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Reggae revival

By CHRIS FARAONE  |  May 21, 2009

While smoking a joint on a Martha's Vineyard beach in the summer of 1975 — the same year Bob Marley did 14 consecutive shows in seven days at the now-defunct Paul's Mall on Boylston Street, and one year before Peter Tosh would record his critically applauded Live and Dangerous album at the same venue — Simon and a BU pal, budding music journalist Stephen Davis, presciently decided that someone had to chronicle reggae's embryonic development in the US. They followed up the premonition that fall by writing and snapping visuals for a prominent feature in the New York Times. That piece in turn led to their watershed 1977 tome, Reggae Bloodlines — which brought Davis's typewriter and Simon's camera overseas "in search of the music and culture of Jamaica" — and the subsequent stateside exposure that it generated for the music. Those in the know will tell you: Boston — as much if not more so than New York or any other American city — helped launch reggae in the States.

090522_reggae_PeterSimon
LOCAL BOYS: Stephen Davis (far left) and Peter Simon (kneeling) — shown with BU buddies (and Phoenix colleagues) Joe Pilati and Clif Garboden, as well as Ray Mungo — would collaborate on a New York Times feature on reggae that would later be developed into the seminal book on the genre, Reggae Bloodlines.

New bloodlines
Whereas other niche genres have given up on college radio and focused their grassroots-marketing efforts online, reggae — especially in Boston — has, over the years, connected with its core audience through campus and pirate airwaves. There's currently more than 200 hours of Caribbean programming showering the area inside of Route 128 — about the same, or maybe even more, than in New York City. That's notable in that the latter has a Caribbean population north of 600,000 people, roughly 13 times the size of that in Boston. Which is not to say that the Hub's island demographic is unsubstantial; according to the 2000 census, Caribbean natives make up 29 percent of Boston's foreign-born population — more than Africans, South Americans, Central Americans, and Mexicans combined. More than 13,500 Jamaicans, Trinidadians, Barbadians, Dominicans, and Haitians immigrated to Boston between 1990 and 2000 — 14 percent of them from reggae's Graceland, and the rest anxious to harness the vibe and invent fresh interpretations. Even Dominicans and Puerto Ricans — who have never been much of a reggae audience, historically — have jumped on board with reggaeton. (In the past two years, both Don Omar and Daddy Yankee have crammed the Orpheum.)

Tropical radio's popularity is not just a recent development — deejays have been breaking records in these parts since before Bob Marley played his fifth-to-last show ever at the Hynes Auditorium in September 1980. The first reggae-oriented radio show broadcast on the East Coast was, by all accounts, Peter Simon's Reggae Bloodlines (named after his book, which — by the time of the show's premiere in 1977 — was a commercial success) on Brown University's WELH. In 1980, Simon brought his vinyl to "the very hip low-wattage" WCAS in Cambridge, then the following year to WGBH, where he was soon after fired for endlessly campaigning for marijuana legalization. "That show brought in the most money during fundraisers," says Simon. "But after that — after being the major exponent of reggae in Boston for years — I bowed out of my Boston reggae persona and moved to Martha's Vineyard."

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Related: Timeline: Reggae in Boston, Grave diggin’, Portland Phoenix Best Music Poll local winners 2000-2007, More more >
  Topics: Music Features , Entertainment, Music, Jimmy Cliff,  More more >
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Comments
Re: Reggae revival
"Live & Dangerous" was recorded at Sanders Theater in Cambridge. Anyone who has heard even one track from that album would realize it wasn't recorded in a club. http://www.discogs.com/Peter-Tosh-Live-Dangerous-1976-Boston-1976/release/1694506
By Mr. Brown on 05/21/2009 at 7:35:29
Re: Reggae revival
In addition to many errors and omissions in this slapped together piece by the lowly C. Farone, I have to laugh at the focus on the Western Front. The Front has not been relevant to the scene for 20 years. Farone should stick to hip hop, and try not to strain a muscle posing so hard.  
By Highest Grade on 05/22/2009 at 6:32:31
Re: Reggae revival
Mr. Brown - Thanks for the correction. Noted. Glad you enjoyed the rest of the article. Highest Grade - Make no mistake. Since I am a hip-hop reporter, I was extremely hesitant to get into this article. But I was encouraged by the more than 25 people I spoke with to pursue the project. As someone who deplores when those not-in-the-know write about my music, I thought I treaded lightly. You call it posing - I call it trying my best to understand something new. I know that "Reggae Revival" doesn't compare to all of the articles you've published to expose the reggae scene to larger audiences, but I tried my best. 
By Chris Faraone on 05/22/2009 at 10:52:51
Re: Reggae revival
 I am not from Boston so this article was very informative for me. That being said I am a White reggae musician and I find it funny that only white people get uptight about other white people playing or even writing about reggae music. I have had plenty of white folks downpress me for playing reggae but only positive vibrations from African-Americans or Carribien natives. I find this very odd. I am from New Orleans, there is a termendous history of white people playing Jazz here and no one calls them a Wigger but the minute you play reggae the hate from fellow white people just comes out and all of the sudden you don't even have the right to have an opnion and you are not dark enough to write an article aobut it. I don't have dreads and I aint no Rast but like the man said "him that feels it knows it."Reggae is on the rise and natty is taking over Seen?Great Article by the way and thanks for filing me in. I have plenty of Reggae friends in the Boston Area. I would love to see a show there one day or play at one. ITES from the NOLA
http://www.neworleansreggae.com
By resista on 05/22/2009 at 12:38:33
Re: Reggae revival
>As someone who deplores when those not-in-the-know write about my >musicYou ARE somebody not in the know when you write about hip hop too. The posing I refer to includes your hip hop posing, boom bap yo yo yo dawg!! I think you need to incorporate more blunt references into your writing...
Your writing on all topics is the equivalent of the local cable access rap  show Heir To The Streets, a joke thing. Other than a few more heads in the Western Front this week, I wouldnt oversell the effects of your little piece.   
By Highest Grade on 05/27/2009 at 8:01:17
Re: Reggae revival
Highest Grade you should have quit after your first douchebag post.  I have a piece of advice you probably will find handy.  "It is better to keep your mouth shut and be thought a moron, than to open it and remove all doubt."  Think about it, take an advil, think about it some more.  Eventually it'll make sense for you.  Whether or not this guy's article was good or not, he admitted to crossing into a field he was unfamiliar with because he was asked.  I don't remember anyone asking you to write anything.  Maybe the lowly Highest Grade should stick to what he does best--eating mayonaise sandwiches--instead of trolling people with an actual job with his uneducated, illiterate ramblings of nerd rage.   Reggae blows anyway.
By jadyjay22 on 06/16/2009 at 7:48:15

[ 12/02 ]   Harvard Yiddish Operetta  @ Agassiz Theater
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