|
Cosmo:
Get Up and Jump from Roots
By Mark Kirby, MusicDish.com
"Roots
rock reggae/ it's a reggae music."
These
words from Bob Marley describe the debut record by Cosmo Fraser.
In this era of the rediscovered and retro - in fashion, sportswear,
and all styles of music - it's inevitable and overdue to hear a
new artist deal with old school reggae.
The
island of Jamaica has absorbed and reflected back many forms of
African-American music throughout its history. Jazz, jump blues,
and soul music were boomed out over 100,000 watt stations in southern
Florida, Louisiana, and Atlanta, and came back from the island as
ska, rock steady, and reggae. It seems that Jamaican music is all
about hip hop and dancehall, at the expense of a vast history of
great music. And like the Neville Staple record of last year, which
mined ska and late seventy's reggae/punk fusion, Cosmo's Get
Up and Jump reinvents and creates within an old style.
"I
was born and raised in Jamaica, W.I., in the Parish of Westmoreland,
about eight miles from the world famous Negril Beach. I grew up
in the countryside, in a family of singers. Everyone on my mother's
side of the family had excellent voices. My mother, aunts and uncles
were stars in our local church choirs. When Aunt Zippy would sing,
the congregation would be on its feet from the very first note.
Our family's instruments are our voices.
"When
one is in Jamaica, the first thing one realizes is that the sound
of music is everywhere. You hear music coming from the house next
door, from the dread riding his bicycle down the street, from cars,
trucks, busses, and from one MASSIVE Sound System after another.
Everyone has their radio tuned to some station which is playing
music.
"It
is a birth right of Jamaicans to share their music with everyone,
so music is played loudly at all time and at all hours. Riding down
the street, is like your ears are on 'scan,' as everyone has another
tune on their radio."
It
is fitting that one of the two covers on this eleven-song disk is
"Sitting In Limbo" by Jimmy Cliff (from The Harder They Come soundtrack
no less). Cliff, along with Toots (and the Maytals) is clearly the
starting point for his vocal style. Though rock artists (and many
of the tradition-bound jazz players of today) respect the past to
the point of slavish imitation, Cosmo has clearly absorbed the tradition
to the point that it is integrated in his musical being and, thus,
while there are various influences, he has his own voice.
"I
have no formal training in music, but have been singing before I
could talk. I was told that the first note that came out of my mouth
was a song. Because of my ear for music, I was always discouraged
from taking formal training. In the words of Fully Fullwood, 'Don't
try to interfere with your God given talents. Many people try to
learn the things that you were born within your head.'"
"Medicine
came by accident," he reflected on his leap from med school to the
stage & studio. "I was always an excellent student, particularly
in mathematics and the sciences - the guy who got A+ and debated
the teacher about a mathematical concept or theorem. It was not
until I was a sophomore in the College of Engineering and Applied
Science at Columbia University though that I got interested in medicine.
And it only came about because I was seeing a girl who was a pre
med student at the time. I literally came back to music, even though
I had never left it, because I felt I had songs in my head which
needed to be heard. I truly feel that nothing can stop the music."
The
title track "Get
Up And Jump" sets the tone for the whole CD. It starts with
a unison band intro that is pure early Wailers. Then the tune kicks
off with a groove that is reminiscent of some of the earliest styles
of reggae straight out of the film. Though not of the sound usually
associated with the ganja-stoked, dread beat and blood image of
hardcore "roots nattie," this is song is pure old school roots reggae
because Cosmo captures the elegance and swing of early reggae, a
sound at once raw, pure and slick. Like sixties soul music. This
approach, which eschews dancehall reggae's obvious use of electronic
percussion and sound effects, makes for authenticity. In other words,
Cosmo brings the realness.
The
next track, "I
Wanna Hold you Pretty Baby," is a simple love song in the style
of early Tuff Gong reggae that evolved out of rock steady. The scratchy
guitar rhythms and tasty lead runs, along with the one-drop drum
beat, underscore his Jamaican baritone with licks that are pure
reggae. Over this percolating music, Cosmo rides in with his simple,
but nimble, vocal melody.
This
skanking roots sound is also prominent on his clever reversal of
the Police song "Every Breath You Take." What musically starts out
almost as an imitation along the lines of George Harrison's "My
Sweet Lord/He's So Fine" parallel (with the exception of the beat)
is actually an inversion of the melody and lyrically places Cosmo,
the singer, under the overbearing, ever lovin' gaze of his girlfriend:
"Every step I take/Every rule I break/ Every slip I fake, girl/
Heard you watching me/ So here I am in your hands/ Taking a hell
of a chance/ Do you know how it feels?"
Against
the happy music and lilting melody, especially on the chorus, he
sings the sentiment of many men in love - that such love is flattering,
exciting, stifling, nerve- wracking, but sweet love none the less.
How come movies don't tell this as well as this four minute song?
Through
the disk there is an ever-present churning, the groove of the band,
bubbling along like a thick stew of dub bass, drums, percussion,
guitar licks, off beat organ bleats and sinew counter riffs. This
is most evident on "Inside
My Head." The song starts with a signature 70's-reggae unison
band intro, followed by an old fashioned up tempo "one drop" drum
beat played with masterful, veteran precision and feel by Horsemouth
Wallace, and bouncing bass by George Fullwood. Tony Chin, mainstay
guitarist of the legendary Studio One back up band, the Roots Radics,
alternates scratchy, percussive guitar licks, with short, melodic
runs that dart along.
On
the Jimmy Cliff all time hit "Sitting in Limbo" Jawge Hughes lays
down a bed of appropriately restrained gospel chords, over Wallace's
beat played on Rasta maroon drums - bass drums and funda - and trap
set. More than providing accompaniment and playing the chords, these
musicians create the atmosphere that frames Cosmo's classic reggae
voice and music. His old school approach would have fallen short
had he not had the hand-of-God good fortune find a dream team of
classic reggae musicians.
How
did he hook up with such reggae luminaries like Leroy Wallace, George
Fullwood and Tony Chin? "A mutual friend, John Bent, who's been
behind the scenes in reggae for years, introduced me to Fully Fullwood
and the rest is history. He felt that with my writing abilities
and voice, Fully and the guys would make a perfect compliment. Clearly,
I know about these players for decades. They all would be members
of my All Time Reggae Band.
"Our
first time in the studio was like hand in glove. It was as though
we grew up with each other. The magic was so great with my first
solo CD (Fire This Time) that it was natural to work with these
fellows again. I just met Leroy for the first time for (this) recording.
I have never met a better drummer, reggae or otherwise. His sense
of time is impeccable."
A
personal favorite is the last song, "Cosmo Reggae Party." This simple
song, enriched by the cooking up tempo groove and the Skatalite-ish
horn hits, sets the listener dancing or swaying to joyous feeling;
it shows reggae in the best, perhaps truest light -as the party
music of warm days in a small town on the north coast of Jamaica,
in a backyard in upstate New York, in a dorm room in frozen college
town in Ohio, anywhere where roots reggae has been heard and good
times lived.
Check
out his CD on Ginger Girl Records and his web site www.cosmomusic.com.
Seen?
Provided
by the MusicDish
Network. Copyright © Tag
It 2004 - Republished with Permission
Return
to Hybrid Studios MAIN NEWS page
|