Roots Reggae Library

The Roots Reggae Library is a website that lists reviews of discographies of reggae artists. It contains detailed written descriptions of albums, songs and the style of the artist. There are currently 33 discographies on the website. The content of the website consists of information on a large range of albums within the reggae genre, some of which are extremely rare and hard to get elsewhere. A number of artists discographies are uniquely indexed and/or newly created. Songs with lyrics other than English are interpreted in English. This is done in collaboration with various people around the world.

Roots Reggae Library
Official Roots Reggae Library logo
Available inEnglish
Created by Anton Eise de Vries
Editors Anton Eise de Vries
URLwww.roots-reggae-library.com
LaunchedMay 2012
  • Key Associates

Marenda Douglas
Abubacar Sanoko
Ahmed Ndao

History

The Roots Reggae Library was started in May 2012 as an initiative to index, store and analyse reggae music, with a particular emphasis on the transition period of rocksteady into roots reggae. Although the first edition published in May 2012 focused on Bob Marley, the author communicated his intent to dedicate special attention to other musicians besides “the King of Reggae”.[1] The primary focus of the Roots Reggae Library is to create a single library of both Jamaican and non-Jamaican reggae music.

The initial name of the website was This Is Crucial Reggae. It was changed to Roots Reggae Library in order to prevent confusion with the This Is Crucial Reggae series that features best of albums of reggae artists.

Content

The slogan of the Roots Reggae Library is "read, listen, collect". The website provides descriptions and reviews of albums, as well as individual songs. The library is a growing collection of reggae music, including descriptions of rare albums and artists. In recent times it has aimed to add hard to find African reggae records.[2]

The Roots Reggae Library brings forth a unique index of the music from The Wailers, drawn from the period prior to their signing to Island Records and the release of Catch a Fire. The music of The Wailers has been categorized into 17 albums, of which 6 are predominantly from the 1963–1967 ska period and 11 from the 1968–1972 rocksteady period. In a similar fashion, the singles recorded by The Tartans are compiled into two albums. The library has compiled three albums of the Twinkle Brothers with songs not previously released on albums. Two albums of The Congos featuring various other artists were indexed. There are also two Steel Pulse albums made, of which one is an album with collaborations with other artists, similar to those albums described by The Congos. Single new albums of Ijahman Levi, Judy Mowatt, The Abyssinians, The Gladiators and Talisman can be found. These albums vary in time frame, whereas some are collections of recently released singles, others go further back in time to include singles that were not released on any album.[3]

Besides those mentioned above, other editions have featured well known artists such as Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer. The list of Jamaican artists on the website is long, including musicians such as Ijahman Levi, Prince Lincoln, The Congos, The Gladiators, the Twinkle Brothers, Israel Vibration, The Abyssinians and Judy Mowatt, the only female artist. There are various artists from other Caribbean islands, Africa, and artists from elsewhere with African or Caribbean roots.[4]

The discographies described on the website are generally the original albums released by the artists, with the addition of singles and outtakes. This has been done in an attempt to create a full index of the discography of each artist and to describe everything an artist has ever released in studio.

YouTube

The YouTube Channel of This Is Crucial Reggae was initiated in October 2012. Although far from representing the current YouTube channel of the Roots Reggae Library, it provided a fundamental step to create the current concept. Initially all library's music was available on YouTube in order for people to listen to what had been reviewed on the Roots Reggae Library website. However, the author announced in December 2015 that albums will no longer be uploaded in order to refrain from breaking copyright regulations. Instead the channel will host a single video per artist or group to account for their discography, highlighting extras and rarities.[5]

Index

Artist / BandCountryDate PublishedAlbumsSongsPlaying TimeWebsite TabPublishing Location
Bob Marley Jamaica2012/05910706:49:241 Groningen, Netherlands
Peter Tosh Jamaica2012/061010907:56:312 Groningen, Netherlands
Prince Lincoln Jamaica2012/0766505:09:434 Bennekom, Netherlands
Black Roots England2012/1078705:37:1720 Windhoek, Namibia
Talisman England2012/1053802:50:0921 Windhoek, Namibia
The Gladiators Jamaica2012/122830518:20:1413 Lubango, Angola
The Wailers Jamaica2013/031725512:04:1810 Jitra, Malaysia
The Tartans Jamaica2014/0621800:49:5111 Jitra, Malaysia
The Congos Jamaica2014/101519713:47:0612 Jitra, Malaysia
Steel Pulse England2014/111315711:16:0319 Jitra, Malaysia
Israel Vibration Jamaica2014/121820614:41:148 Jitra, Malaysia
Alpha Blondy Ivory Coast2015/011719514:20:4128 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
The Abyssinians Jamaica2015/0256404:02:3914 Jitra, Malaysia
Lucky Dube South Africa2015/081818312:28:43 *22 Cruz das Almas, Brazil
Twinkle Brothers Jamaica2015/094245628:04:009 Cruz das Almas, Brazil
Edson Gomes Brazil2015/1066904:33:3531 Cruz das Almas, Brazil
Bunny Wailer Jamaica2015/122428319:07:283 Jember, Indonesia
Ijahman Levi Jamaica2016/012015311:15:055 Jember, Indonesia
Judy Mowatt Jamaica2016/021113808:52:206 Sidoarjo, Indonesia
Max Adioa Senegal2016/0621801:16:1029 Jember, Indonesia
Reggae Muntu South Africa2016/071600:28:2024 Jember, Indonesia
Joe Silo South Africa2016/071800:32:1725 Jember, Indonesia
Joe Gad South Africa2017/011800:29:3326 Ilagan, Philippines
José Carlos South Africa2017/011800:33:4927 Ilagan, Philippines
Sipho Johnson South Africa2017/0265104:10:0923 Singapore, Singapore
Adams Junior Niger2017/021700:30:5230 Singapore, Singapore
Joe Yamanaka Japan2017/0243502:29:3032 Singapore, Singapore
Jah Big United States2017/021900:40:0533 Singapore, Singapore
The Visionaires Jamaica2017/0211000:32:1115 Singapore, Singapore
African Brothers Jamaica2017/0223001:41:1316 Singapore, Singapore
Ossie Dellimore Saint Vincent2017/0322101:30:4917 Singapore, Singapore
Donald Davidson Jamaica2017/0611000:43:587 Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic
Collective Security Dominica2017/0721801:10:0318 Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic

-* Playing time excluding 'Ngikwethembe Na', which is at the top of the Roots Reggae Library wishlist

gollark: The orbital laughter induction systems worked as designed then. Excellent.
gollark: I could say the same to you.
gollark: Your isomorphism to the set of all bees continues to exist.
gollark: No, "saad maan" is, not you.
gollark: Ugh, you are SIMILAR TO a triangle formed by 3 dodecahedra orbiting Pluto (dwarf planet).

References

  1. de Vries, A. E. (2013). "Lifting The Reggae Blindfold". intellectcollected.com. Archived from the original on 11 November 2014. Retrieved 2 October 2014.
  2. de Vries, A. E. (2015). "Rhythm 'n History". atwistoflime.nl. Retrieved 9 February 2015.
  3. Kolíbal, L. (2015). "Legendární jamajská kapela The Gladiators". www.reggae.cz. Retrieved 23 January 2017.
  4. de Vries, A. E. (2015). "Roots Reggae Library". roots-reggae-library.com. Retrieved 9 February 2015.
  5. Youtube Channel. "Youtube". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 9 February 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.