Enter your search keyword(s):

Click to search our directories-AllWebHunt, Encyclopedic, TopChoice, Or Google, Alexa, About & Yahoo:

 


Personal Pages
Home / Top / Arts / Music / Styles / Rock / Ska / Personal Pages


See also:
Related articles

Edit | Discuss Article

Ska

Were you looking for the square kilometer array?


      
Ska is a form of Jamaican music which began in the late 1950s. Combining elements of traditional mento and calypso with an American rhythm and blues sound, it was a precursor in Jamaica to rocksteady, and later, reggae.

The sound of the ska was created at Studio One in Kingston, Jamaica.

The music of ska is known for the placement of the accented guitar and piano rhythms on the upbeats. The word "ska" may have onomatopoeic origins in a tradition of poetic or possibly even musical rhythms.

Guitarist Ernest Ranglin said that "the offbeat guitar scratching that he and other musicians played was referred to as 'skat! skat! skat!'"

Ska's popularity has waxed and waned since its original inception, and has had revivals of note in England in the 1980s (known as Two-Tone), and another wave of popularity in the 1990s (referred to as Third Wave Ska).

The Two-Tone era was named after the similarly titled record label, formed by Jerry Dammers, keyboardist of The Specials. Other artists on this label included The Selecter and the commercially successful Madness.

Some of the biggest selling American bands of Third Wave Ska were The Mighty Mighty Bosstones and No Doubt, both of whom fused ska with rock and punk. Some argue that the fusion of the two types of music caused it to lose almost all Jamaican elements.

Ska around the world is seemingly going back to it's roots. More and more bands are playing traditionally influenced or even full blown traditional ska. These bands include The Slackers, Pressure Cooker, The Debonaires, Westbound Train, and The Soul Captives.

Table of contents
1 Ska Musicians of Note
2 Lyrics
3 Further Reference
4 External Links

Ska Musicians of Note

First Wave (original)

Second Wave (Two-Tone Era)

Third Wave

Lyrics

The Ska Lyric Archive - The most complete reference for ska lyrics

Skaponk - A wide database of ska and punk lyrics

Jamaica Lyrics - Ska Lyrics

Further Reference

  • Timothy White, Catch a Fire: The Life of Bob Marley, UK:Corgi Books, 1983

External Links

Reggae
Reggae genres
Mento - Rocksteady - Ska
Roots rock reggae - Dub - Dub poetry - Dee jaying - Dancehall - Ragga - Raggamuffin - Rockers reggae
Other topics
Jamaica - Rastafarianism - Haile Selassie - Marcus Mosiah Garvey


Source | Copyright


Webmasters: Add your website here:

Readers: Edit | Discuss Listings

Meredith's Site
Information and links on a few aspiring ska bands, plus personal information.
http://www.geocities.com/merbear0/

Ska Jerk
Dedicated to Jamaican, rocksteady and neo-traditional ska music. Featuring a streaming MP3 broadcast and background genre information.
http://members.tripod.com/rytradska/



Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
 Submit a Site - Open Directory Project (modified) - Become an Editor

Modified contents copyright 2010. All rights reserved.