"The first real musical fusion of technology"
Not really the first fusion. There was the collaboration of Les Paul, Bing Crosby and Ampex in the 50s: Multi-track recording pioneers. I'm sure there were others.
Phil Strongman reveals the bizarre true story of how the first real musical fusion of technology and culture ended up coming from the Third World. Youtube Video In late 1974, out of nowhere, the first dub hit anywhere in the world leapt into the UK Top Ten. Upon its release that autumn, Rupie Edwards’ innovatory Ire Feelings …
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Growing up in the seventies seemed weird to me; on the one hand you had open racism against "Jamaicans" - that was the supposedly polite word used by some racist politicians when on TV; but you also got the white kid, just as poor as you, that seeks you out to try and learn more about that weird infectious music they had heard.
The music, Dub & Reggae was an integrating force. It allowed friendships to be forged across the playground, across races. (The cricket crushed arguments of *racial* superiority ;-)
There were also very bare dubs - usually B sides - with mainy drum and bass plus a touch of other bits now and then. The labels were usually marked 'Drum and Bass'.
And the 'rules' of DubStep where repeats are exactly like a Space Echo - plus the drop.
But you try telling that to youngsters these days . . .
I don't doubt that there was a common undercurrent amongst the various producers and studios at the time and that they inspired each other. But I was always under the impression that Lee 'Scratch' Perry was first to the post with "Upsetters 14 Dub Blackboard Jungle" in 1973? Then there's also Keith Hudson's seminal "Pick a Dub" in 1974. Let's open this can of worms further...