Over 2 Hours of Old School Reggae Vibes | JAMAaiCAN
Автор: Axum Rockwell
Загружено: 2026-02-17
Просмотров: 73
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Early Jamaican reggae from the 1960s and 1970s is where modern music truly shifted. This was the moment when ska slowed down, rocksteady softened the rhythm, and reggae found its voice — deep, confident, and unmistakably Jamaican. What started in small Kingston studios quickly became a global movement that reshaped soul, hip-hop, punk, dub, and electronic music.
In the early 1960s, reggae was still forming. Ska rhythms relaxed, basslines became heavier, and space entered the music. By the late 1960s, reggae had locked into its signature groove — slower tempos, off-beat guitar chops, and bass-led arrangements that carried both rhythm and melody. Lyrics moved away from simple dance themes and began addressing identity, hardship, faith, love, and resistance.
Artists defined this era with raw honesty and presence. Bob Marley emerged as the global voice of reggae, while Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer brought militancy, spirituality, and depth. Singers like Alton Ellis and Ken Boothe carried the emotional weight of rocksteady into early reggae with soulful vocals and timeless melodies.
Behind the artists were the studios and labels that shaped the sound. Studio One laid the foundation, often called the Motown of Jamaica. Treasure Isle refined the smoother, cooler edge of rocksteady and early reggae. As the 1970s progressed, experimentation took over. Black Ark Studio pushed boundaries with echo, distortion, and atmosphere, while King Tubby turned the mixing desk into an instrument. Lee Scratch Perry blurred the lines between reggae, dub, and sonic art.
This era matters because it was real. Recorded on tape, played by hand, mixed live, and pressed to vinyl, early reggae carries warmth, imperfection, and soul that modern music still chases. These records don’t just sound good — they feel alive.
If you want to understand reggae, you start here: Jamaica, 1960s and 1970s — where rhythm slowed down and history began.
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