After my tutorial with Lorenzo we spoke about there being a focus to the exhibition and a concept for the design rather than just a historical backdrop of it all. We discussed the imagery, the fashion like pork pie hats and gangster suits and also the actual music.
So I have been looking further into it and how the music is actually made up and what actually makes it SKA.
The stationing of American military forces during and after the war
meant that Jamaicans could listen to military broadcasts of American
music, and there was a constant influx of records from the US. To meet
the demand for that music, entrepreneurs such as Prince Buster, Clement "Coxsone" Dodd, and Duke Reid formed sound systems. As jump blues
and more traditional R&B began to ebb in popularity in the early
1960s, Jamaican artists began recording their own version of the genres. The style was of bars made up of four triplets but was characterized by a guitar chop on the off beat
- known as an upstroke or skank - with horns taking the lead and often
following the off beat skank and piano emphasizing the bass line and,
again, playing the skank. Drums kept 4/4 time
and the bass drum was accented on the 3rd beat of each 4-triplet
phrase. The snare would play side stick and accent the third beat of
each 4-triplet phrase. The upstroke sound can also be found in other Caribbean forms of music, such as mento and calypso.
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