skAcid
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The Specials & 'Friends' Back In The Studio., by skAcid on Dec 4, 2018 14:51:28 GMT 1, 'Vote for me' from the new album had its first airing on the Steve Lamacq show on BBC6 music yesterdayย ย
"Vote For Me"
If we vote for you, do you promise To be upright, decent and honest To have our best interest at heart You understand why we don't believe you You're way too easy to see through Not the best places to start
There are no rocks at Rockaway beach And all that glitters isn't gold
You're all so drunk on money and power Inside your Ivory tower Teaching us not to be smart Making laws that serve to protect you But we will never forget that You tore our families apart
There are no rocks at Rockaway beach And all that glitters isn't gold
So if we vote for you, do you promise To be upright, decent and honest And take away all of the fear You sit and wait for us to elect you But all we will do is reject you Your politics brought us to tears
There are no rocks at Rockaway beach And all that glitters isn't gold
'Vote for me' from the new album had its first airing on the Steve Lamacq show on BBC6 music yesterdayย ย "Vote For Me" If we vote for you, do you promise To be upright, decent and honest To have our best interest at heart You understand why we don't believe you You're way too easy to see through Not the best places to start There are no rocks at Rockaway beach And all that glitters isn't gold You're all so drunk on money and power Inside your Ivory tower Teaching us not to be smart Making laws that serve to protect you But we will never forget that You tore our families apart There are no rocks at Rockaway beach And all that glitters isn't gold So if we vote for you, do you promise To be upright, decent and honest And take away all of the fear You sit and wait for us to elect you But all we will do is reject you Your politics brought us to tears There are no rocks at Rockaway beach And all that glitters isn't gold
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skAcid
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 862
๐๐ป 917
October 2017
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The Specials & 'Friends' Back In The Studio., by skAcid on Jan 25, 2019 11:03:23 GMT 1, The Specials Talk Reunion Album & Recording With Viral Activist Saffiyah Khan
The Specials didnโt need anyone to validate Encore (Feb. 1), their first album of new material since 1980 or 1998, depending on how you count. Even with only three of seven original members still in the fold, the British ska veterans find themselves in a world wracked by racism, xenophobia, and other issues they battled with weaponized dance music 40 years ago. A bat-signal with their logo shouldโve have gone up the second the Brexit vote came down.
But if The Specials were looking for someone to reaffirm their relevance, they couldnโt have found anyone better than Saffiyah Khan, the 21-year-old half-Pakistani, half-Bosnian activist and model from Birmingham, England, who gives the albumโs most incendiary performance.
Khan guests on โ10 Commandments,โ a female response to Jamaican ska legend Prince Busterโs 1967 track of the same name. Busterโs original is a hyper-sexist rant in which he orders womenfolk to obey him, caress him, forgive his transgressions, and promise not to cross him, lest they incur a violent wrath theyโll surely deserve. Khan is not impressed by his machismo.
โThou shalt not listen to Prince Buster or any other man offering kindly advice in matters of my own conduct,โ Khan declares in her first commandment, speaking with icy cool atop a frigid dub-reggae groove. If you know anything about Khan and her remarkable rise to fame, itโs easy to picture her facial expression as she drops her feminist bombs.
Khan became a viral phenomenon in April 2017, when she was photographed standing face to face with a leader of the far-right English Defense League during one of their rallies in Birmingham. In the photo, Khan grins calmly as the man stares her down, radiating hatred, seemingly ready to pounce. Khan didnโt go to the demonstration looking for trouble, but when members of the staunchly anti-Muslim EDL surrounded a woman in a headscarf, she had to step in.
While all this was going down, Khan was wearing a Specials t-shirt beneath her denim jacket. Itโs plain as day in the photos of her smiling as sheโs led away by police. Khan discovered the band via the Internet as a teenager and soon learned that her father had grown up with their music back in the โ80s. Both father and daughter were drawn to The Specials for more than just the infectious energy of hits like โGangstersโ and โToo Much Too Young.โ
As leaders of the 2 Tone label and movement in the late โ70s and early โ80s, The Specials sought to unite black and white kids through music. The septet featured a nattily dressed multiracial lineup and raucous sound built from English punk rock and Jamaican ska. They made pop with purpose, and for a couple years, as racial tensions flared up across England, they were the hottest thing on 14 legs.
โThe Specials, for me, reignited the idea of honor and unity being intrinsic to all anti-racist struggles,โ Khan tells Billboard. โThey are living proof that such politics will stand the test of time and transcend religions and colors.โ
Saffiyah Khan speaking at a Labour rally in Birmingham, ahead of a speech by party leader Jeremy Corbyn, on the General Election campaign trail
After photos of Khanโs standoff exploded on the Internet, Specials rhythm guitarist Lynval Golding reached out and invited her to a show. โMy family loved it, and my dad teared up when we went to meet them after,โ says Khan. โLynval did a little shoutout for me during the set. My family, being as unhip as possible, did all the pointing and the waving, at which point I pretended I didnโt know them.โ
Meeting Khan also made a big impression on Golding. โShe was thanking us for inspiring her, and I was like, โThank you for inspiring us,โโ he says. โWe got the band together 40 years ago, and that means a lot: It wasnโt wasted time. The Specialsโ music literally touched a young 20-year-old girl. This is what itโs all about.โโ
A few months later, Specials lead singer Terry Hall reached out to Khan with the idea appearing on their new album, the first to feature his vocals since the groupโs 1980 sophomore effort, More Specials. (In the โ90s and โ00s, Hall-free iterations of the band released three covers LPs and one disc of original material, 1998โs Guilty โtil Proved Innocent.) Khan may be the type of person whoโll stand fearlessly in the face of hatred, but she admits to being extremely nervous about rocking the mic alongside her heroes.
โIf you put that job before any Specials fan, you'd probably get the same response,โ says Khan. โIt was one of the single most overwhelming tasks I've ever been set, and even now that Iโve written the lyrics, I donโt feel like I've done them justice.โ
Khan agonized for weeks over her commandments, only to finish them up the night before the London recording session. Hall made a few last-minute edits, and she nailed her vocal in a couple of hours. Khan need not worry the finished product: Her performance is angry, assured, and at times funny, like when she blasts โpseudo-intellectuals on the Internetโ and warns catcalling dudes on the street that sheโll catcall them right back.
โWe said, โWeโll lift you up on our shoulders and let you say what you want to sayโitโs your time to shout now,โโ says Golding. โWe gave her room to do her thing. Iโm really pleased with the way she went about it.โ
โ10 Commandmentsโ is one of three spoken-word songs at the heart of Encore. Given that Hall, Golding, and bassist Horace Panter are the only original Specials along for the ride, itโs reasonable for even hardcore fans to be skeptical about the project. But the remaining trio delivers a sharp, mature, musically surprising album thatโs appropriate for the times and respectful of 2 Toneโs legacy. And they do so with a fair bit of talking.
On the wah-wah-powered funk-ska workout โB.L.M.,โ Golding tells his life story beginning with his fatherโs move from Jamaica to England in the early โ50s. This was a time when Great Britain was encouraging people from its Caribbean territories to come over and help rebuild the country after World War II. But Goldingโs father arrived to find signs reading โNo Dogs, No Irish, No Blacksโ in boarding-house windows. As we learn, Golding received a similar welcome when he came over from Jamaica in the โ60s. By the final verse, weโre in Goldingโs current home, America, where the racial slurs are different but the same ugly story old plays itself out.
Sexism and racism are obviously hot topics in the age of Trump and Brexit, and perhaps not coincidentally, so is mental health. Hall speaks about his struggles with bipolar disorder on โThe Life and Times (Of a Man Called Depression),โ a rubbery lounge-pop tune punctuated by nervy brass straight out of More Specials.
Hall tells his tale with warmth and candor and none of the frosty deadpan he was known for back in the heyday of The Specials. The song speaks to the progress heโs made since finally being diagnosed as bipolar following a suicide attempt in 2004. He refers to himself at one point as โa clean, mean, medicated fight machine.โ
โIโve been with him for the last 10 years, and I can look at Terry and tell whether heโs going to have good day or a bad day,โ Golding says. โThatโs how close weโve become.โ
โItโs really nice heโs been honest [in his lyrics] about what he goes through,โ Golding adds. โIโm the closest to him. Iโm the only one that goes to visit him at his house. Because he doesnโt answer his phone. Iโm just so blessed to work with a guy I consider one of the best. Most of the lyrics on the records are Terryโs work. Heโs an amazing lyricist.โ
Golding seems to have willed Encore into existence, just as he did the reunion that reactivated The Specials as a touring band in 2009. As the driving force a decade ago, Golding succeeded in getting five of his six former bandmates back into their black suits and pork pie hats. Alas, he was unable to secure the participation of Jerry Dammers, the eccentric keyboardist and songwriter who masterminded the group.
โMe and Jerry were the closest,โ says Golding, recalling how he and Dammers worked together on a still-unreleased song called โThe First Victim of Warโ prior to the reunion. โI thought Jerry would be the first one Iโd get back on board. I love the man, and I wish he couldโve been back with us. Heโs very, very difficult. I tried, I tried, I tried. In the end, I decided weโve got to play music for the people. Weโve just got to move on, you know?โ
Golding maintained that attitude when vocalist Neville Staple left in 2013 and guitarist Roddy Radiation followed a year later. (Golding cites personal issues for Roddyโs departure.) Drummer John Bradbury died in 2015, but not before he, Golding, and Panter began demoing tracks for a new album. One of these songs became โVote for Me,โ the lead single off Encore. A far cry from the amphetamine ska of the bandโs heyday, the song is sophisticated dinner-party reggae with a simple question for politicians of the world: โIf we vote for you do you promise / to be upright, decent, and honest?โ
โItโs so appropriate now for what the world is going through,โ says Golding. โOne thing I love is that weโre just asking questions. On that song, the way we put it across was, โLetโs talk to each other, not shout at each other.โโโ
The same is true of โEmbarrassed By You,โ a slightly more aggressive reggae tune wherein Golding views the resurgence of British fascism as a personal affront to the band: โWe never fought for freedom for nasty little brutes like you / to come and undo the work we do.โ And so The Specials fight again, optimistic despite it all. Golding says the message of Encore really boils down to the title of the closing track, โWe Sell Hope.โ
Musically, the aim with Encore was to pick up where The Specials left off with their landmark 1981 single โGhost Town.โ It was the final recording before Hall, Golding, and Staple left to form the new wave group The Fun Boy Three, spelling the end of an era. (Encore includes a cover of the 1981 Fun Boy Three Hit โThe Lunatics.โ) With its disquieting horn blasts and howling background vocals, โGhost Townโ captured the mood of England on the brink. It reached No. 1 in the U.K. as race riots erupted across the country.
Following โGhost Townโ would be difficult even with Dammers still working his magic at the keys. Golding credits Nikolaj Torp Larsen, the Danish keyboardist whoโs been filling Dammersโ loafers since 2009, with helping to maintain The Specialsโ distinctive ska-and-beyond vibe. Larsen produced Encore alongside Hall, Golding, and Panter and co-wrote all of the new material.
โNikolaj is an absolute genius,โ Golding says. โThe work we done with Jerry was fantastic. We were really fortunate we could meet another young guy with Nikolaj. Itโs like winning the lottery twice. It doesnโt happen.โ
Encore arrives at the start of a year marking 2 Toneโs 40th anniversary. Given that the movementโs other three flagship bandsโMadness, The Selecter, and The English Beatโare all still active in one form or another, Golding says thereโs a chance for some joint performances later in the year.
โItโs something to celebrate: a youth movement that lasts 40 years,โ says Golding. โIt would be an amazing thing. But you know what itโs like. Thereโs always debates and discussions. If we can sit down and not drink too many beers, but have cups of tea with no sugar, we can come to some agreement for the people, for the fans.โ
News of any 2 Tone 40th anniversary concert would surely spark new debates about what the label achieved all those years agoโand whether itโs really possible for music to change the world. You can guess what Saffiyah Khan thinks about that last question.
โAll music and art can make politics, love, struggles, etc., tangible and human and accessible,โ she says. โAccessible mediums are the key to all mass movements.โ
www.billboard.com/articles/columns/rock/8494013/the-specials-reunion-album-saffiyah-khan
The Specials Talk Reunion Album & Recording With Viral Activist Saffiyah Khan
The Specials didnโt need anyone to validate Encore (Feb. 1), their first album of new material since 1980 or 1998, depending on how you count. Even with only three of seven original members still in the fold, the British ska veterans find themselves in a world wracked by racism, xenophobia, and other issues they battled with weaponized dance music 40 years ago. A bat-signal with their logo shouldโve have gone up the second the Brexit vote came down. But if The Specials were looking for someone to reaffirm their relevance, they couldnโt have found anyone better than Saffiyah Khan, the 21-year-old half-Pakistani, half-Bosnian activist and model from Birmingham, England, who gives the albumโs most incendiary performance. Khan guests on โ10 Commandments,โ a female response to Jamaican ska legend Prince Busterโs 1967 track of the same name. Busterโs original is a hyper-sexist rant in which he orders womenfolk to obey him, caress him, forgive his transgressions, and promise not to cross him, lest they incur a violent wrath theyโll surely deserve. Khan is not impressed by his machismo. โThou shalt not listen to Prince Buster or any other man offering kindly advice in matters of my own conduct,โ Khan declares in her first commandment, speaking with icy cool atop a frigid dub-reggae groove. If you know anything about Khan and her remarkable rise to fame, itโs easy to picture her facial expression as she drops her feminist bombs. Khan became a viral phenomenon in April 2017, when she was photographed standing face to face with a leader of the far-right English Defense League during one of their rallies in Birmingham. In the photo, Khan grins calmly as the man stares her down, radiating hatred, seemingly ready to pounce. Khan didnโt go to the demonstration looking for trouble, but when members of the staunchly anti-Muslim EDL surrounded a woman in a headscarf, she had to step in. While all this was going down, Khan was wearing a Specials t-shirt beneath her denim jacket. Itโs plain as day in the photos of her smiling as sheโs led away by police. Khan discovered the band via the Internet as a teenager and soon learned that her father had grown up with their music back in the โ80s. Both father and daughter were drawn to The Specials for more than just the infectious energy of hits like โGangstersโ and โToo Much Too Young.โ As leaders of the 2 Tone label and movement in the late โ70s and early โ80s, The Specials sought to unite black and white kids through music. The septet featured a nattily dressed multiracial lineup and raucous sound built from English punk rock and Jamaican ska. They made pop with purpose, and for a couple years, as racial tensions flared up across England, they were the hottest thing on 14 legs. โThe Specials, for me, reignited the idea of honor and unity being intrinsic to all anti-racist struggles,โ Khan tells Billboard. โThey are living proof that such politics will stand the test of time and transcend religions and colors.โ Saffiyah Khan speaking at a Labour rally in Birmingham, ahead of a speech by party leader Jeremy Corbyn, on the General Election campaign trailAfter photos of Khanโs standoff exploded on the Internet, Specials rhythm guitarist Lynval Golding reached out and invited her to a show. โMy family loved it, and my dad teared up when we went to meet them after,โ says Khan. โLynval did a little shoutout for me during the set. My family, being as unhip as possible, did all the pointing and the waving, at which point I pretended I didnโt know them.โ Meeting Khan also made a big impression on Golding. โShe was thanking us for inspiring her, and I was like, โThank you for inspiring us,โโ he says. โWe got the band together 40 years ago, and that means a lot: It wasnโt wasted time. The Specialsโ music literally touched a young 20-year-old girl. This is what itโs all about.โโ A few months later, Specials lead singer Terry Hall reached out to Khan with the idea appearing on their new album, the first to feature his vocals since the groupโs 1980 sophomore effort, More Specials. (In the โ90s and โ00s, Hall-free iterations of the band released three covers LPs and one disc of original material, 1998โs Guilty โtil Proved Innocent.) Khan may be the type of person whoโll stand fearlessly in the face of hatred, but she admits to being extremely nervous about rocking the mic alongside her heroes. โIf you put that job before any Specials fan, you'd probably get the same response,โ says Khan. โIt was one of the single most overwhelming tasks I've ever been set, and even now that Iโve written the lyrics, I donโt feel like I've done them justice.โ Khan agonized for weeks over her commandments, only to finish them up the night before the London recording session. Hall made a few last-minute edits, and she nailed her vocal in a couple of hours. Khan need not worry the finished product: Her performance is angry, assured, and at times funny, like when she blasts โpseudo-intellectuals on the Internetโ and warns catcalling dudes on the street that sheโll catcall them right back. โWe said, โWeโll lift you up on our shoulders and let you say what you want to sayโitโs your time to shout now,โโ says Golding. โWe gave her room to do her thing. Iโm really pleased with the way she went about it.โ โ10 Commandmentsโ is one of three spoken-word songs at the heart of Encore. Given that Hall, Golding, and bassist Horace Panter are the only original Specials along for the ride, itโs reasonable for even hardcore fans to be skeptical about the project. But the remaining trio delivers a sharp, mature, musically surprising album thatโs appropriate for the times and respectful of 2 Toneโs legacy. And they do so with a fair bit of talking. On the wah-wah-powered funk-ska workout โB.L.M.,โ Golding tells his life story beginning with his fatherโs move from Jamaica to England in the early โ50s. This was a time when Great Britain was encouraging people from its Caribbean territories to come over and help rebuild the country after World War II. But Goldingโs father arrived to find signs reading โNo Dogs, No Irish, No Blacksโ in boarding-house windows. As we learn, Golding received a similar welcome when he came over from Jamaica in the โ60s. By the final verse, weโre in Goldingโs current home, America, where the racial slurs are different but the same ugly story old plays itself out. Sexism and racism are obviously hot topics in the age of Trump and Brexit, and perhaps not coincidentally, so is mental health. Hall speaks about his struggles with bipolar disorder on โThe Life and Times (Of a Man Called Depression),โ a rubbery lounge-pop tune punctuated by nervy brass straight out of More Specials. Hall tells his tale with warmth and candor and none of the frosty deadpan he was known for back in the heyday of The Specials. The song speaks to the progress heโs made since finally being diagnosed as bipolar following a suicide attempt in 2004. He refers to himself at one point as โa clean, mean, medicated fight machine.โ โIโve been with him for the last 10 years, and I can look at Terry and tell whether heโs going to have good day or a bad day,โ Golding says. โThatโs how close weโve become.โ โItโs really nice heโs been honest [in his lyrics] about what he goes through,โ Golding adds. โIโm the closest to him. Iโm the only one that goes to visit him at his house. Because he doesnโt answer his phone. Iโm just so blessed to work with a guy I consider one of the best. Most of the lyrics on the records are Terryโs work. Heโs an amazing lyricist.โ Golding seems to have willed Encore into existence, just as he did the reunion that reactivated The Specials as a touring band in 2009. As the driving force a decade ago, Golding succeeded in getting five of his six former bandmates back into their black suits and pork pie hats. Alas, he was unable to secure the participation of Jerry Dammers, the eccentric keyboardist and songwriter who masterminded the group. โMe and Jerry were the closest,โ says Golding, recalling how he and Dammers worked together on a still-unreleased song called โThe First Victim of Warโ prior to the reunion. โI thought Jerry would be the first one Iโd get back on board. I love the man, and I wish he couldโve been back with us. Heโs very, very difficult. I tried, I tried, I tried. In the end, I decided weโve got to play music for the people. Weโve just got to move on, you know?โ Golding maintained that attitude when vocalist Neville Staple left in 2013 and guitarist Roddy Radiation followed a year later. (Golding cites personal issues for Roddyโs departure.) Drummer John Bradbury died in 2015, but not before he, Golding, and Panter began demoing tracks for a new album. One of these songs became โVote for Me,โ the lead single off Encore. A far cry from the amphetamine ska of the bandโs heyday, the song is sophisticated dinner-party reggae with a simple question for politicians of the world: โIf we vote for you do you promise / to be upright, decent, and honest?โ โItโs so appropriate now for what the world is going through,โ says Golding. โOne thing I love is that weโre just asking questions. On that song, the way we put it across was, โLetโs talk to each other, not shout at each other.โโโ The same is true of โEmbarrassed By You,โ a slightly more aggressive reggae tune wherein Golding views the resurgence of British fascism as a personal affront to the band: โWe never fought for freedom for nasty little brutes like you / to come and undo the work we do.โ And so The Specials fight again, optimistic despite it all. Golding says the message of Encore really boils down to the title of the closing track, โWe Sell Hope.โ Musically, the aim with Encore was to pick up where The Specials left off with their landmark 1981 single โGhost Town.โ It was the final recording before Hall, Golding, and Staple left to form the new wave group The Fun Boy Three, spelling the end of an era. (Encore includes a cover of the 1981 Fun Boy Three Hit โThe Lunatics.โ) With its disquieting horn blasts and howling background vocals, โGhost Townโ captured the mood of England on the brink. It reached No. 1 in the U.K. as race riots erupted across the country. Following โGhost Townโ would be difficult even with Dammers still working his magic at the keys. Golding credits Nikolaj Torp Larsen, the Danish keyboardist whoโs been filling Dammersโ loafers since 2009, with helping to maintain The Specialsโ distinctive ska-and-beyond vibe. Larsen produced Encore alongside Hall, Golding, and Panter and co-wrote all of the new material. โNikolaj is an absolute genius,โ Golding says. โThe work we done with Jerry was fantastic. We were really fortunate we could meet another young guy with Nikolaj. Itโs like winning the lottery twice. It doesnโt happen.โ Encore arrives at the start of a year marking 2 Toneโs 40th anniversary. Given that the movementโs other three flagship bandsโMadness, The Selecter, and The English Beatโare all still active in one form or another, Golding says thereโs a chance for some joint performances later in the year. โItโs something to celebrate: a youth movement that lasts 40 years,โ says Golding. โIt would be an amazing thing. But you know what itโs like. Thereโs always debates and discussions. If we can sit down and not drink too many beers, but have cups of tea with no sugar, we can come to some agreement for the people, for the fans.โ News of any 2 Tone 40th anniversary concert would surely spark new debates about what the label achieved all those years agoโand whether itโs really possible for music to change the world. You can guess what Saffiyah Khan thinks about that last question. โAll music and art can make politics, love, struggles, etc., tangible and human and accessible,โ she says. โAccessible mediums are the key to all mass movements.โ www.billboard.com/articles/columns/rock/8494013/the-specials-reunion-album-saffiyah-khan
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The Specials & 'Friends' Back In The Studio., by Lroy on Jan 25, 2019 12:37:12 GMT 1, โThou shalt not listen to Prince Buster or any other man offering kindly advice in matters of my own conduct,
Who was not machist etc... in the Prince Buster ' years ? In Jamaรฏca, in London or in all over the world ? Things have changed, not totally, I know, but we can find a lot of hyper sexist songs or texts in the earlier 60 ' before cultural and sex revolution ( 68, woodsotck etc... ) Its true that with a title like that : The Ten Commandments of Men ! easy target !
โThou shalt not listen to Prince Buster or any other man offering kindly advice in matters of my own conduct, Who was not machist etc... in the Prince Buster ' years ? In Jamaรฏca, in London or in all over the world ? Things have changed, not totally, I know, but we can find a lot of hyper sexist songs or texts in the earlier 60 ' before cultural and sex revolution ( 68, woodsotck etc... ) Its true that with a title like that : The Ten Commandments of Men ! easy target !
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