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Jun 2, 2021 · While most American iterations of ska and the more commonly-heard ska-punk have tended to be dominated by white musicians and bear a permanent association with the '90s, the genre was actually invented in Jamaica by Black artists in the mid-1960s.
- Lauren Lavin
Aug 9, 2021 · As ska slowly grew in the U.S. throughout the 1980s, it began mixing with the American punk scene, and eventually ska-punk entered the American mainstream in the 1990s, with hit songs by...
Feb 17, 2024 · The Specials formed in 1977 and two years later released their first single, “ Gangsters ,” a reworking of legendary ska singer Prince Buster’s 1964 Jamaican hit “Al Capone.”. The band ...
- Reel Big Fish
- Mighty Mighty Bosstones
- Madness
- The Specials
- The Uptones
- No Doubt
- Streetlight Manifesto
- Relient K
- Less Than Jake
- The Toasters
Even music aficionados who aren’t well-versed in ska recognize the name of Reel Big Fish. The band, which formed in Orange County in the 1990s, quickly became a fixture of third-wave ska with their debut album, Turn the Radio Off. Reel Big Fish enjoyed mainstream success with the album and “Sell Out,” the first track of their second album. They had...
The Mighty Mighty Bosstonesborrowed the sound of SoCal ska-punk but with roots in Boston. The band began playing together in 1983 and continued until they decided to call it quits in early 2022. For almost forty years, the original lineup remained, adding various brass and percussion members as their popularity grew. The Bosstones made a cameo appe...
Notable for their two-tone ska style, we have the English band Madness. They formed in 1976 and had quite the success from the onset and into the early 1980s. Even if you’re not a ska fan, you might have heard their songs “House of Fun” and “Our House.” The former was their first, and only, #1 hit in the UK, while the latter topped the chart in Can...
UK-based The Specialsis a ska band with inextricable political ties. Commenting on youth, culture, interpersonal relations, and global events, they contributed perhaps the most foundational ska sound to their country in the 1980s and beyond. They’re known for their 1980 hit single “Too Much Too Young” as well as “Ghost Town,” released the year afte...
Though The Uptoneswere a part of the Northern California ska contingent, they borrowed their sound from the British wave. They were also a band that preserved the Jamaican elements of ska without developing too far from its island origins. The Uptones’s influence in the genre found a place between the initial ‘80s UK sound and pop/reggae from the l...
Though they weren’t a pure ska band, No Doubt’s eclectic blend of musical contributions included a heavy dose of off-beat rhythms and basslines borrowed from the genre. The fusion of punk, new wave, and alternative rock that flowed from their songs gripped the musical culture of the 1990s and got significant MTV airplay. Singer Gwen Stefani and the...
One of the more modern iterations of the ska genre, Streetlight Manifestodidn’t appear on the scene until the early 2000s. Despite various lineup changes and disagreements with their recording label, the group released several albums in the past couple of decades to much acclaim. Founding member Tomas Kalnoky famously utilizes aspects of the 1950s ...
An unassuming band from Ohio, Relient Ksuccessfully crossed boundaries in more than one way. Beginning punk but adding facets of ska, pop/rock, and even gospel, they provided a clean and high-energy sound for ska fans in the late ’90s and early 2000s. They also successfully cornered the Christian listening market for punk rock while also seeing suc...
With their start in Gainesville, Florida, back in 1992, Less Than Jakehas just celebrated their 20th year of making music. The group is a noted Warped Tourveteran and has made other appearances at virtually every big music venue and festival in the past two decades. Commercial success came in 2003 with the release of their album Anthem, which had t...
Though the modern ska sound is most prevalent now, The Toasterswas one of the originators of second-wave ska. This subgenre fused Jamaican reggae and British punk traditions into an American new-wave formula, later copied quite successfully by bands like No Doubt. The Toasters formed in 1981 and tried to release their first EP in 1985 but couldn’t ...
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It was developed in Jamaica in the 1960s when Stranger Cole, Prince Buster, Clement "Coxsone" Dodd, and Duke Reid formed sound systems to play American rhythm and blues and then began recording their own songs. In the early 1960s, ska was the dominant music genre of Jamaica and was popular with British mods and with many skinheads.
- Late 1950s, Jamaica
Jul 27, 2020 · It combines elements of Caribbean mento and calypso with American jazz and rhythm and blues. Ska developed further in the 1960s when Prince Buster, Clement “Coxsone” Dodd, and Duke Reid formed “sound systems” to play American rhythm and blues and eventually recorded their own songs.
Apr 28, 2022 · In the early 1960s, a cohort came together—the Skatalites—backing singers for different producers, performing live, and making their own records to form the backbone of ska. Many other backing groups were in fact the Skatalites under different names.