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  • Virginia Reggae Awards List of Presenters

    The award show will be hosted by Jersey Goodas from 88.f.m w.h.o.v and Sessions With Jesey Goodas and Lora from Island Girl Mix.

    Virginia reggae would like to thank the following persons who are slated to be presenters at the Virginia Reggae Awards. We are appreciative of your time and energy. The diverse and impressive list is as follows:


    United Souls Reggae Band:  Reggae band
    Nita Hurt: Owner of INHERGY Entertainment.
    Ausar: Entrepreneur.  Owner of Kultjah Towers.
    Coconut Lady:  Caribbean flavored comedian.
    Yonachak:  Roots Reggae Artist
    Killa Khan:  Virginia’s top Mc/ Selecta. Member of Love People sound system
    Zaq Tiller: Member of the Virgnia Reggae Community
    Sons of Thunder: Roots Reggae Band
    Abbey Kat: Dancehall / Hip Hop/ Reggae/ Reggaeton Artist
    Super D’fari: Roots Dancehall Artist
    Kulture Lion: Owner/ operator of Lion Tribe Reggae Sound System
    Members of I.G.M’s Carnival Troupe(in full costumes)

    Hosts of the V.R.A’s:

    We are fortunate to have two strong, talented and beautiful women anchor the Virginia Reggae Awards.  On the eve of mother’s day what more can we ask for?

    Jersey Goodas from 88.f.m W.H.O.V 88.1f.m and Sessions with Jersey Goodas, (Baselineradio.net)
    & “The boss lady” from Island Girl Mix promotions, Lora. Please support these wonderful people in all their endeavors.

    We ask you to PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE bring out all of your family members and friends.

    This is an ALL AGE / FREE event.

    Voting is still opened and will remain open until noon on 9th May 2008.

    Just a reminder, Project 1 will be at the award show collecting non-perishable food items and donations for the food bank. They will be giving away limited edition concert posters to everyone who brings 10 non-perishable food items or give $10 in donations to the food bank. Please help support the food bank and bring a donation.

    The Virginia Reggae Awards will honor life of our friend “Yagga” by naming the trophies “The Yagga”.  If like us you are unable to be with the family on Saturday the 10th, we invite you to come out to the Virginia Reggae Awards.  We will have a card to be signed and sent to Buddah, the other part of this dynamic duo.

    See you at the VRA’s on Saturday 10 May 2008 @ MP Island café.

  • R.I.P Yagga

    R.I.P Yagga

    We at Virginia reggae would like to tender our deepest condolences to the family and friends of “Yagga”. Our friend left us on the 29th of April 2008.

    yagga

    We at Virginia reggae would like to
    tender our deepest condolences to the family and friends of “Yagga”.
    Our friend left us on the 29th of April 2008. We
    especially want to pray for his twin brother “Buddah” as he deals
    with this situation. A very well known and loved person on the
    Virginia reggae and Caribbean community, Yagga will be remembered!
    The upcoming Virginia reggae awards will honor the life of our friend
    Yagga!

    We will have a card to be signed at the
    door which we will forward to Buddah!

    yagga and buddah

    To honor our friend’s life ,
    the trophies presented at the VRA’s will be known as the
    “Yagga”

  • The 5th Annual Virginia 24 Hour Run for Cancer!

    Last Saturday the 12th of April, VirginiaReggae.Com staff ventured to Sandy Bottom Park in Hampton Va. We were there to be a part of the 5th Annual Virginia 24 Hour Run for Cancer! Admittedly some of us would have rather being tucked in a cozy bed at 6:00 a.m. on a Saturday, but this was for a worthwhile cause

    Last Saturday the 12th of April, VirginiaReggae.Com staff ventured to
    Sandy Bottom Park in Hampton Va. We were there to be a part of the 5th
    Annual Virginia 24 Hour Run for Cancer! Admittedly some of us would
    have rather being tucked in a cozy bed at 6:00 a.m. on a Saturday, but
    this was for a worthwhile cause.

    Within our small Reggae and Caribbean community, most of us, if not all has been affected by cancer.

    It was a gorgeous morning that blessed these beautiful people that
    came out to raise awareness and money for the cause. Some added to the
    excitement by not only being there for there two mentioned reasons but
    to see how far they could actually run with a 24 hour time limit! Yes!
    Run for twenty four hours. You are allowed to stop and walk, you can
    even crawl and well bathroom breaks must be an issue at some point. One
    lady did some distance backwards when going forward became painful. She
    had already covered an extensive amount of miles by then!

    It was a great day of fun and VirginiaReggae.com is proud to be a
    part of this event! While this was our first time participating in the
    relay for life campaign, we are already looking towards 2009!

    Ps: Please join us when we go out and run/ walk for a cause.

    One member officially entered the race. See results and write up taken from www.penisualtrackclub.com below.

    Another Record Year at the Virginia 24 Hour Run for Cancer

    The 5th Annual Virginia 24 Hour Run for Cancer was once again a
    great success. It was held as usual on a flat, 3.75 mile out-and-back
    loop trail at Sandy Bottom Nature Park in Hampton Virginia from 7:00
    a.m. 12 April until 7:00 a.m. 13 April. Although quite warm and humid
    in the first half of the day, the weather cooperated with a light
    30-minute shower in the afternoon that cooled things off comfortably.
    Many new course records were set. Herman Richards of Stockton, NJ
    set a new men’s record of 115 miles. A total of 130 people (33
    individual ultrarunners and nine teams) ran/walked at least one loop.
    41 people ran 50 or more miles, while 56 people ran at least an ultra
    of 30 miles. In doing so we raised over $6500.

    As usual several great human interest stories emerged. William
    House (USMC) was raising money for his own cause (The local Down
    Syndrome society) in addition to the American Society. He has a young
    son with down syndrome. He raised over $1800 while running the third
    most miles (82.5) of the day (having never run more than a marathon
    before). His older (11 years) son Brandon decided he wanted to help by
    running with dad for a while — he ended up doing seven laps totaling
    a marathon. David Snipes, trying for a “double 50,” first ran the Bull
    Run 50 miler in Manassas, VA, then drove 3 hours to Sandy Bottom and
    ran another 45 miles. He got credit for 95 miles, the second most of
    the day. Alexy Popov came out to volunteer for a few hours after
    running a local 5K race in the morning, but after an hour decided to
    run a few loops. He didn’t stop until he had run over 50 miles. The
    women’s winner with 75 miles, Jane Kupkowski, had never run more than
    34 miles. Tim Scott from the local police academy managed to cover 60
    miles having never before gone over 22 miles. Who says police officers
    eat too many donuts. Finally, the award for “most exceeding her
    limits,” goes to Mary Simmons who covered 45 miles, having never
    run/walked more than 4 miles before. As in other years, this was the
    first venture into the ultra world for many of the runners, allowing
    most to run/walk much farther than they ever have before. That is what
    I get the most satisfaction from —- seeing so many people
    successfully challenge their limits. Many move on to higher levels in
    the “ultra world.”

    Once again the Ranger staff at Sandy Bottom was outstanding in
    their support. Every need we had was anticipated and taken care of. And
    as always, the volunteer lap counters from the Peninsula Track Club
    (Jerry Schenck, Debbie Henderson, Pete Navin, David Donohue, Susan
    Hagel, Cheryl Lager, Karen Corl, Louis Frederico, and Stephanie
    Douglas) were critical to the success of the event. Based on feedback
    from the participants we’ll see you next year at the 6th edition. Same
    time, same place.

    NAME MILES

    HERMAN RICHARDS 115 NEW COURE RECORD

    DAVID SNIPES 95 (INCLUDES 50 MILES AT BULL RUN)

    WILLIAM HOUSE 82.5

    JANE KUPKOWSKI 75 WOMEN’S WINNER

    JAMES HARRISON 75

    JAY MAGIERA 75

    TEDDY BUNNEL 75

    BRYANT MALONE 75

    SEAN KERN 75

    ED PARKS 63.75

    SEKO FRANCIS 60 VirginiaReggae.com member

    TIM SCOTT 60

    ANN GREEN 52.5

    MICHAEL BAILEY 52.5

    DAVID HUFFMAN 52.5

    BRIAN COBB 52.5

    EDWIN LEON 52.5

    HEATHER LEON 52.5

    ANDREW LEVY 52.5

    CHRIS CONWAY 52.5

    CARLOS DUGGER 52.5

    KEVIN MUTCH 52.5

    STEPHANIE BURTON 52.5

    SKIP DUNHAM 52.5

    ROBERT WYCO 52.5

    ALEXY POPOV 51.75 (INCLUDES 5K)

    JIMMY BLOUNT 50

    JOE PREBLE 50

    LETTY MARINO 50

    ANTON STRUNTZ 50

    OWEN DWIRE 50

    DAVID BLANCHARD 50

    JOHN SCHAUMAN 50

    JEAN RICHARDS 50

    KARL KLICKER 50

    ROBERT SITLER 50

    SARAH LLAGUNO 50

    DAVID DEMMIN 50

    MITCH JACKSON 50

    MARY SIMMONS 45

    JONATHAN OLSZYK 41.25

    SUSAN BENDER 41.25

    STEVE DORCEY 41.25

    JULIE BARNES 37.5

    KEITH DUNN 35

    JOE MCCOLLUM 33.75

    BILLY MONTGOMERY 33.75

    CHRISTINA ARAJ 33.75

    JESSICA MORRIS 30

    KEVIN O’CONNOR 30

    ALAN PALAZO 30

    LINDSEY NORTH 30

    WAYNE BIEBER 30

    AMY DUNHAM 30

    MICHAEL MORTON 26.25

    JOE LAGRAVE 26.25

    TERRY BRENNAN 26.25

    ANNA STORM 26.25

    RANDALL MARTIN 26.25

    DANIEL O’MARA 26.25

    RICARDO WILSON 26.25

    MICHAEL MCDONALD 22.5

    JONATHAN HUBBLE 22.5

    DARCY HAYES 22.5

    LEWIS RISMILLER 22.5

    TONY MCDADE 18.75

    MILO WARNER 18.75

    WILLIAM ALLEN 18.75

    JON STRICKLING 18.75

    CALEB MALCOLM 18.75

    DALE GIBBONS 15

    KELLY THORKILSON 15

    STEHEN NICHOLSON 15

    DEINA SHERWOOD 15

    RAY NICKELL 15

    BILL MARION 15

    TERRY ELHAJJ 15

    KENT COOPER 11.25

    RON WARLOCK 11.25

    MATHEW SVARPLAITIS 11.25

    THOMAS PALMEIRA 11.25

    DANICA JOLLY 11.25

    MARY TINSLEY 11.25

    BECKY PARKER 11.25

    DAVID HEFNER 11.25

    MIKE PITTMAN 11.25

    JAN WEATHERS 11.25

    ERIC ROMERO 9.5

    STEVEN ZALES 7.5

    LEAH HERNANDEZ 7.5

    ASHLEY HERNANDEZ 7.5

    MICHAEL RAYNO 7.5

    JONATHAN SHIPPERLY 7.5

    SHELBY STRIBLING 7.5

    BEN STRIBLING 7.5

    ROBERT WOODS 7.5

    RON GUGLIELMO 7.5

    JOHN BROOKS 7.5

    DAVID BROOKS 7.5

    TRICIA NICKELL 7.5

    LEIGH ANN ERDMAN 7.5

    LIZA SOZA 7.5

    JONATHAN O’CONNEL 7.5

    MELVIN SANDERS 7.5

    MARILYN PATTON 7.5

    VICI LENNON 7.5

    CARLIN LOCKHART 7.5

    MICHAEL HARP 7.5

    WALTER HARRIS 7.5

    THOMAS QUANDT 7.5

    BRIAN FONTAINE 7.5

    JOSE HERNANDEZ 7.5

    ADAM FORSHEY 7.5

    MICHAEL HART 7.5

    JENNY KLUTZ 7.5

    CHARLOTTE HITNER 7.5

    LANE MCTALL 3.75

    TINA MILIANTI 3.75

    CAROLYN PENDER 3.75

    JASON PENDERGAST 3.75

    DORIS HAWKES 3.75

    DELBERT JACKSON 3.75

    RON MAINVIELLE 3.75

    MATHEW KING 3.75

    BROOKE MATSON 3.75

    WENDY KLEIN 3.75

    JOHNNY SOZA 3.75

    CASEY LAWRENCE 3.75

    NICOLE BRUNY 3.75

    http://www.peninsulatrackclub.com

  • Virginia Reggae Award Nominees presented awards

    In private ceremonies, plaques and certificates were presented to
    nominees of the Virginia Reggae Awards. Here are some pictures of the
    presentations.

    In private ceremonies, plaques and certificates were presented to
    nominees of the Virginia Reggae Awards. Here are some pictures of the
    presentations.

    Don’t forget to vote. Virginia reggae Awards Final voting ends at noon on 9th May 2008. Presentation of the Awards will be on Saturday 10th May 2008 @ MP Island Cafe in Va. Beach.

    Project 1 will be at the award show collecting non-perishable food items and donations for the food bank. They will be giving away limited edition concert posters to everyone who brings 10 non-perishable food items or give $10 in donations to the food bank. Please help support the food bank and bring a donation.

    [!MaxiGallery? &gal_query_ids=`67` &display=`embedded` &embedtype=`slimbox` &pics_per_row=`4` &order_by=`date` !]

  • Mikey Dread passed away

    Mikey Dread passed away

    Mikey passed away at approximately 6:50pm Eastern Standard Time on Saturday, March 15th, 2008. He was surrounded by his family in the home of his sister in Connecticut at the time of his passing.

    mikey dread

    Mikey Dread passed away this evening

    According to the West Indian Times, Michael ‘Mikey Dread’ Campbell who was always ‘The Dread At The Control’ has passed away. Mikey passed away at approximately 6:50pm Eastern Standard Time on Saturday, March 15th, 2008.

    He was surrounded by his family in the home of his sister in Connecticut at the time of his passing. We had reported in October 2007 that Mikey had been diagnosed with a brain tumor and that he was fighting with all his might to recover from his illness.

    Mikey constantly remained upbeat and hopeful for a full recovery so that he could continue doing what he loved; spreading Jah music to the world. Mikey’s family including his children; 2 sons from Jamaica, a daughter who lives in Houston, TX, a son who lives in Canada, a daughter who lives in Belize, and his 4 month old son Zylen Jahlight had been close by in the last few months as he fought to stay with them.

  • In Di Newz : Tuff Lion, Ancient King & WIT

    In Di Newz : Tuff Lion, Ancient King & WIT

    Tuff Lion hard at work, New Ancient King Album Plus More

    Virginia’s Tuff Lion hard at work.

    Tuff Lion Ten Strings Preview 1

    Tuff Lion and St. Croix I Grade Records have completed an album of instrumental music. The album features Tuff Lion’s spectacular guitar renderings set with classic riddims from the I Grade catalog. The album contains a few new riddims (co-produced by Zion High and Lustre Kings). The album is entitled "Ten Strings" and will be out in early May.

    Also released is Wadada a various artist album produced by Tuff Lion featuring tracks by Tuff Lion, Ras Attitude and a host of other talents.

    Change by Sahra Indio is another roots classic album produced by Tuff Lion. Sahra Indio hails from Hawaii.

    West Indian times

    West Indian times magazine will no longer be printed. January’s issue of the magazine was the last edition! West Indian times magazine is a major loss to the Virginia reggae and Caribbean communities!

    Ancient King

    Ancient King

    Ancient King releases his sophomore album entitled Judgement! The album was done with Mystic Vision.

     

  • The Harder They Come: How Britain picked up the reggae beat

    The Harder They Come: How Britain picked up the reggae beat

    Tonight, after two sell-out runs at London’s Theatre Royal Stratford East, the stage musical of the classic movie The Harder They Come begins a month-long residency at the Barbican, before heading to Birmingham.

    harder they come

    As the stage version of ‘The Harder They Come’ opens, Andrew Perry celebrates the soundtrack that brought Jamaican music to a vast new audience

    Tonight, after two sell-out runs at London’s Theatre Royal Stratford East, the stage musical of the classic movie The Harder They Come begins a month-long residency at the Barbican, before heading to Birmingham

    a scene from the stage version of The Harder They Come
    Chain reaction: a scene from the stage version of The Harder They Come

     The arrival of this production at one of London’s most distinguished arts centres mirrors the trajectory of reggae itself, rising from the mean streets of Kingston to a state of high esteem and worldwide popularity.

    The original 1972 film, which starred Jimmy Cliff as a young singer hustling in poverty-stricken Jamaica, illuminated the harsh conditions in the ghettos of Kingston, where many of the inhabitants sought to earn a crust through the city’s vibrant music culture.

    The immortal songs in the movie, such as Cliff’s street-tough title track, are ripe for use in a musical. They are embedded in the British psyche, every bit as much as the songs of Abba, Madness and Queen, which have all already been used in hit stage musicals.

    For many years, the soundtrack album was comfortably the biggest-selling reggae album ever, until 1984’s posthumous Bob Marley compilation Legend finally toppled it from that position.

    Many Jamaican immigrants in Britain at the time remember the release of The Harder They Come as the moment "their" music finally started to be taken seriously. Throughout the 1960s, Jamaica had been churning out fantastic ska and rocksteady records, but the only ones to hit the British charts were novelty tunes, such as Max Romeo’s Wet Dream. Reggae was accordingly seen as rather silly – not proper music.

    By the early 1970s, the island’s prevailing sound had coalesced into the shuffling, spacious, bassline-propelled form which became known as reggae. It was The Harder They Come which really introduced the new idiom to a global audience.

    "The movie opened it up for all Jamaican music, and for me personally," Jimmy Cliff told me, when I met him a few years ago. "People finally saw where the music was coming from. It was all there – visual and audio, too."

    Initially, Cliff was approached to write some songs for the soundtrack. Clean-cut and professional by Jamaica’s notoriously lax standards, Cliff’s heavenly, high-pitched voice marked him out as a kind of reggae Curtis Mayfield. Jamaican music had always drawn inspiration from American R&B. Its sound mixed social themes, vocal harmonies and sublime melodies directly influenced by soul.

     Casting Cliff in the movie’s lead role, as a singer, forced into lawlessness in his quest for stardom, gave him the extra "edge", to appeal to rock audiences weaned on self-styled outlaws such as Keith Richards.

    As can be seen on the cover of the soundtrack album, the film was pitched as offshore blaxploitation, with big guns, superfly threads and Rastas on motorbikes. But as Cliff suggested, the movie and its music in tandem provided a pretty realistic snapshot of the street crime that had escalated in Kingston’s ghettoes after British colonial rule ended in 1961.

    In the title track, Cliff sings of getting ahead by any means necessary, voicing the same ideas of hoodlum autonomy as the pistol-toting "rude boys" running wild in Trenchtown. Other songs on the soundtrack, such as The Slickers’ Johnny Too Bad, and Desmond Dekker’s 007 (Shanty Town), sent out desperate emergency signals about the spiralling gangsterism.

    These lurid lyrics, however, not to mention the fabulously exotic rhythms surrounding them, proved irresistible to British audiences in the ensuing years.

    I remember standing around a campfire with the Clash’s Joe Strummer, at Glastonbury in the late 1990s. On his way there, Strummer had bought a budget-price cassette of The Harder They Come at a motorway service station, and was blasting it out over his sound system. He told me he had mislaid his old vinyl copy years beforehand, but hearing the album now – and I may be paraphrasing here; this was Glastonbury, after all – he said, felt like being reunited with beloved old friends.

    For Strummer’s pal, Don Letts, a second-generation Jamaican in London, the soundtrack of The Harder They Come was like a series of "postcards from cousins or relatives, telling you what was going on back home".

    For today’s listeners, those songs are simply brilliant pop music, quivering with attitude, excitement and stonking tunes, whose potency only grows with age. When David Cameron used Cliff’s You Can Get It If You Really Want as the anthem for his campaign to restore trust in politics, he was plugging into a cultural phenomenon of the very broadest appeal, transcending all class, race and gender boundaries.

    So, theatre-goers rolling up for the Theatre Royal Stratford East and UK Arts production of The Harder They Come at the Barbican can be guaranteed one thing: tunes from the very top drawer.

     

  • Rita Marley Gives Green Light For Marley Movie

    Rita Marley Gives Green Light For Marley Movie

    Bob Marley’s widow, Rita Marley, has inked a deal with film producers The Weinstein Co. to develop, produce and distribute the first ever biopic on the Reggae icon. The film will be based on Rita’s 2004 autobiography, No Woman No Cry: My Life With Bob Marley, and screenwriter Lizzie Borden has been hired to pen the film adaptation. Rita Marley is serving as the movie’s executive producer.

    bob marley

    Bob Marley‘s widow, Rita Marley, has inked a deal with film producers The Weinstein Co.
    to develop, produce and distribute the first ever biopic on the Reggae
    icon. The film will be based on Rita’s 2004 autobiography, No Woman No Cry: My Life With Bob Marley, and screenwriter Lizzie Borden has been hired to pen the film adaptation. Rita Marley is serving as the movie’s executive producer.

    While no casting decisions have been made, Rita has already nominated Lauryn Hill to portray her. Hill is married to Bob Marley’s son from another relationship, Rohan. "Lauryn would be ideal," said Marley. "She sees my life as her life." She also said that her grandson Stefan is "the spitting image" of Bob and would be perfect to play the role.

    Meanwhile, the Hollywood Reporter
    says that the musician will be played by two actors, one portraying him
    at age 15 and another as an adult. The option of Marley’s original
    songs, covers sung by an actor or a Ray-style blend of the two are all possible for the soundtrack.

    The
    untitled project is tentatively set to begin filming early next year
    with a projected release date of late 2009. If that is the case, it
    will arrive before Martin Scorsese‘s documentary on the performer, which is set for release on what would be Marley’s 65th birthday: February 6, 2010.

  • RCMP Raid Shuts Down Massive Alleged Music Counterfeiting Operation in Winnipeg

    TORONTO, March 6 /CNW/ – Following a year-long investigation by the
    Canadian Recording Industry Association (CRIA), the RCMP has shut down
    Audiomaxxx.com Ltd., a major alleged music counterfeiting operation in
    Winnipeg, and filed criminal charges against four individuals.

    Police file criminal charges against four people and seize more than
    200,000 music CDs and DVDs

    TORONTO, March 6 /CNW/ – Following a year-long investigation by the
    Canadian Recording Industry Association (CRIA), the RCMP has shut down
    Audiomaxxx.com Ltd., a major alleged music counterfeiting operation in
    Winnipeg, and filed criminal charges against four individuals.

    Raj Singh Ramgotra, the principal behind Audiomaxxx, was among those
    arrested during a raid yesterday at the organization, which for three years
    has allegedly manufactured pirated compact discs and hard core pornographic
    videos, and distributed them throughout Canada, the U.S., Europe and Jamaica.
    More recently, Audiomaxxx’s offerings have also included allegedly pirated
    digital downloads.

    In addition to the arrests, police seized an enormous volume of suspected
    counterfeit goods. This includes more than 200,000 music CDs and DVDs,
    numerous movie DVDs and hundreds of thousands of blank discs. Police also
    seized five CD/DVD burning towers, each with 12 burners, which together are
    capable of burning well in excess of 10,000 CDs and DVDs a day. The raid also
    netted several computers and hard drives, two commercial CD printers, four
    colour copiers and other office equipment.

    In the past 10 years, the raid closest in scale to the action against
    Audiomaxxx involved the seizure of about 10,000 counterfeit music CDs and DVDs
    – one-twentieth the volume netted yesterday.
    More than 10 police officers were involved in yesterday’s raid.
    "We sincerely thank the RCMP officers who have worked so hard to bring
    Audiomaxxx to heel, and to the federal prosecutors who have worked closely
    with them," said Graham Henderson, President of the Canadian Recording
    Industry Association. "Today’s arrests send out a clear message that
    commercial piracy will no longer be tolerated in Canada."

    Audiomaxxx is suspected of being one of Canada’s leading music
    counterfeiters. In Toronto alone, approximately 30 percent of the pirated CDs
    seized allegedly originate from the operation. CRIA estimates that, at
    minimum, Audiomaxxx has been shipping tens of thousands of allegedly pirated
    CDs each month.

    CRIA has received dozens of complaints concerning the operation from
    artists, music associations and music labels around the world, including
    numerous small, independent labels. In the past, when faced with demands by
    rights holders to cease its activities, Audiomaxxx has consistently ignored
    the demands or failed to fully comply.

    The operation appears to be highly developed, with a significant
    catalogue of allegedly pirated CDs and music downloads offered for sale via
    the website www.audiomaxxx.com, including copies of tracks by famous artists
    like Shania Twain, Lionel Richie, Jay-Z, Mary J. Blige and Nelly Furtado.

    "The RCMP has again demonstrated that it stands side by side with artists
    and rights holders in the fight against intellectual property crime," said
    Randy Lennox, President and CEO of Universal Music Canada Ltd. and Chairman of
    CRIA. "CRIA has a longstanding partnership with the RCMP and other police
    forces in fighting piracy, and today we have taken a big step together to stop
    one of the most flagrant examples of its kind in Canada."

    Audiomaxxx’s alleged piracy affects not just famous artists, but also new
    and independent artists – largely in the reggae, soca and hip-hop community –
    who are struggling to build careers. For example, Vancouver’s Utopia Records,
    one of the many independent labels to voice concerns, has seen new artist
    albums appear on the Audiomaxxx website on the day an album is released in
    stores or even before the legitimate launch date.

    "The harm done by music piracy is especially troubling when it undermines
    a promising artist’s burgeoning career," Henderson said. "We will continue to
    work with police and lawmakers to give these artists, and the organizations
    behind them, the opportunity to succeed."

    CRIA began investigating Audiomaxxx as part of an ongoing program to
    deter music counterfeiting and piracy. The operation came to CRIA’s attention
    because of the large volume of suspected counterfeit products openly offered
    for sale on the Internet and the owner’s failure to stop selling these
    products after the issuance of cease-and-desist orders.

    Since CRIA began dedicated anti-counterfeiting operations more than a
    year ago, the association and police have seized more than 400,000 CDs and
    issued 80 cease-and-desist orders against retailers of illicitly copied music.
    The Impact of Piracy and Counterfeiting on Canadian Artists and Rights
    Holders

    Piracy and counterfeiting exact a steep toll on artists and rights
    holders in Canada. This is reflected in significant music sales declines since
    the advent of widespread unauthorized file-swapping in 1999 and the
    proliferation of CD and music DVD counterfeiting in recent years. In that
    time, retail sales of pre-recorded audio products (CDs, digital tracks, etc.)
    declined by 47 percent, from $1.3 billion in 1999 to $703.7 million in 2006.

    For the 11 months ended November 2007, net wholesale shipments of CDs,
    music DVDs, and other "physical" recorded music formats dropped 16 percent to
    37.9 million units from 45.1 million units in the year-earlier period, while
    the related net wholesale value dropped 20 percent to $382.4 million from
    $476.3 million.

    A 2007 national POLLARA survey found that purchases of counterfeit goods
    such as music CDs displace legitimate commerce. About half of those who bought
    counterfeit music, movies or software would have purchased the genuine version
    had they not purchased a copy (for music, the figure was 43 percent; movies,
    45 percent; and software, 44 percent).

    About the Canadian Recording Industry Association
    The Canadian Recording Industry Association (CRIA) promotes the interests
    of Canadian record companies

     

  • Dancehall’s betrayal of reggae

    Reggae differed from mere pop music which was for entertainment and frivolity. Reggae was serious without being sombre. What has accounted for reggae having this phenomenal impact on the world is not just its pulsating beat and hypnotic rhythm, which it certainly has. There are other great rhythms which have not had reggae’s impact on the world.

    from the JA Gleaner
    published: Sunday | February 24, 2008 
    Ian Boyne, Contributor 
    

    Reggae Month cannot end without someone’s saying that the dominant trend in dancehall represents a betrayal of reggae; the tragic case of the child doing violence to his mother.

    Reggae differed from mere pop music which was for entertainment and frivolity. Reggae was serious without being sombre. What has accounted for reggae having this phenomenal impact on the world is not just its pulsating beat and hypnotic rhythm, which it certainly has. There are other great rhythms which have not had reggae’s impact on the world.

    Reggae is message music. The classic reggae artistes were acutely aware that there were not just minstrels. Their songs had us singing along and rocking, most definitely. But there was a message, which represented not just ‘brawta’; it was its life force. For it came from the bowels of the working class experience with oppression, injustice, dehumanisation and exclusion.

    Reggae artistes did not have to read philosophy to carry a strong philosophical message. Their life experience – harsh, brutal, but hopeful – gave them a natural mystic. Reggae could be claimed as a potent source of inspiration by Southern Africans struggling for liberation from apartheid, as well as for middle-class white people in America and Europe because reggae was a universal language understood by all.

    Oppression

    Reggae’s appeal is its innate humanism and universalism. For in decrying oppression, colonialism, imperialism and injustice, it was saying, forcefully, that these features are alien to our common heritage as human beings. This was not how humans were supposed to live. We were not supposed to be segregated by class, race, gender, religion and nationality.

    Bob Marley’s astounding appeal to the world cannot be separated from his message. He certainly did not have the finest voice in reggae. His rhythms were not unique. There was – there is – something about Bob Marley which just resonated and still resonates with mankind.

    It was not just Bob Marley. Another great artiste who has never received the just recognition he deserves in this country is the great Max Romeo. Max Romeo, Bob Andy, Burning Spear, Joseph Hill, Dennis Brown, the Mighty Diamonds, Half Pint, Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer, among others, have a timeless appeal.

    What is the message of dancehall today in its most dominant trend? It’s about the "gal dem business", the objectification and commodification of women, the glorification of promiscuity. It is about power over women’s bodies. As Buju Banton has put it:

    "Hear weh me tell di girl seh if unnu look good
    Hear weh me tell har seh
    Gal me serious
    Mi haffi get yu tonight
    Even by gunpoint"

    Rape, in other words. But in the dancehall, women’s bodies are not their own. They are merely allowed to beautify them and take care of them for men to use. The dancehall trends have to do with lyrics glorifying dons; glorifying the shottas, bad man; worshipfully describing the various guns with relish and lyrical eloquence. The dancehall has to do with shaming youth and youth who can’t "tek it to dem".

    No encouragement

    So at a time when we need peace in the inner cities; when old people need to sleep peacefully rather than having to risk heart attacks and strokes at night; when children need to study their books so they can leave their lives of wretchedness rather than bawling out for "gunshots!", what we have are communities and corners set ablaze with no encouragement from the music – as the dominant trend – for "the youths dem to ‘low’ the glock," as Tarrus Riley pleads. The top deejays – the ones currently ruling the dancehall – the Mavados, the Bounty Killers, the Vybz Kartels, the Assassins, the Baby Chams, the Bling Dawgs – are not shouting to the youth "be careful of yu guns and ammunition".

    Instead, what we have in the dancehall is the glorification of the gun; the inciting of violence. And when we don’t have the vulgarity which is hailed as the expression of ‘female liberation’ and the gun talk, we have the promotion of bling bling and Western materialistic and hedonistic values – the values of Babylon.

    Now, imagine you are a poor ghetto youth struggling to find food to have just one meal a day; struggling to find clothes; struggling to eke out a subsistence under Babylon’s oppression to find food for your youth. The music being played all around you is telling you and your neighbours that you are nobody because you don’t have certain name-brand things. You have no value because you don’t have a certain type of car, can’t flash the dollars and can’t drink expensive European champagne. You are nothing if you have nothing. You are traced in the lyrics, especially the women.

    When the reggae pioneers were saying "Natty never get weary" and to "hold di struggle", these modern-day traitors of the revolution are telling you the opposite: Babylon is really right, uptown is right after all, join the rat race, life is about what you possess, how much money you have in the bank, what you wear, eat, the "stush area" you live in, etc. This is what the music has come to in its dominant form.

    ‘Ghetto authenticity’

    And this is what is not being critiqued by the academics at the University of the West Indies who are teaching reggae studies. They are so busy celebrating and bigging up ‘ghetto authenticity’ that they have failed to grasp how dancehall represents – in its dominant trends – the betrayal reggae.

    Now, dancehall defenders say they respect ghetto people. It is people like me who disrespect ghetto youth. Yet, I respect them enough to believe they can do better than just reflect the worst of what they see around them. I believe they have brains which they can use to go in a positive direction. The UWI academics apparently believe that they must mechanistically and deterministically follow their environment. They are Skinnerians (after the famed Harvard psychologist B.F. Skinner) with black masks.

    Another canard is that people who criticise negative dancehall just despise everything Jamaican and black and display Eurocentric tastes. As someone who is one of the most ardent vintage fanatics in Jamaica and who has attended more stage shows than many ‘worldians,’ this could not apply to me. I enjoy dancehall music. I totally disagree with those who believe there is no creativity in dancehall music and that it’s all monotony. People who say that have a limited exposure to dancehall. The dancehall lyricists – including the negative ones – are some of the most creative pop artistes in the world today.

    Negative dancehall

    What I am saying is that we should not uncritically support the music just because it is part of our culture and comes from the inner city. There are some things in the inner city which hold us back and which represent a kind of self-hatred and self-injury. Negative dancehall is in that category. Peace is a public good – it is not just ‘Christian fundamentalism,’ a term Carolyn Cooper (Professor, pardon me) uses as a conversation-stopper.

    Music which lionises shottas and badmen who are a terror to poor people is not good. Music which encourages violence for the slightest dissing; music which preaches a message of death to homosexuals or any group is not a good thing; music which encourages "gal inna bungle" is not a good thing because of its effects on our sisters and even on our brothers. Music which makes poor people feel small because they can’t bling out is not good. This has nothing to do with ‘middle-class values’.

    In fact, the UWI academics and my colleagues at TVJ don’t live in the inner cities. They can glorify dancehall music from their ivory towers and television studios but the poor, defenceless ghetto people who have nowhere to hide and no friend in high society have to contend with the gunshots and the mayhem – not created by dancehall but certainly not helped by it. Another blindsiding argument is that the violent lyrics in dancehall represent a kind of cry of the oppressed. Nonsense. The kind of revolutionary lyrics against oppression and ‘downpressors’ is not the dominant trend in dancehall. Peter Tosh was a rebel and was no pacifist, but Tosh was not talking about blowing out people’s marrow because "dem dis him woman". He did not trivialise violence. He took it seriously to be used selectively and strategically.

    None of the reggae practitioners did that. Even when Bob did some songs hailing the ‘rude boys’ of the 1960s – and was rebuked by fellow Trench Town giant (and my rocksteady idol) Alton Ellis in Dance Crasher and Cry Tough – Bob was not glorifying nihilistic violence. The comparisons by the UWI academics are grossly overdrawn.

    The UWI academics are guilty of overcompensation. They have seen the music snubbed and scorned in decades past by the middle class and they now feel psychologically and morally obligated to give ‘full hundred’ endorsement to our indigenous music. But in doing so, they have taken daredevil liberties with intellectual rigour and have done a disservice to reggae.

    Ian Boyne is a veteran journalist who may be reached at ianboyne@yahoo.com.