spacer
All in Music Features
spacer
Next Article

Music Features

Sound Lab

Clement “Coxsone” Dodd’s Studio One genius  
By WAYNE MARSHALL  |  April 12, 2006

spacer When people think reggae, the first name that comes to mind is Bob Marley. Far fewer know the name of the man who not only gave Marley and the Wailers their start but who was perhaps more instrumental in laying reggae’s solid foundation than any other individual: Clement “Coxsone” Dodd. A sound-system innovator, record producer, and the first black studio owner in Jamaica, Dodd parlayed entrepreneurial acumen and impeccable taste into one of the largest legacies in recorded music at Studio One, his studio and label. Studio One played a central role in the Jamaican ska, rocksteady, and reggae booms of the ’60s. And much of that music is now being reissued by the Rounder imprint Heartbeat.

In addition to issuing hundreds of albums and countless hit singles, Studio One boasted a house band featuring the island’s finest players. Having cut their teeth in Kingston jazz bands and on the hotel and cruise-ship circuit, they were versatile virtuosos. Under the guidance of Dodd and his team of crack engineers — among them, Sylvan Morris and a young Lee “Scratch” Perry — Studio One’s band produced a corpus of backing tracks, or riddims, that would outpace even the original songs recorded on them, providing what has amounted to a Jamaican “Real Book,” of sorts. These riddims and recordings (sound quality is crucial to their character) have been versioned, re-licked, and sampled thousands of times over.

It was Dodd’s engagement with American culture — in particular, the music of African-Americans — that would prove his ticket to success. The sound of Studio One — a sound as engaged with contemporary R&B and soul as with Jamaican folk and pop traditions — expressed a new sort of cultural alignment for many Jamaicans. Jamaicans tuned into the sounds of America via radio broadcasts. Dodd himself was inspired by the jive-talk stylings of black radio DJs and began collecting R&B records while working in Florida. He returned to Kingston with big speakers and big plans. Before long, “Sir Coxsone’s Downbeat” was the eminent sound system (the name for mobile discos with stacks of speakerboxes) on the downtown scene.

As Dodd relates in liner notes to the reissues — The Best of Studio One,Full Up: More Hits from Studio One,Downbeat the Ruler: Killer Instrumentals from Studio One, and Bob Marley and the Wailers: One Love at Studio One 1964-1966 — when the American music industry shifted from R&B to rock and roll, he decided to meet the dancehall’s demand for more boogie-woogie and jump blues. The Jamaican music industry began advancing a sound as local as it was international. And Studio One became its premier outlet.

1  |  2  |  3  |   next >
 spacer Topics: Music Features , Entertainment, Music, Bob Marley,  More spacer " />
| More


Most Popular
The Current Issue
spacer

Table of Contents

Cover Archive

Masthead | Authors | Contact us

Blogs
Q&A: Behind The Globe's “68 Blocks” Series (now available as an e-book)
Phlog  |  March 06, 2013 at 4:04 PM
Filibuster? I Hardly Knew....
Talking Politics  |  March 06, 2013 at 3:49 PM
[dance party review] Some drama, more not: tINI @ Naga 02.28.13
On The Download  |  March 06, 2013 at 2:12 PM
[pre-sxsw] Adventures in Monterrey, Mexico and McAllen, TX
March 06, 2013 at 1:10 PM
BEST 2013: Best Place to Eat Your Veggies
Phlog  |  March 06, 2013 at 11:13 AM
spacer  More: Phlog  |  Music  |  Film  |  Books  |  Politics  |  Media  |  Election '08  |  Free Speech  |  All Blogs
ARTICLES BY WAYNE MARSHALL
spacer
  • spacer   MEGA UP YOURS  |  February 01, 2012
    This week, some 50 million users may begin to permanently lose whatever it is that they stored on Megaupload.
  • spacer   NANCY BAYM RETHINKS THE MUSIC INDUSTRY  |  April 21, 2011
    In the wake of the recording industry's crash, a cottage industry has sprung up around rethinking the commercial future of music.  

spacer  See all articles by: WAYNE MARSHALL

LATEST SLIDESHOWS
spacer
Scavenged sculpture and Dead Sea scrolls: 10 heady spring exhibits blooming in New England galleries
spacer
Hive Minded: Spring accessories

spacer All Slideshows Send us your photos-->



Featured Articles in Music Features:
spacer

Six to Watch @ SXSW

spacer

Tame Impala’s new surround sound

spacer

The empowerment of Kate Nash

spacer

The modern retro of Jesse Dee

spacer

What's F'n Next? Alt-J

gipoco.com is neither affiliated with the authors of this page nor responsible for its contents. This is a safe-cache copy of the original web site.