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David Hinds: “Jah Vengeance” Single (2009)

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Crucial single from the frontman for Steel Pulse.  Perhaps a shout to the classic Yabby You tune.

Here is the classic tune performed by Yabby You and the Sons of Jah, a Jamaican reggae band. They made at least four records including the album Bankrupt Morality in 1978, which was co-produced by Mikey Dread.



Premiere of the Midnight Dread Radio Show, September 30, 1979

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Midnight Dread #1 September 30th, 1979 as aired live on KTIM FM, San Rafael, CA (opening 80 minutes)

“33 years ago I was busy in my San Francisco apartment preparing for my first Midnight Dread reggae radio program. What to play? What to say? I made my way north into Marin County where one of the country’s last remaining free-form commercial rock radio stations KTIM resided. Underground vibes uptown now!

Wait’ll you hear my Dread Beat Report, a scorchin’ unreleased Soul Syndicate instrumental, Tosh for NORML, new Marley… Isn’t it time to time travel to the glory days of classic progressive roots rock reggae? Yes I.”

-Doug Wendt for Midnight Dread

Midnight Dread #1 September 30th 1979, KTIM FM San Rafael, CA (first 80 minutes)

1- Intro  “Opening montage & talk”  1:43
2- Steel Pulse “Sound System”  5:34
3- Israel Vibration “Prophet Has Arise”  4:42
4- Wailing Souls “Feel The Spirit” 7″  3:49
5- The Mighty Three  “Satta” 7″  3:34
6- Sheena Spirit & The Third Eyes “Reggae Pounding” 7″  4:36
talk
7- Peter Tosh NORML Public Service Announcement / Midnight Dread Station ID  :49
8- Sharon Forrester “Love Don’t Live Here Anymore” 12″  4:04
9- Sly & Robbie “War Of The Gods”  3:56
10- Bob Marley & The Wailers ”Rastaman Live Up” 7″  4:28
11- Bob Marley & The Wailers “Ambush” 7″  3:01
12- Bob Marley & The Wailers “Wake Up & Live” 7″  4:12
13- Bunny Wailer “Rasta Dub”  4:21
talk
14- Doug Wendt “Dread Beat Report” -reggae news from & for the San Francisco Bay Area-  5:44
15- Well Pleased & Satisfied “News Carrier” 7″  2:49
16-  Linton Kwesi Johnson “Sonny’s Lettah (Anti-Sus Poem)”  3:52
17- The Mighty Diamonds “Bodyguard”  4:13
18- Soul Syndicate “The Mark Of The Beast” (unreleased instrumental)  5:41
19- Jah Woosh ”Marijuana Wiorld Tour”  3:16
20- The I-Threes “Many Are Called” 7″  5:32
talk
21- Doug Wendt intro & dread bit into start of a Steven Matthew David classic ‘Top Of The Hill Daly City” ad…

DOWNLOAD

This is the very first show of hun-dreads that ran on various stations between 1979 & 1997
Midnight Dread broadcasts new shows daily at http://worldOneradio.org/ 12am Pacific
More info / other archived programs http://www.midnightdread.com/midnight.html
Press clippings http://www.midnightdread.com/PressPage3.html
“Finest radio I’ve ever heard”-Liz Dunn, San Francisco Calendar
Midnight Dread full up website http://www.midnightdread.com
Doug Wendt’s live band http://www.ghosttownsound.com/
Facebook http://www.facebook.com/Midnightdread
Do some serious time traveling and listen up!


Steel Pulse Live at Montreux, 1979

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Steel Pulse’s short set at the 1979 Montreux Jazz Festival includes several tunes from my favorite Steel Pulse album TRIBUTE TO THE MARTYRS – crucial roots album (produced by legendary Wailers engineer Karl Pitterson). Great set.  Great sound.
Also, there is a detailed article about Steel Pulse from MUSICIAN MAGAZINE 1982.
Steel Pulse
July xx, 1979 Le Casino,
Montreux Jazz Festival,
Switzerland
SBD > FM > my 2nd gen cassette sony EF60 > WAV > CD-R > FLAC 8
Setlist
01 Intro_Uncle George
02 Jah Pickney – R.A.R.
03 Handsworth Revolution
04 Babylon Makes The Rules
05 Reggae Fever
06 Biko’s Kindred Lament
07 Ku Klux Klan Sound System
DOWNLOAD LOSSLESS AUDIO (FLAC)

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Steel Pulse Live at Ritz Theatre, NYC, August 13, 1982 (feat. Al Anderson)

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Included here is a great audio recording of the FM broadcast of Steel Pulse’s performance at NYC’s The Ritz on Friday, August 13, 1982.  The set is short – only 7 tracks – but the performance is noteworthy for a couple of reasons.  First, Al Anderson, former lead guitarist with Bob Marley and the Wailers and also for Peter Tosh during his first tour, joins the band here and gives a knockout performance.  Also, the set features tunes from True Democracy album which was just released a few months earlier in May 1982.  The album was recorded over 25 days in Denmark, with legendary reggae producer Karl Pitterson (Bob Marley and the Wailers).  While True Democracy does see Steel Pulse return somewhat to their political roots of Handsworth Revolution and Tribute to the Martyrs, it is also more light-hearted in the vein of Reggae Fever (Caught You).  True Democracy peaks at #120 on Billboard’s Top Pop Albums chart in 1982.

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Untitled

Steel Pulse w/ Al Anderson
The Ritz Theatre, NYC
August 13, 1982
WBAI broadcast 99.5 FM (Labrish/Habte Selassie at the controls)
Source: WBAI > Maxell UD XL II C 90 > Kenwood W4040 > Xitel Inport > Hard Drive > Wav ( PCM 1411
kbps, 16 bit stereo, 44 KHz ) > Flac 8.
01 Drug Squad 5:37
02 Blues Dance Raid 7:25
03 Ku Klux Klan 5:08
04 Man No Sober 6:53
05 Ravers 9:15
06 Habte outo 1:31
Total: 35:49
DOWNLOAD LOSSLESS (FLAC) AUDIO
Many thanks to The Librarian for seeding this show!

Steel Pulse: Live, Suwanee Music Festival, 2011

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A superb recording of an outstanding performance by Steel Pulse at the Suwanee Music Festival in Live Oak, FL on October 22, 2011.

Untitled

Steel Pulse
Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park Meadow Stage
Live Oak, Florida
October 22, 2011
01 Intro > Find It…Quick
02 Rally Round
03 Prodigal Son
04 Chant A Psalm
05 Pan Africans Unite
06 Blues Dance Raid
07 Leggo Beast
08 Not King James Version > Drug Squad
09 Your House
10 Steppin’ Out
11 Ku Klux Klan > Soldiers
12 Ravers > Reggae Fever
13 Blazing Fire
DOWNLOAD LOSSLESS (FLAC) AUDIO
Here is a press article profiling Steel Pulse that was published in New Musical Express on May 1, 1982.  Click through to read in our digital document library.

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Steel Pulse Live Paradiso, Amsterdam 1983

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Steel Pulse sometimes gets a bum rap for being too “pop” or radio friendly.  I could not disagree more.  I am a roots fan to the core, and I own everything Steel Pulse has released.  Listen to their first 4 albums and tell me they are not a roots band.  David Hinds writes some of the hardest lyrics you will ever hear in a reggae tune.  Take one of my favorites, “Unseen Guest,” which opens my favorite album, Tribute To The Martyrs:
“Down in the dungeon
I heard them constructing, the scaffold
Where . . . I’ll be lynched aloft high
The thoughts of me to die
Rocking like a pendulum,
Anyway it does’nt matter cause
I’ll be swinging to the rhythms of heh.
Jah Jah watch over I”
And I could go on for days quoting brutal lyrics like that.  Much respect David Hinds and the Steel Pulse crew!  They will always get pure love from the MIDNIGHT RAVER BLOG…
Enjoy this amazing performance from 1983.

Untitled

Steel Pulse Live at Paradiso Amsterdam
26 November 1983
Good FM Recording.
01-George Jackson
02-Biko
03-Blues Dance Raid
04-Soldiers
05-Rally Round The Flag
06-Handsworth Revolution
07-Riot
08-Chant A Psalm
09-Sound System
10-Drug Squad
11-Ravers

12-Man No Sober
DOWNLOAD LOSSLESS (FLAC) AUDIO
Album review from New Musical Express March 6, 1982

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Forward Exactly 33 Years; Midnight Dread KTIM Radioactive Mixology!

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33 years to the day of its original Dread-cast late Sunday night/early Monday morning February 4th 1980 I mastered & digitized this eighth ever radio program off its original dolby chrome cassette. Musical curative curation that still needs airing. Several unique live-on-air radio mixes using as many sources as possible appear; supered & layered dub-wise selection without objection. Mostly recent releases. Good times for conscious sound judgement. Listen for the Pink Floyd mystery phone booth clue if you want to witness the world premiere of  “The Wall” that Thursday at L.A. Memorial Spots Arena courtesy of KTIM! “Let’s Make A Profit Out Of Our Problem” by Max Romeo & “Man Hungry” by Sugar Minott are a just a couple of its highlights:

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 (Midnight Dread debuted in September 1979 on KTIM, commercial radio in the North Bay Area.  It moved to  KQAK The Quake in 1984 & later to KFOG, both major San Francisco rock stations. Other shows/news collected here on Midnight Raver’s Midnight Dread page: http://midnightraverblog.com/midnight-dread/ Broadcast regularly from San Francisco’s KUSF & KFOG into the 1990s, Midnight Dread now airs new shows daily: http://worldOneradio.org/ 12am Pacific Time More information & other archived programs: http://www.midnightdread.com/midnight.html)

Mass Herb-Icide! Ganja Catapult Sensibration for NORML May 12 1980 Midnight Dread #19

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"No differences" chants Toots Hibbert & The Bredren as the herbal meditation begins in the round midnight posse circle of this 33 years ahead Midnight Dread four hour radio program. Kaya anthems abound in the multitude like Sambo Jim's deep & deeper "Collie Burning" featured in this opening eighty minute segment. Hunter S. Thompson protege, lawyer Michael Stepanian says a few words at a February 13th, 1980 NORML (National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws) signature raising event for CMI-80 (the California Marijuana Initiative for 1980) held at the Sleeping Lady Cafe in Fairfax, California just down the road from KTIM's home studio base in San Rafael. A smokin' Nigerian Reggae & Highlife band Lokoto play two great live tracks from the Sleeping Lady that same night. One of the first San Francisco bay area reggae bands Jah Love whose lead singer Josh went on to sing for Reggae Jackson (Jimmy Foot's band before The Rhyth-O-Matics) play "Jah Love", a never released studio gem from Sausalito's 'dredgetown experience' pioneeering roots rock reggae outfit. Several Marin County musicians lent a hand including Frank Hubnick & The Music Wizards, Prune Music, The Record Plant, & Wally Heider's Studio in San Francisco. Cynthia Johnson speaks live on the air for NORML. Change comes slow. So lift up you conscience & get ready for a noon high 'Light Up For Liberty' rally planned for May 13th. Don't be late for the future!

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Dreadcasting & streaming liquid musical jewels with daily 21st Century Midnight Dread programs at 12am including deja views often heard in Wendt’s Best of All Worlds slot when noon is high. Become conscious with the indigenous sounds of Native Son Rising curated by Doug everyday at 6am (all Pacific Times). Explore more Midnight Dreadness here.



Steel Pulse “Handsworth Revolution” / “Revolution Version”

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This right here is a first.  Unless you are in possession of one of Steel Pulse’s 12-inch singles, which are fairly rare to come by, you have probably never heard a Steel Pulse dub track.  I’m not sure why they have not explored their own music through dub, but I do plan to ask David Hinds this very question when I do the interview (soon come I hope).

Here you have the opening track to their debut album and a real stunner.  Think about it.  This is the very first time that many people are hearing Steel Pulse.  If this opener did not grab each and every listener by the throat, then they are just not reggae fans.  It’s just that simple.  Hinds’ vocal is not only pitch-perfect, but his message both positive yet apprehensive.  Deep.  Almost Marley-esque:

I say the people of Handsworth, know that
One hand wash the other so they say
So let’s join hands my bredren
Make the way for our children (our children, our children)
And their children (their children, their children)
Ensuring that they get life’s fair share of…
Equality…
Doesn’t justice stand for all
Doesn’t justice stand for all
Doesn’t justice stand for all mankind
We find society putting us down
Crowning us, crowning us, crowning us, crowning us
A place of Evil, OH, OH
Handsworth means us the Black People
Handsworth means us the Black People
We’re taiklng now. Speaking Jah Jah language!

I lost many hours, maybe even days, listening to this album when I first found it.  Bombtrack after bombtrack after bombtrack.
“Handsworth Revolution,” “Bad Man,” “Soldiers,” “Sound Check,” “Prodigal Son,” “Ku Klux Klan,” “Prediction,” “Macka Splaff”  all in rapid succession.  A virtual atom bomb dropped right into the crowded streets of Babylon in 1978, coming five months after the release of their first single for Island records “Ku Klux Klan.”  The album, brilliantly produced by Bob Marley’s own engineer Karl Pitterson, reaches #9 on the British charts just 10 days after its release. The band would soon support Bob Marley & The Wailers on a 12-date European tour in June and July 1978, including concerts in Paris, Ibiza, Gothenburg, Stockholm, Oslo, Rotterdam, Amsterdam, and Brussels. The tour kicked off with an outdoor festival at the New Bingley Hall in Stafford. David Hinds recalls:

We learned a lot of discipline on that tour that rubbed off – rehearsal, execution on stage, how to tour, stability [...] that’s when the doors really started to open for us. It has always been one of the most memorable moments of my career. To play as part of that package exposed Steel Pulse to audiences that literally were in awe of our message. Of course, being formally introduced through Bob Marley helped us tremendously. Playing for audiences, especially those in Paris who saw the force of Steel Pulse and the force of Bob Marley play on the same bill, enabled us to sell out shows every time since then.

The dub track included here is just phenomenal.  Unspeakably strong.  Here’s for a Steel Pulse in Dub album come real soon!

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Steel Pulse “Save Black Music” 12″ (Elektra)

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And here we have yet another Steel Pulse vinyl single, “Save Black Music” from the Grammy Award-winning album Babylon The Bandit.  Overall, a mediocre effort from Steel Pulse with several outstanding tracks.  The opening track “Save Black Music” is striking as the opening track.  This is a different sound and vibe from Steel Pulse.  Although David Hinds’ lyrics remain conscious and strong, Steel Pulse enter a horrid phase characterized by the overuse of synthesizers, which was a development that emerges in the 1980s.  Still an interesting listen if you are a fan.  The first track on this 12″ has a distinctly different mix.  Track 2 is the instrumental and Track 3 is the LP version.

1. Save Black Music (Vocal Extended)
2. Instrumental
3. LP Version

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Weeks, James. The Reggae & African Beat (Archive- 1983-1988)6. 2 (Apr 1, 1987)- 26-29-1

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Whether New Sheriff or Pope In Town, Un Paso Adelante, Roots Reggae Pounding inna Midnight Dread #29 July 21st 1980

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Read it in the news. Lee Perry’s brand new foot long forty five “Bafflin’ Smoke Signal” is the latest Midnight Dread on KTIM Reggae Rocker of the week 33 years ahead this twilight when all-time radio ‘Kay-Tea-I-Am’ fills the sky with MD reggae waves still rippling. Bob Marley’s UPRISING is one week away so The Sheriff of Trenchtown draws down The Deputy one more time to start the show. Carlos Malcolm giddy-ups “Bonanza Ska” as Duppy’s ghost town sound shows early inklings. Maytones elevate “Madness” to new levels of sanity so Madness must go one step beyond in Spanish. The Maytals celebrate that elating end of work-day feeling, Matumbi & I Roy easy squeeze out a lickle more loving, Sheena Spirit & The Third Eyes boisterously boost JA sounds, while Pulse, Spear, Dennis, Gladiators, Selecter & many others chime in. Just another Sunday night on San Francisco bay area radio when public service programming dominated the dial as Midnight Dread, one of the only musical offerings in that time slot, was actually delivering the service folks needed most. Marley may be the new Sheriff in town but Lee Scratch Perry dons his spectacles & hard-earned Popehat while brandishing his holy staff rodly correcting the powers-that-be right in front of a Swiss Bank as he declares The Vatican City of Inequity bankrupt & Reggae the New World Order:

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Dreadcasting & streaming smokin’ audio selections with daily 21st Century Midnight Dread programs at 12am including repeat plays often heard in Wendt’s Best of All Worlds slot when noon is high. Wake up with the indigenous sounds of Native Son Rising curated by Doug everyday at 6am (all Pacific Times). Explore more Midnight Dreadness here and with MD on Raver.


Steel Pulse 12″ Vocals and Dubs (A Midnight Raver Mix)

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Big up my good friend Christian for hooking me with these vital Steel Pulse tracks for the mix.

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1. Steel Pulse – Roller Skates (remix)
2. Steel Pulse – Your House (Version)
3. Steel Pulse – Sound System (12″ mix)
4. Steel Pulse – Ku Klux Clan  (12″ mix)
5. Steel Pulse – Bun Dem (12″ mix)
6. Steel Pulse – Babylon Makes The Rules (12″ mix)
7. Steel Pulse – Nyah Love (12″ mix)
8. Steel Pulse – Macka Splaff (Live)
9. Steel Pulse – Caught You Dancin’ (12″ mix)
10. Steel Pulse – Don’t Give In (12″ mix)
11. Steel Pulse – Heart of Stone (12″ mix)
12. Steel Pulse – A Who Responsible (Version)
13. Steel Pulse – Steppin’ Out  (extended mix)

 


New David Hinds for 2013

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David Hinds of Steel Pulse is a busy rasta these days.  While currently in the studio recording a brand new album with Steel Pulse, Hinds still finds time to do his solo thing.  “Soon Come”/”Forward Rockers Dub” is his newest single produced by the Heartical & BDF crews, the same who produced his “Jah Vengeance” single a little while back.

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Natty Dread Marches on Washington: David Hinds of Steel Pulse talks Trayvon Martin, Martin Luther King, and a new album and documentary with MIDNIGHT RAVER.

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When you consider the great reggae poets of the past forty years, names like Linton Kwesi Johnson, Mutabaruka, Benjamin Zephaniah come to mind for most.  However, there is another name that deserves mention among the greats, and that is David Hinds, lead singer of the world’s most popular and successful reggae band,  Steel Pulse.

David’s name doesn’t immediately come to mind because the band is so good at producing the type of danceable, feel good reggae that many fans love to hear.  But if you dig deeper into these danceable reggae hits, you find some of the most eloquent lyrics ever written about the black experience, racism, the horrors of the slave trade, and the diaspora.  Take their first release for the Island label titled “Ku Klux Clan,” a tune about the evils of racism, a song often performed as a visual parody of the sect on stage.  You cannot come with a more danceable reggae rhythm.  However, take a read of the second verse:

“To be taught a lesson not to walk alone
I was waiting for the Good Samaritan
But waiting was hopeless
It was all in vain
The Ku Klux Klan back again
I holla and I bawl (Ku Klux Klan)
Dem naw let me go now
Dem seh one nigger the less
The better the show
Stand strong blackskin and take your blow
The Ku, Ku Klux Klan”

There is no doubt that David Hinds writes some of the hardest lyrics you will ever hear in a reggae tune. Take one of my favorites, “Unseen Guest,” which opens my favorite album, Tribute To The Martyrs:

“Down in the dungeon
I heard them constructing, the scaffold

Where . . . I’ll be lynched aloft high
The thoughts of me to die
Rocking like a pendulum,
Anyway it does’nt matter cause
I’ll be swinging to the rhythms of heh
Jah Jah watch over I”

Formed in 1975 in the working class Handsworth area of Birmingham, England , their debut 7″ single “Kibudu, Mansetta And Abuku” (Dip) linked the plight of urban black youth with the image of a greater African homeland. They followed suit in  1977 with the single “Nyah Luv,” which was released on the Anchor label. They were initially refused live dates in Caribbean venues in Birmingham due to their Rastafarian beliefs. Aligning themselves closely with the Rock Against Racism organization and featuring in its first music festival in early 1978, they chose to tour with sympathetic elements of the punk movement, including the Stranglers and XTC.  Eventually they found a more natural home in support slots for Burning Spear, which brought them to the attention of Island Records.

In 1978 they released their first LP for Island titled Handsworth Revolution.  Executive produced by Pete King and engineered by Karl Pitterson from Bob Marley’s Tuff Gong studio, the album still stands as one of the major landmarks in the evolution of British reggae, and one of the best-produced roots reggae albums of the 1970s.

After their fourth album for Island/Mango Reggae Fever, the band signed with Elektra and released perhaps their three most popular and financially successful albums True Democracy, Earth Crisis, and 1985′s Babylon The  Bandit, which brings the band a Grammy Award for Best Reggae Album in 1986.  The band received Grammy nominations for Victims (1991) and Rastafari Centennial (1992).

1997′s Rage and Fury included a cover version of Van Morrisson’s massive hit “Brown-Eyed Girl.”  In 2004, Steel Pulse released African Holocaust on RAS/Sanctuary.  The album included the track “Door Of No Return” a brutal look at the trans-atlantic slave trade through the eyes of a man leaving the Maison des Esclaves (House of Slaves) on Gorée Island to board a slave ship to America.  The album also featured an appearance by Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley on the track “No More Weapons.”

MIDNIGHT RAVER recently caught up with David in Washington, DC where he was participating in the 50th Anniversary of Martin Luther King’s March On Washington.

Steel Pulse has an interesting history with Washington, DC.  On May 11th, 1981, Bob Marley passed.  On the 21st of May a funeral was held in Kingston, JA for the international hero and reggae king.  That same night the band, with help from Washington, DC radio personality (and future manager of Steel Pulse) Tom Terrell, masterminded a concert which was broadcast live around the world from the legendary punk outpost the 930 Club at 930 F Street, N.W., Washington, D.C..  In 1992, during the first Presidential Inaugural for Bill Clinton, Steel Pulse was the first reggae band ever to be invited to perform at the international event (give thanks Rootsman!).  Again, just last month, David Hinds performed at the Kennedy Center for the Legacy of Bob Marley Tribute Concert sponsored by the Grammy Museum and hosted by Sirius/XM’s Dermot Hussey.

Here is our interview:

So tell me a little bit about today. Heavy day here in the US with the 50th anniversary of Martin Luther King’s March on Washington?

“Well, yes, I came here to the east coast specifically for this. I’ve got some dates lined up in California but I came here just to go to the march. Security was very tough and it really slowed things down, but when we got down on the National Mall we gathered ourselves around the Refelecting Pool at the Lincoln Memorial and listened to the speeches.”

It’s a really unique and historic opportunity that I was blessed to speak with you on this very day. In my opinion, you have spoken as eloquently as anyone with regard to the black experience and the horrors of slavery. You should be mentioned among the great Rasta poets really…Mutabaruka, Linton Kwesi Johnson, Benjamin Zephaniah. Just look at songs like “Unseen Guest,” “Tribute To The Martyrs,” “Ku Klux Klan,” “George Jackson,” Biko.”

“Really? (Laughs) Thanks man, I appreciate that.”

You were recently given an award from the United Nations for your activism right?

“Yeah, it was an award for [bringing awareness to] slavery. For bringing awareness to the whole trans-atlantic slave trade. It was March 22, 2013 to be exact. “

And a few years ago you did a great documentary on the slave trade called “Door Of No Return” (named after a track from the stellar African Holocaust album).

“Yes, we are actually working on a documentary now which encompasses the Door Of No Return. Its in the works and we hope to have it wrapped by December.”

Why was it important for you to be here today?

“Its a milestone in our history. In the history of the struggle and of the diaspora and for the world recognizing such an incredible feat. I had to be there. I had to experience a part of history that I missed. But we must also remember that there were many others who supported Martin Luther King and helped bring the people together around his message. I’m talking the Bob Dylans, the Joan Baezs, Phil Ochs, and then you had Muhammad Ali, and Malcolm X. If you look at the times through America’s eyes it was evident that something had to break. With Muhammad Ali, and Malcolm X, and the Black Panther movement it was very difficult so Martin Luther King was the obvious choice to present the message because his thing was about peace, non-violence. I say this with no disrespect to King, but without those others pushing forward I don’t know that he would have been as successful as he was. One man could not do it alone, you know.”

Talk a little bit about your thoughts on the murder of Trayvon Martin. You guys wrote a song speaking to what many still view as a case where a murderer was set free.

“Well, really I am appalled, not as much as I was when I heard the verdict but it is appalling that the jury was selected in such a way that nobody on that jury was representative of that boy’s community. I’m appalled by the way African-Americans [failed] to represent the situation. How did they allow a jury to be selected having nobody who was representative of this boy’s race, financial or economic background, social status. All of the coverage that I saw on the television involved mostly white women commenting about the case and putting the case in a certain light and supporting the assailant as if he had a right to do what he did. The whole case…a message was sent based on how a white female might view a black boy wearing a hood, or kids walking around with their pants hanging down, which is a fashionable thing among a lot of the youths out there. Here in America you don’t have a monarchy with a Prince Charles or William to look to, you have celebrities who sort of command the same attention. What I saw was a failure of the celebrities and the musicians to respond and bring the assailant to justice as far as airing their views about the situation. I mean Stevie Wonder boycotted the state after the verdict! If you check my blogs, one of the things I said in the early stages of this whole thing is that America’s justice system will be on the balance during this trial. And I also said that I hope this is not decided based on the slickness of lawyers but based on truth and rights. Think about it. Michael Vick, which is a name I never heard before until I saw that he was on trial for fighting and killing dogs, he got like a 24 month sentence for killing dogs. I think he only served like 16 months. Then there’s a man who killed a 17 year old unarmed youth and he gets off. So the dog received more justice than the 17 year old boy.”

Let me jump over for a minute and talk about what the people want to know about Steel Pulse. Are you working on a new album?

“Yes. We’ve been working on an album for about 3 years now to be honest with you but, like I said, tour commitments and such. We are also working on the documentary that will look at the entire 35 year career of this band. The hardest part is getting hold of people who helped shape the history of the band to tell their story for the film. Stevie Wonder for example used to have us around his studio all the time in the early 1980s but he’s got his people you know and maybe he doesn’t even know that we been trying to get at him. But we have a bunch of people who have been interviewed over the 2.5 years with many more to come. It won’t be like the Marley film which was very Jamaica-focused. This film you will see police and riots and punks, you know, we come from a concrete jungle.”

When can we expect to see the documentary and album, do you have a release date in mind?

“I think we should have it ready by December. Once we get to a certain point we just have to cut it and put it out. Our last album African Holocaust came out ten years ago. So it’s been ten years since we put out a proper studio album.”

Speaking of Marley, Tuff Gong just released the Kaya Deluxe Edition which has on it the Rotterdam 1978 show. You guys opened for Marley on that tour and opened with four incredible songs that night in Rotterdam. What did you learn touring with Marley?

“We learned it all. This man performed every show like it was his last. He treated every show as if he would never perform again. Very disciplined. His energy and drive in doing what he did was relentless. So that is what we tried to do after that. If we had 2 hours of rehearsal time booked in studio, we got the best from that 2 hours. That is what we took home with us. A level of discipline that we never had before. I mean we had some, but learning from the master we stepped it up. It really had a profound effect on us as a band.”

You guys tour incessantly. You are always on the road. What kind of difficulties does this bring about with the family life and your life, being gone all the time?

“With record sales falling off and the fact that we haven’t released an album in ten years, we aren’t in the position we were twenty years ago with Earth Crisis or True Democracy where every day with SoundScan you wake up and hey you sold 1000 copies here and 400 copies there. So we have to stay on the road. The amazing thing is that our audience keeps building regardless of the fact that we haven’t put out an album. We played the Del Mar Fair which we play every year and there were at least 4,000 more followers there this year than last year. I would like to come off the road because it does cause problems with family and girlfriends and spouses you know. Like right now I’m here in Washington, and they’re not here. It’s tough too because they think that as soon as you get on a plane its vacation time and you are having a great time. Like on a Caribbean tour or something. The real reason you are there is to keep a roof over your head. There are nights when you play a late show and you have an early flight and you’re just shattered but you are still high on the fact that you are doing something you love.”

David, I thank you my friend. I know you don’t do a lot of interviews and it was a real pleasure to talk with you, especially on an historic day like today.

“Thank you very much man. I hope I made some sense.”

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From left: Hinds, Raver, and Rootsman


First Look: Steel Pulse Documentary

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A great look at the forthcoming STEEL PULSE:  THE DEFINITIVE STORY.

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Steel Pulse Montreux 1979

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Rare video of Steel Pulse’s performance at Montreux 1979.  They perform many songs from the Tribute To The Martyrs album here…


Steel Pulse Live Rockpalast, Germany, 1979

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Here is a rare filmed 1979 performance from Steel Pulse on the German music television show Rockpalast.  I have also included several Steel Pulse 12″ vinyl transfers for your listening pleasure.  Many thanks to our good friend Joe Bailes for the vinyl transfers.

If you missed my interview with DAVID HINDS, CLICK HERE to read!

01.wir.skyrock.net


Reggae MD, Good For You

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Now ear this. A new full-time full up stream for Midnight & All-Day Ravers:

Radio

After many months, & special tests Doug Wendt presents a special tonic & degree,

Extra something guaranteed, recipe balanced carefully, FDA I-proved, Reggae MD
Vital vinyl, unique mixes, carefully selected, all ages, covers & lovers, uncovered & cured,

Ever-changing, never ending, hand-picked fresh playlists daily, brand new, good for you



BobLevel

Free house calls, level vibes 24/7/365,
no need to feel jumpy, no need to feel bumpy,
making sure you take your musical medicine, leaving the happy in,
Midnight Dread, Mikey Dread, Med-Ical Doctors, Reggae MD

PFC2

Wrapping you in a bubble of love, Always there when you need it,
Nurses & Doctors agree “Take the conscious party” Radio IO Reggae MD

It’s all about the music.
Be well,
Doug


Summer Arrives with Midnight Dread’s Reggae MD Global Listening Party

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“Smiling Children” in Jamaica painting by Deeling Gregory This signal never ends. Tune in now. My monthly interactive world-wide, your guide, massive & mighty Reggae Music Listening Party specially occupied all time zones Saturday June 21st, from Noon-5pm Hawaiian Time, 3-8pm Pacific, 4-9pm Mountain, 5-10pm Central & 6-11pm Eastern Time, & that’s just inside the … Continue reading

Steel Pulse Live, California Roots Festival, June 24, 2014

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A blazing 60 minutes from the best live act in reggae! CLICK HERE to read 10 things you didn’t know about Steel Pulse… I sat down with lead singer David Hinds recently when he was in DC staying with Doctor Dread.  Big up Doc for linking us!
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