Words by Rasta Claus—

Words by Jesse Serwer, Eddie STATS and Martei Korley
With a documentary about the hidden history of lovers rock coming out this week (in U.K. theaters only, naturally), a primer on this somewhat misunderstood sub-genre seemed in order. At its heart, lovers rock is two things, a distinctly British musical movement which developed and evolved in London’s Caribbean communities in the 1970s, and the “Quiet Storm” to reggae’s R&B, a mellower version of the basic blueprint that developed expressly for intimate occasions, slow dancing or perhaps melancholic daydreaming about that one that got away. While the sound was re-transmitted back to the original source in Jamaica by artists who came to England to record or just fell in love with the sound—Sugar Minott, Dennis Brown, Gregory Isaacs and Al Campbell, to name a few—we’ve focused this list on those British artists who most embodied the style.
Posted by Martei Korley

May 19th marks the 85th birthday of Malcolm X or El-Haj Malik El-Shabazz. In years bygone that meant that all of the mom and pops stores on 125th Street in Harlem would close up shop at midday in honor of the leader and human rights activist. As the memory of Spike Lee’s “Malcolm X”(1992) faded, so did the re-surge in activism and by the early 2000s most of the shops only locked up at three pm. Since then big business have closed down many family owned businesses on Harlem’s main street, now renamed Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd. Among the new eateries which have sprung up on ‘two-fifth’; several are Caribbean with names like Uptown Juice Bar, MoBay, Golden Crust.