Frederick "Toots" Hibbert (1942 - 2020)Back when I was working in the Washington, DC area in the mid/late 2000s, I used to spend a lot of time after work at a bar/coffeehouse called Tryst, in that city's Adams-Morgan neighborhood. The big, comfortable, rustic old space it occupied was furnished with huge old mismatched tables, sofas and lounges all seemingly scrounged from a garage sale, and local art covered the unevenly painted walls. Yeah, it was (ant still is) sort of a local
Tryst would host various cultural events from time to time, including art openings, left-leaning political get-togethers and DJ nights - events that I usually tried to avoid, not that I was "anti-" any of that, but since the space required to set up these events would mean less available seating for potential customers, and I generally got there later than most. I hated having to stand around by the wall, strategically positioning myself to commandeer a seating as soon as a current occupant made the slightest indication that he or she was about to vacate.
Anyway, one night in the spring of 2006, they were having another DJ night at Tryst, but this time I had arrived there early enough to place myself at one of the coveted seats/tables. I was sitting there chilling out, with a Greek salad and a Dufrene in front of me, watching Fritz Lang's classic thriller M on my laptop and not really paying much attention to the record spinner, who seemed to be playing a lot of deep house and dub sides... when all of a sudden, one of the cuts he put on caught my attention - THIS one:
Although by that point in life, I was a pretty big ska and reggae fan, somehow I had no awareness of this tune the DJ played that night. I might have heard it before and it hadn't connected, perhaps... but no matter - it DEFINITELY connected that night. Before the song was half over, I rushed to the area in Tryst when the turntables were set up to learn the name of this great song and band. It was "Funky Kingston", off of the album by the same name, by Toots & The Maytals.
Frederick Hibbert was born in 1942 in Jamaica, the youngest of seven children. His parents were both fundamentalist Seventh Day Adventists preachers, so Hibbert's earliest singing experiences were with church gospel choirs. However, before he turned twelve, both of his parents had died, leaving him an orphan raised by his older brother John, who lived in Kingston in the soon-to-be-famous Trenchtown neighborhood, birthplace and crucible of modern Jamaican music.
There in Trenchtown, with his childhood friends Raleigh Gordon and Jerry Matthias, Toots formed the first version of the Toots & The Maytals trio in 1961, when he was nineteen. The band's early ska/rocksteady songs, such as "Six And Seven Books Of Moses" and "Hallelujah", were rooted in Hibbert's religious upbringing. But the band quickly moved on from those themes and expanded their repertoire. By the mid-60s, Toots & The Maytals were one of the biggest bands in Jamaica, with producers clamoring to work with them and the group producing hit after hit, including "Bam Bam", "54-46 That's My Number" (inspired by Hibbert's 18-month stretch in prison for marijuana possession) and "Do The Reggay", the first song to refer to (and subsequently coin the term) "reggae", the then-new music genre that continues to this day.
Toots & The Maytals had released several albums in Jamaica during the 1960s, but by the early '70s they - and reggae music in general - were still relatively unknown in the rest of the world. That international perception began to change in 1972 with the release of the film The Harder They Come, an underground hit in the UK which featured two Maytals songs in the soundtrack. Attempting to strike while the iron was still hot, producer Chris Blackwell hustled the band into Dynamic Sounds Studio in Jamaica, and by the early spring of 1972 had released Funky Kingston, the group's first international album, in Britain and other Commonwealth countries. In 1975, a revised version of Funky Kingston was released in the States, retaining only three songs from the 1972 release and adding six from the Maytals' immediate follow-up album In The Dark, along with the single version of "Pressure Drop" from The Harder They Come soundtrack.Here's the lineup on the original release:
- "Sit Right Down" — 4:44
- "Pomps And Pride" — 4:30
- "Louie Louie" — 5:46
- "I Can't Believe"
- "Redemption Song" — 3:26
- "Daddy's Home" — 5:05
- "Funky Kingston" — 4:54
- "It Was Written Down" — 3:04
- "Time Tough" — 4:23
- "In the Dark" — 2:48
- "Funky Kingston" — 4:54
- "Love is Gonna Let Me Down" — 3:15
- "Louie Louie"
- "Pomps and Pride" — 4:30
- "Got to Be There" — 3:06
- "Country Road" — 3:23
- "Pressure Drop" — 3:46
- "Sailin' On" — 3:35
The original Toots & The Maytals continued on as a unit until the early 1980s before breaking up, with Hibbert having a long subsequent career as a solo artist, collaborator with the likes of Willie Nelson, Gov't Mule, The Red Hot Chili Peppers (among many others), and reviving the Maytals from time to time with new members. Toots performed right up to the end, with his final appearances in the spring and summer of 2020, just before he took ill.
- The original version, released on Dragon Records (a subsidiary of Chris Blackwell's Island Records) in April 1972; and
- The U.S. version, released on Mango Records in mid-1975
Enjoy and pay tribute to one of the founding fathers of reggae! And as always, let me know what you think.
- Funky Kingston (Original 1972 Jamaica/UK Release): Send Email
- Funky Kingston (Revised 1975 US Release): Send Email
Thank you so much for the Jamaican version. It is rare to get to hear reggae in the form Jamaicans get to hear. Better bass lines in the mix among other treats.
ReplyDeleteGreat to hear the 1972 version, many thanks again!
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