Linton
Kwesi Johnson is one of the unsung greats of reggae. Maybe he’s not as well
known these days because he veers further afield from the dominant reggae ideas
than many performers of his era. While others responded to the positive vibes,
ganja, and Jah that run through reggae, Johnson was moved by its political
messages and saw untapped potential the
re for more great music.
Johnson was born in Jamaica and
moved with his family to England in 1963 when he was 11. After earning a degree
in sociology, he began performing his poetry publicly, backed by musicians
playing the reggae that he grew up with and loved. He is generally considered
the founder of dub poetry, a style of reggae in which prepared poetry – as opposed
to the more improvised toasting style of reggae vocals - is recited over dub
music. Once he connected with performer/bandleader/producer Dennis “Blackbeard”
Bovell all the pieces were set in place and Johnson debuted with his 1978 album
Dread Beat an’ Blood (credited to Poet and the Roots). With lyrics
written in Jamaican patois, one of Johnson’s most brilliant features is his
ability to condense intellectual and social analysis to the slang of the music
he loves and of his people.
But lyrics are not his only
strength – in fact, for someone who puts so much care into the words he has a
remarkable gift for music and melody, anchoring songs with hooks that are
married to the lyrics to drive home his messages. He kicks the album off with
“Want Fi Goh Rave,” a song about young people barely scraping by to
survive – by begging, stealing, violence – but not giving up hope. And
once the song’s hard message has made its point the music takes over halfway
through, as is common with Johnson because he takes it as seriously as his
words, and the band is co-equal to his work, not merely there to support or
back his words, brilliant though they are. The music here is more dialed in
than the great debut, and he’d get even better as well, with 1984’s Making
History.
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And like all great political
artists, Johnson’s work is both time-specific, speaking to the particulars of
his situation and those of people around him, and universal, placing these
issues in a broader analysis and social framework – the Anti-Sus Poem speaks to
the exact situation in NYC 34 years later. Forces of Victory is
propulsive, smart, catchy, and politically charged – it’s everything I like in
music in one package, like so much of LKJ’s best. Seek out whatever you can
find – it’ll be worth it.
- Patrick Brown
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