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Sunday, 2 October 2022

Forty Five Minutes Of Weatherdub

At the time of writing this I've no idea whether yesterday's DJ escapades at the Golden Lion in Todmorden were a triumph or a disaster or somewhere in between. I took a bag full of songs and tracks to play including a lot of Andrew Weatherall flavoured dub- remixes, his own productions, songs and poems that he sampled, songs he played out when DJing or on the radio which I thought might go down well on a Saturday afternoon in early October, a pre- David Holmes pint accompaniment. All the tracks below were in my digital record box.

Forty Five Minutes Of Weatherdub

  • Jean Binta Breeze: Dubwise
  • Dub Syndicate: Ravi Shankar Part 1
  • Lark: Can I Colour In Your Hair (Andrew Weatherall Mix)
  • Count Ossie and Mystic Revelation Of Rastafari: Poem
  • The Sexual Objects: Sometimes (Weatherall Dub)
  • Yabby You: Conquering Dub
  • The Scientist: Lovers
  • Misty In Roots: Introduction To Live At The Counter Eurovision
  • Meatraffle: Meatraffle On the Moon (Andrew Weatherall Remix)
  • Steve Mason: Boys Outside (Andrew Weatherall Dub 2)
  • Andrew Weatherall: Kiyadub 45

Jean Binta Breeze's Dubwise poem came out on her 1991 album Tracks and was sampled by Weatherall on his legendary remix of Saint Etienne's Only Love Can Break Your Heart (he also sampled Jean from the same album for his earth shaking remixes Galliano's Skunk Funk, worthy of a separate post at some point soon I think).

Dub Syndicate, a mainstay of Adrian Sherwood's On U Sound label, released Tunes From The Missing Channel in 1985. Opening track Ravi Shankar Part 1 was a Weatherall favourite and is often mentioned in connection with the famous Boy's Own party held on a farm in East Grinstead in summer 1989, Andrew coming on to the decks to play at dawn as revellers welcomed the sun and Ravi Shankar's unmistakeable intro bounced around the West Sussex countryside. 

Lark were a London band led and fronted by Karl Bielek. Weatherall's dub remix of Can I Colour In Your Hair was finally released on 7" vinyl in 2018, years after being played on Weatherall's radio shows and in his mixes.

Count Ossie and Mystic Revelation Of Rastafari's album Grounation album came out in 1974, a masterpiece of spiritual dub. The line 'Ever since I was a youth/ I've always been searching for the truth' was sampled by Sabres Of Paradise for their mighty Ysaebud track, which came out on one sided 7" in 1997, after Sabres had split and Weatherall had gone on to Two Lone Swordsmen. The track was discovered by Andrew Curley on cassette while clearing out the drawers at HQ and was felt to be too good to lie unreleased so came out as S.O.P. rather as Sabres (licensing issues or some such detail). I'd like to thank Dr Rob of Ban Ban Ton Ton for enabling me to track down the source of the sample. Another piece of the jigsaw slotted into place.

The Sexual Objects are/ were a band formed by David Henderson (formerly of Scottish indie/ post- punkers Fire Engine and Nectarine No. 9). Weatherall's remix came out on a wonderful  piece of 10" vinyl along with remixes by Boards Of Canada and WAVNE, only 1000 copies pressed. 

Yabby You was another Weatherall favourite, from Kingston Jamaica, a singer and producer from the golden age of roots reggae and dub frequently played by Andrew and mentioned in interviews. The same came be said of The Scientist, a protege of King Tubby, whose dub albums in the 1980s were a big Weatherall touchstone. 

Misty in Roots are British dub reggae pioneers, from Southall, London. Their 1979 album Live St The Counter Eurovision is a key British reggae album. The Introduction to the album was sampled to massive effect by Andrew on his Ultrabass 2 remix of The Orb's Perpetual Dawn, 1991.

Meatraffle's Meatraffle On The Moon album came out in 2019, a still superb sounding dissection of life in Brexit Britain (and much more). The Weatherall remix is bass heavy meandering dub, a remix of the band's song about un- unionised moon workers and the evils of late stage capitalism. 

Steve Mason's Boys Outside album came out in 2010. Weatherall remixed the title track twice, the second is a dub of a dub. 

Kiyadub 45 was a one off two track 12" only dub release on the Byrd Out label (with Kiyadub 47 on the flipside), 500 copies only, recorded with Nina Walsh. Heavy electronic dub business. 

9 comments:

Nick L said...

Well you certainly looked like you were in control and managing to enjoy the occasion in the twitter pic last night. Interesting and very cool selections, nice jacket too!

Anonymous said...

Top selection lad. Xx

Swiss Adam said...

It was quite the night, still in a bit of 'did that really happen?' state today. Full report to follow.

Walter said...

I think you can't go wrong with this selection on the controls. Superb mix as always. Thank you mate.

AKickIndieNutz said...

Misty In Roots Yabby You, Adrian Sherwood and King Tubby. My dub heaven. Nice one 👍 A lot of names I love. Good work! Wish I could have been there. Might be a bit goth, but by God love those dub sounds. All the best and congrats, sounded like it was a good night. :-)

Khayem said...

Superb mix here, Adam, and sounds like it was a wonderful experience at The Golden Lion on Saturday. Nice one!

keepingitpeel said...

No Status Quo ? *tsk*

Aditya said...

Adam,
I've listened to this a few times and i can say: lucky people of the Golden Lion. Beautifully sequenced. Thank you.

Swiss Adam said...

Thnaks Aditya (and everyone).

KIP- I couldn't find the Quo dub mix. Maybe I dreamt it.