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ERNEST RANGLIN - live at The Basement (Syd) Sunday 9 December 2007

#1 User is offline   nardo 

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Posted 15 November 2007 - 02:07 PM

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Legendary guitarist and accomplished arranger who is one of the pioneers of Jamaican popular music but also a highly regarded jazz player with a number of recordings for the famed European label MPS in the 1970s and the hugely popular album 'Below The Bassline' with Idris Muhammad, Ira Coleman, Monty Alexander and Roland Alphonso for Island Records in 1996.

Plus classic selections on vinyl from Firehouse crew.

Sunday 9 December 2007
The Basement, 29 Reiby Place, Circular Quay
bookings & enquiries 9251-2797

limited early bird tix $36 + b.f. until Friday 23 November or sold out
$42 + booking fee thereafter
buy tickets online through moshtix.com.au

presented by 2SER 107.3FM & Firehouse

:lighta:

#2 User is offline   DollaMix 

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Posted 15 November 2007 - 02:18 PM

Just a complete joy to winess!!! I saw him a couple times a few years back with tony Alexander(?) on the pianno. So cool!
If you havn't seen him live - don't miss him !
MADANTZ INVASION

#3 User is offline   Simmo T 

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Posted 15 November 2007 - 02:20 PM

Nice vibes for the big people crew and those that know!!
Will be nice for sure!!!!
COOL WEN MI COME BOUT

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#4 User is offline   +nightnurse+ 

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Posted 15 November 2007 - 02:42 PM

OMG one of the very few regrets I have is missing Ernest Ranglin last time he was in melburn - is is coming here this time???
dem caan get me dowwwn/
coz melburn ah mi town!

#5 User is offline   nardo 

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Posted 15 November 2007 - 03:21 PM

Thursday 6 December at the Espy... but get confirmation on that

#6 User is offline   general justice 

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Posted 15 November 2007 - 03:22 PM

my alltime favotite guitarman Love his work .I had the privalage of Interviewing Ernest in the foyer of a hotel in Montego Bay sept 1984. He played for 3 hours to an audience of 3 people and one was the barman.A true Gentleman in every sence of the word. I heard a whisper he is playing Perth !!SLOANY any truth?? :respect:
Who Jah Bless .....
and yu know the rest!

#7 User is offline   dangerous 

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Posted 15 November 2007 - 03:28 PM

nardo, on Nov 15 2007, 04:21 PM, said:

Thursday 6 December at the Espy... but get confirmation on that

:bomb:
Bass is maternal, when it's loud I feel safer

#8 User is offline   Simmo T 

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Posted 15 November 2007 - 03:32 PM

ERNEST RANGLIN
SWEET AS! SUNDAY SESSION LAUNCH
AT THE GREATEST LIVE MUSIC BEERGARDEN IN WA!!
RAILWAY HOTEL. NORTH FREO!!!!
SUN 2ND DECEMBER

SUPPORT FROM SUNSHINE BROTHERS AND EARTHLINK SOUND.

FLYER, THREAD ETC SHOULD BE UP BY THE END OF THE DAY.....JUST WAITN ON MY TECHNICAL SPECIALIST TO A DO THE WORKS!
COOL WEN MI COME BOUT

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#9 User is offline   general justice 

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Posted 15 November 2007 - 03:50 PM

Great Everybody in perth go an see this show! Ernest is amazing :flag:
Who Jah Bless .....
and yu know the rest!

#10 User is offline   Chris 

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Posted 15 November 2007 - 08:25 PM

Will be there with bells on! :thumbs:

#11 User is offline   nardo 

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Posted 15 November 2007 - 11:21 PM

ERNEST RANGLIN BIO

Jamaican guitarist Ernest Ranglin was born June 19, 1932 and grew up in the small town of Robin's Hall in the Parish of Manchester, a rural community in the middle of Jamaica. Music has always claimed a special place in the island’s culture, and Ranglin's destiny was set from an early age when two of his uncles showed him the rudiments of playing the guitar. When they discovered just how good the young boy was, they bought him a ukulele.

Ranglin learned how to play by imitating his uncles, but he was soon to be influenced by the recordings of the great American jazz guitarist Charlie Christian. Living in rural Jamaica, however, inhibited the boy's ambitions, which, even at the age of fourteen, were focused on music. He moved to Kingston - the country's capital - ostensibly to finish his studies at Bodmin College, but very high on Ranglin's agenda was to seriously study the guitar; something not among the school's priorities.

His lessons came from guitar books and late-night sessions watching the Jamaican dance bands of the time: he was particularly influenced by Cecil Houdini, an unrecorded local musician. By the time he was sixteen years old, Ranglin was acknowledged as the rising young talent in the city. In 1948 he joined his first group, the Val Bennett Orchestra, playing in local hotels. Such was Ranglin's burgeoning reputation that he soon came to the attention of rival dance bands and, by the early-Fifties, he was a member of Jamaica's best-known group, the Eric Deans Orchestra, touring the Caribbean.

The big bands gave Ranglin the hugely beneficial experience of learning how to orchestrate and arrange. The typical repertoire of the day included tunes by Benny Goodman, Stan Kenton and Duke Ellington, together with Cuban music and the hot Broadway show songs. The constant tours gave Ranglin a wider vision, meeting musicians from other traditions. Once, for instance, when he was working in Nassau, his performance was heard by Les Paul, who gave Ranglin a guitar in admiration of his talents.

It was, however, back in Jamaica that Ernest's career was transformed by a chance meeting. In 1958 Ranglin was leading his own quintet when, at one engagement at the Half Moon Hotel in Montego Bay, he met a young would-be record producer called Chris Blackwell.

Impressed by Ranglin's extraordinary talents, Blackwell offered him the chance to make a record. The album, the first release for Island records, featured a pianist called Lance Heywood on one side with Ernest Ranglin on the other - the start of a long association between Ranglin and Blackwell.

By the following year, 1959, Jamaican music was in a state of flux, the traditional mento was being superseded by a tough urban sound modelled on American R&B. As part of bassist Cluett Johnson's Blues Blasters, Ranglin recorded several instrumentals for producer Clement 'Coxsone' Dodd at Federal Studios - the only real studio facility on the island where Australian sound engineer Graeme Goodall was the man at the controls. Among these were a tune credited to pianist Theophilus Beckford's called 'Easy Snappin'' and another 'Shuffling Jug' by Clue J & His Blues Blasters - widely regarded now as the first recorded examples of Ska. Ska was a dancefloor phenomenon and became the bedrock of Jamaican popular music, leading to rocksteady, reggae, and all the subsequent musical innovations the island has brought to the world.

Ranglin's fluent and versatile guitar style, coupled with his arrangement skills, meant he was in constant demand right through the ska era. In 1964 Chris Blackwell brought a young singer called Millie Small and Ranglin to London - he had plans to make a hit record. Ernest played guitar and arranged the session which produced 'My Boy Lollipop' which, in the spring of that year, reached number two in the UK chart. It went on to become a worldwide hit, the first time ska had infiltrated into the vocabulary of pop music.

Ranglin, by this stage, was a colossus on the Jamaican recording scene and when he would return to the island he was in high demand as a session man. He was present at Bob Marley's first recording session and then there were hit records with the likes of the Ethiopians, the Melodians, the Paragons, Toots and the Maytals and Jimmy Cliff.

Jamaican styles are not the only weapon in Ernest Ranglin's arsenal. In 1964 Ranglin went to Ronnie Scott's jazz club in London and so impressed the owner that he became resident guitarist for some 9 months. His jazz recordings in the 60s and 70s include 'The Jamaica Jazz Crusaders' with Roy "Bubbles" Burrowes, 'Ranglypso' and 'Now is the Time' for MPS and 'Guitar in Ernest', 'Wranglin' and 'Reflections' for Island Records.

Since the 90s, Ranglin has recorded prolifically. In 1996 'Below The Bassline' with Idris Muhammad, Ira Coleman, Monty Alexander and Roland Alphonso was a popular and critical success on Island Record's Jamaica Jazz offshoot. Since a 1970s visit to Senegal with Jimmy Cliff, Ranglin has been keen to explore African music and has recorded with Fela Kuti's drummer Tony Allen ('Modern Answers To Old Problems', Telarc 2000) and Senegalese singer and guitarist Baaba Maal ('In Search Of The Lost Riddim', Palm 1998). In 2004 he collaborated with long-time partner Monty Alexander on an album called 'Rocksteady' which he toured to Australia, playing incredible celebratory shows at the Cockatoo Island Festival, East Coast Blues and Roots Festival and The Basement where he returns on Sunday the 9th of December.

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"People who think that Jamaica is only about reggae music have only experienced Jamaica from the '70s," Ranglin says. "As a young boy in the '40s, I heard the great musicians of Jamaica and musicians from all over the world at a place in Kingston called the Colony Club, especially Americans and artists from Cuba.

"The [Jamaican] musicians had to be versatile," Ranglin continues. "We played mento and calypso, which is our music, but we also played songs from Broadway musicals and swing music, and when Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie came along, which was the greatest time of my life, we played bebop."

Down Beat, 2004

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credit: based on Telarc label bio, with additions & corrections by Nardo & The Professor

#12 User is online   ISIS 

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Posted 17 November 2007 - 02:49 PM

nardo, on Nov 15 2007, 02:07 PM, said:

Plus classic selections on vinyl from Firehouse crew.

You boys should record this, Would love to hear it. I expect you have some beauties up your respective sleeves.

:respect:

#13 User is offline   Social Living 

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Posted 17 November 2007 - 06:24 PM

Lots of great bands / artists / dj's (reggae & otherwise) coming up in the next couple of months... I'm particularly excited about this one, have to get some tickets this week.
& as Isis said you should record the Firehouse classic selection, I'm still annoyed I missed the oldies night at Jimmy Sings!

#14 User is offline   nardo 

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Posted 19 November 2007 - 02:31 PM

"This was Jamaica's first musical revolution... and we called it ska"
http://www.youtube.c...h?v=mr0fVJ0ZbII

Surfin' live - Glastonbury?
http://www.youtube.c...h?v=cB_FC3eZyz8

Ernest Ranglin live with Jason Wilson & Tabarruk
http://www.youtube.c...h?v=MAVpV1Fb8W8

#15 User is offline   skin up 

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Posted 19 November 2007 - 06:07 PM

Big ups to the Fire House crew for this I be there for sure .What a perfect night a great Sound System and a legendary innovative live artist .The best of both worlds under one drop big top :bbox: :cool: :bbox:

#16 User is offline   nardo 

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Posted 19 November 2007 - 06:51 PM

well really the focus is on Mr Ranglin, we're just there to make sure the sound man doesn't put a Brand New Heavies CD on repeat while you're all taking in a drink and some conversation prior to the BAND :wink:

#17 User is offline   Chris 

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Posted 19 November 2007 - 07:30 PM

Setting the tone with style :thumbs:

#18 User is offline   nardo 

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Posted 04 December 2007 - 10:04 AM

Ernest Ranglin interviewed on The Music Show, ABC Radio, 1 December 2007
http://www.abc.net.a...007/2106054.htm

download (10mb) or listen online

Mr Ranglin plays live, also mentions a couple of Australian connections

#19 User is online   L.Static 

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Posted 08 December 2007 - 01:51 PM

Bump. Moro nite! :flame:
maddda dan...

#20 User is offline   judgement 

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Posted 08 December 2007 - 02:37 PM

yo static i'll be at a wedding but i'll swing by after
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