May 24, 2013
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Posts tagged: Punk rock

Heds and Dreds: Bad Brains “Into The Future” Now

Words by DJ Gravy–

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Fashion Fridays: Q+A with Marcus Burrowes of RockersNYC


Words by Jesse Serwer, Portraits by Martei Korley —

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Toppa Top 10: Ten Reggae Tunes That Influenced Punk Rock (Selected by Earl Gateshead)


Words by Earl Gateshead—


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Come Back Around: Download Jimmy Cliff’s “One More” + “Rebirth” Album Details

Words by Jesse Serwer—

We’re betting you know by now that Jimmy Cliff has a new album produced by punk rock luminary Tim Armstrong (Rancid, Operation Ivy) on the way. Well, that record, a follow up to the Sacred Fire EP the duo hit us with last year, now has a name, a track listing and a release date. Rebirth, which includes 10 original tracks plus covers of The Clash’s “Guns of Brixton” and Rancid’s “Ruby Soho,” drops July 17 through Universal Music. And the man who told us The harder they come, the harder they fall and You can get if if you really want may yet have another song for the ages in his bag. “One More,” which he performed on David Letterman a few weeks back, is a TUNE, an anthem for music lovers and makers that captures the ecstasy and anticipation of closing time, when all everybody wants to hear is jus’ one more.

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Ari Up, 1962-2010

Words by Jesse Serwer

Punk-reggae fusionist Arianna Forster, AKA Ari Up of the Slits, has died at age 48 of an unspecified “serious” illness, according to her stepfather John Lydon (yes, Johnny Rotten was her stepfather). The all-female, barely-teenaged Slits were, along with the Clash (whose Joe Strummer, it is said, taught Ari how to play guitar), among the first punk acts to inject their sound with a heavy dose of reggae flavor. Like any worthwhile punk band, they flamed out just as quickly as they arrived, releasing just two albums—1979′s Cut (its notorious cover art depicting the mostly underaged band mostly naked, but for some mud) and 1981′s Return of the Giant Slits—before disbanding. Up, however, immersed herself deeper into Jamaican culture and reggae music following the legendary group’s demise, recording with dub producer Adrian Sherwood as the New Age Steppers in the ’80s, growing epicly long dreads and, eventually, moving to the Jamaican countryside and, later, Kingston. (She later split her time in Flatbush, Brooklyn as well). In yard, Up rolled with Stone Love, and adopted the nickname “Madussa,” she told the Montreal Mirror, after Jamaicans began derisively calling her Medusa for her unusual look.

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