigham-tp; Russell B. Campbell-tb; Fred Jackson-p; Dave Dyson-b; Leon Petties-d. Savoy 1020-SLA 526. Los Angeles, April 25, 1949.
16. Been Fooling Around - Professor Longhair - (Roy Byrd aka Professor Longhair)
Roy Byrd and his Blues Jumpers: Roy Byrd-v, p; Walter Nelson aka Papoose-g;
George Miller-b; Louis Joseph-d. New Orleans, September 8, 1949.
17. Stack-a-Lee (Part 2) - Archibald - (Leon Gross aka Archibald)
Leon Gross as Archibald-v, p. unknown g, b, d. Imperial 5068. Produced by Lew Chudd at Cosimo Matassa’s J&M Studio, New Orleans, 1950.
18. Later For The Gator (Coxsone Hop) - Willis “Gator” Jackson - (Willis Jackson)
Willis Jackson and his Orchestra: Willis Jackson-ts; Andrew Ford-tp; Michael Woods-tb; Reuben Philips-bar s; Arnold Jarvis-p; Leonard Swain-b; Panama Francis-d. Apollo 806. New York, May 29, 1950.
19. Street Walkin’ Woman - T-Bone Walker
Edward Hale-as; Maxwell Davis-ts; possibly Jim Wynn aka Big Jim-bar s; Robert Sims aka Snake-d. Los Angeles, April 5, 1950.
20. Tend to Do Business - James “Wee Willie” Wayne - (James Waynes aka James “Wee Willie” Wayne)
James Waynes aka James “Wee Willie” Wayne-v; unknown musicians. Sittin’ In With 588. Produced by Bob Shad, Houston, 1951.
21. Train Time Blues - Roy Brown and his Mighty-Mighty Men - (Roy James Brown aka Roy Brown)
Roy James Brown as Roy Brown-v; Wilbur Harden-tp; Johnny Fontenette-ts; Leroy Rankins-bar s; Edgar Blanchard-g; Ike Isaacs-b; George Jenkins-d. Deluxe 3318. Cincinnati, June 22, 1950.
22. No More Doggin’ - Rosco Gordon - (Rosco Gordon, Julius Bihari aka Jules Taub)
Note: Taub is a publisher cryptonym, not a songwriter.
Rosco Gordon-v, p; Ray Jones-as; unknown-ts; Bud Green akaTuff Green-b; Man Son or John Murry Daley-d; RPM 350. Produced by Julius Bihari aka Jules Taub, Bud Green akaTuff Green’s home studio, Memphis, 1952.
23. My Ding-a-Ling - Dave Bartholomew - (Dave Bartholomew)
Dave Bartholomew-v, tp; Joe Harris-as; Clarence Hall, Herb Hardesty-ts; Salvador Doucette-p; Ernest McLean-g; Frank Fields-b; Earl Palmer; d; Tommy Ridgley-v. King 4544. New Orleans, January 22, 1952.
Disc 2: USA & Jamaica 1950-1962
1. Lovers Lane Boogie - Little Esther with the Johnny Otis Show
(unknown)
The Johnny Otis Show: Esther Phillips as Little Esther-v; Ioannis Alexander Veliotes as Johnny Otis-vib, dir; John Anderson-tp; Cecil James McNeely as Big Jay McNeely-ts; Devonia Williams-p; Pete Lewis-g; Mario DeLagarde-b; Leard Bell-d; The Blue Notes (band members)-v. Savoy SJL2221. Los Angeles, January 11, 1950.
2. I Found Out My Troubles - The Robins with the Johnny Otis Show 1950 - (unknown)
The Johnny Otis Show:
The Robins: Terrell Leonard as Ty Terrell Leonard-v; Roy Richards-v; Robert Nunn as Bobby Nunn-v; William Richards as Billy Richards-v. The Johnny Otis Show: Ioannis Alexander Veliotes as Johnny Otis-vib, dir; John Anderson-tp; Cecil James McNeely as Big Jay McNeely -ts; Devonia Williams-p; Pete Lewis-g; Mario DeLagarde-b; Leard Bell-d. Savoy SJL2221. Los Angeles, January 11, 1950.
3. Rockin’ the Blues Away - Tiny Grimes and his Rocking Highlanders - (Lloyd Grimes aka Tiny Grimes)
Lloyd Grimes as Tiny Grimes-g; Wilbert Prysock aka Red-ts; Freddie Redd-p, b; Jerry Potter-d. United 190. Chicago, November 27, 1951.
4. Rock this Morning - Jesse Allen and James Gilchrist - (Jesse Leroy Allen aka Jesse Allen)
Jesse Leroy Allen as Jesse Allen-v, g. James Gilchrist aka Jimmy Gilchrist-unknown instrument; unknown p, b, d. Alladin 3129. New Orleans, October 13, 1951.
5. Chicken Blues - Bill Brown W/Billy Ward and his Dominoes - (Robert L. Williams aka Billy Ward, Rose Marks)
Bill Brown-lead v, b; Clyde McPhatter-v; Charlie White-v (2nd tenor); Joe Lamont-bar v; Robert L. Williams aka Billy Ward -p; unknown d. Federal 12001. New York, November 14, 1950.
6. Rockin’ All Day - Jimmy McCracklin
Jimmie McCracklin and his Blues Blasters: as Jimmie McCracklin-v, p; possibly Maxwell Davis-ts; Robert Kelton-g; possibly Lafayette Thomas-b; possibly Little Red-d. Modern 20-762. Los Angeles or Oakland, spring 1950.
7. Guitar Shuffle - Lowell Fulson - (Lowell Fulson)
Lowell Fulson-g; Earl Brown-as; Lloyd Glenn-p; Billy Hadnott-b; Bob Harvey-d. Swing Time 295. Los Angeles, circa September 1951.
8. You’re Not the One - Smiley Lewis - (Overton Amons Lemons aka Smiley Lewis)
Overton Amons Lemons aka Smiley Lewis-v; Dave Bartholomew-tp; Lee Allen-ts; Joe Harris-as; Herb Hardesty-ts; Isidore Washington as Tuts Washington-p; Ernest McLean-g; Frank Fields-b; Earl Palmer-d. Imperial 5224. New Orleans, October 1952.
9. Hey Bartender - Floyd Dixon and his Band - (Dossie Terry)
Floyd Dixon-v, p; unknown-ts, bar s; Jimmy Lewis-g; unknown-b, d. Cat 114. C-1361. New York, November 10, 1954.
10. You Upset Me, Baby - B.B. King and his Orchestra - (Riley B. King, Jules Taub aka Julius Bihari)
Riley B. King as B.B. “Blues Boy” King, v, g; unknown sax, tp, p, b, d.
Possibly The King Review: possibly Millard Lee, dir, p; possibly Onzie Horne bv, possibly Calvin Owens, Kenneth Sands-tp; possibly Lawrence Burdin-as; possibly George Coleman-ts; possibly Floyd Newman-bar s; possibly George Joyner-b; possibly Earl Forest, Ted Curry-d; RPM 416, MM-2121. Produced by Julius Bihari, Los Angeles, 1954.
11. Hot Little Mama - Johnny “Guitar” Watson - (John Watson Jr. aka Johnny “Guitar” Watson, Maxwell Davis)
John Watson Jr. as Johnny “Guitar” Watson-v, g; possibly James Parr-tp; Maxwell Davis-ts; Jim Wynn-bar s; Willard McDaniel-p; Billy Hadnott-b; Jesse Price-d. RPM 423. Los Angeles, January 11, 1955.
12. Gettin’ Drunk - Johnny “Guitar” Watson - (John Watson Jr. aka Johnny “Guitar” Watson)
John Watson Jr. as Young John Watson-v, g; Bill Gaither-ts; Devonia Williams-p; Mario DeLagarde-b; Charles Pendegraph-d. Federal 12183. Los Angeles, February 1, 1954.
13. Oop Shoop - Shirley Gunter and the Queens - (Shirley Gunter, Blondene Taylor)
Shirley Gunter-lead v; Lula B. Kenney-soprano v;Lula Mae Suggs-middle harmony v;Blondene Taylor-alto v; Maxwell Davis-ts, arr; unknown p, b, d. Produced by Joe Bihari. Flair 1050. Los Angeles, 1954.
14. Hey Hey Girl - Rosco Gordon - (Rosco Gordon)
Rosco Gordon-v, p; Foree Wells-g; Willie Wilkes-s; Billy Duncan-as; Charles Taylor-as; Richard Sanders-bar s; Bud Green as Tuff Green-b; John Murry Daley-d;
Produced by Sam Phillips, Memphis, late 1955.
15. Too Tired - Johnny “Guitar” Watson - (John Watson Jr. aka Johnny “Guitar” Watson, Maxwell Davis, Sam Ling)
John Watson Jr. as Johnny “Guitar” Watson-v, g; possibly James Parr-tp; Maxwell Davis-ts; Jim Wynn-bar s; Willard McDaniel-p; Billy Hadnott-b; Jesse Price-d. RPM 431. Los Angeles, circa January, 1955.
16. My Boy Lollipop - Barbie Gaye - (Robert Spencer aka Bobby Spencer, John Roberts aka Johnnie Roberts)
Note: on Millie Small’s much later version, the song was credited to Robert Spencer/Morris Levy)
Barbie Gaye-v; Leroy Kirkland-g, arr; Al Sears-ts; possibly Lloyd Trotman-b; Panama Francis-d. Darl R-1002. New York, 1956.
17. Just a Gigolo/I Ain’t Got Nobody - Louis Prima - (English version of “I’m Just a Gigolo” adapted by Irving Caesar from the Austrian song “Scöner Gigolo, armer Gigolo” by Julius Brammer, Leonello Casucci. “I Ain’t Got Nobody” was written by Roger Graham, Spencer Williams)
Louis Prima-v; Keely Smith-v; Sam Butera and the Witnesses: Sam Butera-ts; James Blount, Jr. aka Red-tb; William McCumber aka Willlie-p; Jack Marshall-g; Amado Rodriques-b; Robert Morris aka Bobby-d. Capitol T 755. Produced by Voyle Gilmore. Capitol Tower Studios, Los Angeles, April 1956.
18. Sea Cruise - Frankie Ford with Huey “Piano Smith and Orchestra - (Huey Smith aka Huey “Piano” Smith)
Francis Guzzo as Frankie Ford-v; Huey “Piano” Smith and the Clowns: Huey “Piano” Smith-p, arr; possibly Dave Bartholomew-tp; possibly Lee Allen-ts; possibly Red Tyler-as; unknown b; possibly Earl Palmer-d; Ace 554. Produced by Huey Smith and Johnny Vincent, New Orleans, 1959.
19. I Feel Good - Owen Gray with the Duke Reid Group - (Owen Gray)
Probably Ernest Ranglin-g; unknown saxophones (possibly Wilton Gaynair aka Bogey), b, d. Starlite ST45 078. Produced by Christopher Percy Gordon Blackwell aka Chris Blackwell, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, circa 1959-1960.
20. The Joker - The Duke Reid Group - (Arthur Reid aka Duke Reid)
Roland Alphonso-ts; possibly Emmanuel Rodriguez aka Rico-tb; possibly Theophilus Beckford or Aubrey Adams-p; Cluett Johnson-b; Arkland Parks aka Drumbago-d. Produced by Arthur Reid aka Duke Reid, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, circa 1959.
21. Greasy - Jackie McLean - (Walter Davis Jr.)
Jackie McLean-as; Donald Byrd-tp; Walter Davis Jr.-p; Paul Chambers-b; Pete La Roca-d. Produced by Alfred Lion, Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, May 2, 1959.
22. Duke’s Cookies - The Duke Reid Group - (Arthur Reid aka Duke Reid)
Unknown-ts; possibly Jerry Haines as Jah Jerry-g; possibly Lloyd Brevett or Lloyd Mason-b; unknown-d. Produced by Arthur Reid as Duke Reid, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, circa 1960.
23. Judge Not - Bob Marley 1962 - (Robert Nesta Marley aka Bob Marley)
Robert Marley and the Beverley’s All Stars: Bob Marley as Robert Marley-v; Arkland Parks aka Drumbago-d; Lloyd Brevett-b; Jerome Haines aka Jah Jerry-g; unknown el. p, p; Roland Alphonso-ts; Charlie Organaire-harmo; unknown-flute. Beverley’s LM 027. Recorded by Buddy Davidson, produced by Leslie Kong, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, circa February 1962.
Disc 3: Jamaica 1956-1962
1. Rocking in my Feet - Owen Gray and the Jets - (Owen Gray)
Possibly Wilton Gaynair aka Bogey-ts; possibly Theophilus Beckford-p; Lloyd Mason or Lloyd Brevett-b; probably Arkland Parks aka Drumbago-d. Smith’s. Produced by Simeon L. Smith, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, circa 1962.
2. Silky - Clue J and his Blues Blasters - (Cluett Johnson aka Clue J)
Roland Alphonso-ts; Ernest Ranglin-g; Emmanuel Rodriguez aka Rico-tb; unknown-org; Cluett Johnson aka Clue J-b; Arkland Parks aka Drumbago-d. Worldisc CR 133. Produced by Clement Dodd aka Coxsone, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, circa 1959-1960.
3. Yard Broom - Roland Alphonso with Duke Reid’s Group - (Roland Alphonso)
Roland Alphonso-ts; Johnny Moore aka Dizzy Johnny-tp; Emmanuel Rodriguez aka Rico-tb; Lloyd Brevett or Lloyd Mason-b; Arkland Parks as Drumbago-d. Produced by Arthur Reid as Duke Reid, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, 1961.
4. Japanese Girl - Lloyd Clarke - (Lloyd Clarke)
Lloyd Clarke-v; Roland Alphonso-ts; unknown-org; possibly Ernest Ranglin-g; unknown-el. b; unknown-d. Beverley’s. Produced by Charlie Moo, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, 1962.
5. That Man Is Back - Don Drummond - (Don Drummond)
Don Drummond-tb; possibly Roland Alphonso-ts; unknown-p; unknown el. b;
unknown-d. All Stars FC112. Produced by Clement Dodd aka Coxsone, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, circa 1962.
6. One Cup of Coffee - Bob Marley - (Claude Gray)
Robert Marley and the Beverley’s All Stars: Bob Marley as Bobby Martell-v; Jerome Haines aka Jah Jerry-g; unknown el. p; Roland Alphonso-ts; unknown ts; Don Drummond-tb; Charlie Organaire-harmonica; unknown-flute; Lloyd Brevett-b; Arkland Parks aka Drumbago-d. Beverley’s LM 052. Recorded by Buddy Davidson, produced by Leslie Kong, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, circa February 1962.
7. Midnight Track - Owen Gray - (Owen Gray)
Owen Gray-v; Roland Alphonso-ts; Emmanuel Rodriguez aka Rico-tb; Possibly Jerome Haines aka Jah Jerry-g; unknown el. p; unknown ts; possibly Lloyd Brevett or Lloyd Mason-b; possibly Arkland Parks aka Drumbago-d. Moo’s. Produced by Charlie Moo, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, 1961.
8. Me and my Forty Five - Eric “Monty” Morris - (Eric Morris)
Roland Alphonso-ts; Emmanuel Rodriguez aka Rico-tb; Ernest Ranglin-g; Theophilus Beckford or Aubrey Adams-p; Cluett Johnson aka Clue J-b; Arkland Parks aka Drumbago-d. Buster Wild Bells. Produced by Cecil Bustamente Campbell as Prince Buster, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, 1961 or 1962.
9 Magic - Rico with the Duke Reid All Stars Trojan R&B 2-5 (inst.) - (Emmanuel Rodriguez aka Rico Rodriguez)
Roland Alphonso-ts; unknown ts; Johnny Moore aka Dizzy Johnny-tp; Emmanuel Rodriguez aka Rico-tb; Aubrey Adams or Theophilus Beckford-p; Lloyd Brevett or Lloyd Mason-b; Arkland Parks as Drumbago-d. Produced by Arthur Reid as Duke Reid, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, 1961.
10. Cool School - Chuck and Dobby with the Duke Reid Group - (Chuck Josephs, Dobby Dobson)
Chuck Josephs as Chuck-v; Highland Dobson aka Dobby Dobson, as Dobby-v; possibly Ernest Ranglin-g; Roland Alphonso-ts; possibly Theophilus Beckford or Aubrey Adams-p; Cluett Johnson aka Clue J-b; Arkland Parks aka Drumbago-d. Produced by Arthur Reid aka Duke Reid, Kenneth Khouri’s Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, circa 1957.
11. Bridgeview Shuffle - Matador All Stars - (Roland Alphonso, Lloyd Daley)
Roland Alphonso-ts; Lester Sterling-as; Johnny Moore aka Dizzy Johnny-tp; Emmanuel Rodriguez aka Rico-tb; Jerry Haines aka Jah Jerry-g; Aubrey Adams or Theophilus Beckford-p; possibly Lloyd Mason-b; Lloyd Knibb-d. Matador FLD 2055 (dub plate). Produced by Lloyd Daley aka The Matador, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, 1959.
12. That’s Me - Theophilus Beckford and the City Slickers - (Theophilus Beckford)
Theophilus Beckford as Theo Beckford-v; Roland Alphonso-ts; probably Roland Alphonso-as; Ernest Ranglin-g ; possibly Herman Sang -p; Cluett Johnson aka Clue J-b; Arkland Parks aka Drumbago-d. Worldisc. Produced by Clement Dodd aka Coxsone, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, possibly circa 1957-1958.
13. African Shuffle - Count Ossie and the Wareikas - (Harry A. Mudie)
Roland Alphonso-ts; possibly Wilton Gaynair aka Big Bra, aka Bogey-ts; Emmanuel Rodriguez aka Rico-tb; Jerry Haines aka Jah Jerry or Ernest Ranglin-g; Oswald Williams as Count Ossie-hand drum; unknown others-hand drums, percussion.
Moodisc. Produced by Harry Mudie, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, 1961.
14. Over the River - The Jiving Juniors with Hersang and his City Slickers - (Derrick Harriott)
Derrick Harriott-v; Eugene Dwyer, Maurice Winter-v; Emmanuel Rodriguez aka Rico-tb; Herman Sang-p; possibly Ernest Ranglin-g; possibly Cluett Johnson aka Clue J-b; Arkland Parks aka Drumbago-d. Produced by Clement Dodd aka Coxsone. All Stars FC117. Federal Studios, Kingston, Jamaica, 1961.
15. I Love You - Winston & Barbara - (Winston Stewart)
Winston Stewart aka Delano Stewart, as Winston-v; Barbara-v; Lenny Hibbert-vib; Don Drummond-tb; Johnny Moore aka Dizzy Johnny-tp; Cluett Johnson aka Clue J b; unknown-d; Rolando and Powie. Produced by Clement Dodd aka Coxsone, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, 1962.
16. Luke Lane Shuffle - Rico Rodriguez and the Buster’s All Stars - (Emmanuel Rodriguez aka Rico Rodriguez)
Roland Alphonso-ts; Emmanuel Rodriguez as Rico Rodriguez-tb; Johnny Moore aka Dizzy Johnny-tp; Theophilus Beckford or Aubrey Adams-p; Cluett Johnson aka Clue J-b; Arkland Parks aka Drumbago-d. Buster Wild Bells. Produced by Cecil Bustamente Campbell as Prince Buster, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, 1960.
17. Bouncing Woman - Laurel Aitken and the Blue Beats - (Lorenzo Aitken aka Laurel Aitken)
Lorenzo Aitken as Laurel Aitken-v; possibly Trenton Spence-ts; Emmanuel Rodriguez as Rico Rodriguez -tb; unknown-p, b, d; unknown-d. Starline DA 3149. Producer unknown, possibly Prince Buster or Byron Lee, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, 1961.
18. Stew Peas and Cornflakes - Aubrey Adams & Rico Rodriguez - (Aubrey Adams, Emmanuel Rodriguez aka Rico Rodriguez) - (inst.) Coxsone All Stars Top Hits
Roland Alphonso-ts; Emmanuel Rodriguez as Rico-tb; Ernest Ranglin-g; Aubrey Adams-p; possibly Lloyd Brevett-b; possibly Lloyd Knibb-d. All Stars. Produced by Clement Dodd aka Coxsone, Federal Studio, Kingston, 1961, Jamaica.
19. Rosabelle - Cornell Campbell - (Cornel Campbell as Cornell Campbell)
Cornel Campbell as Cornell Campbell-v; Emmanuel Rodriguez as Rico Rodriguez-tb; possibly Aubrey Adams-p; possibly Cluett Johnson aka Clue J-b; unknown-d. DDarling. Produced by Clement Dodd aka Coxsone, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, circa 1956.
20. I Was Wrong - Chuck & Dobby with Buster’s Group - (Chuck Josephs, Dobby Dobson)
Chuck Josephs as Chuck-v; Highland Dobson aka Dobby Dobson, as Dobby-v; Roland Alphonso-ts; Emmanuel Rodriguez aka Rico-tb; Theophilus Beckford or Aubrey Adams-p; unknown b, d; Buster Wild Bells. Produced by Cecil Bustamente Campbell as Prince Buster, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, 1961 or 1962.
21. What a World - Busty and Cool - (Arthur Robinson aka Busty)
Arthur Robinson aka Skitter, aka Busty Robinson, aka Busty-v;
Emmanuel Rodriguez aka Rico-tb; unknown-ts, p, b, d. DDarling 2117. Produced by Clement Dodd aka Coxsone, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, circa 1961.
22. Ten Virgins - The Angelic Brothers - (Justin Yap)
The Angelic Brothers aka The Hi-Tones: unknown personnel. Top Deck. Produced by E. Henry, Federal Studio, Kingston, Jamaica, 1962.
23. Jamaica Blues - Azie Lawrence - (Ossie Lawrence aka Azie Lawrence)
Ossie Lawrence as Azie Lawrence-v; Ernest Ranglin-g; unknown saxes, tp, b, d.
Melodisc 45/1563 (UK). Recorded in Kingston, Jamaica, possibly WIRL Studio, circa 1961.
The above Jamaican recordings (end of disc 2, disc 3) credits and recording dates are likely to include some errors. Most credits are probably accurate, but many are merely here to give an indication of likely, possible personnel, especially in the rhythm sections. Other musicians involved on these sessions might include Tommy McCook-ts (Mc Cook started recording in 1962); Wilton Gaynair-ts; Bobby Aitken-g; Roy Wilson-tb; Monty Alexander and Cecil Lloyd-p; Sonny Bradshaw, Billy Cooke and Oswald Brooks aka Baba Brooks-tp; Lloyd Mason-b; Carl McCloud-d — and several unidentified others.
Bien des mystères entourent les origines du ska, célèbre genre musical né à Kingston en 1962. Bruno Blum met ici un point final aux spéculations. Le ska et son contretemps si particulier (que l’on retrouve plus tard dans le reggae) sont dérivés du shuffle, un style de rhythm and blues américain peu connu du grand public. En voici un éblouissant florilège, de l’obscure version originale du fameux « My Boy Lollipop » au classique « Just a Gigolo ». Cette anthologie propose en parallèle 27 shuffles enregistrés en Jamaïque juste avant la création du ska parmi lesquels on a le plaisir de retrouver les débuts de Bob Marley - le son originel du dancehall jamaïcain.
Patrick FRÉMEAUX
There are many mysteries surrounding the origins of ska, the famous music-style born in Kingston in 1962, but this Bruno Blum selection puts an end to all the speculation. Ska and its signature offbeat (which later surfaced in reggae) derived from the little-known Ame-rican R&B style called shuffle. This anthology has some dazzling illustrations of it, from the obscure, original version of the hit “My Boy Lollipop” to the classic song “Just a Gigolo” - as well as 27 shuffles recorded in Jamaica just before the creation of ska, not to mention some early Bob Marley - this is the original sound of Jamaican dancehall.
Patrick FRÉMEAUX
CD Roots of ska USA jamaica 1942-1962 Rhythm and blues shuffle © Frémeaux & Associés 2013.