The arrival of the Windrush Generation in Britain enriched society and culture, having a profound effect on the development of music in this country. Readers wishing to take a deep dive into the music imported and created by the first Caribbean settlers to arrive in 1948, and enjoyed by those in the next three decades, and by their children, should check out the National Caribbean Heritage Museum’s Windrush 2022 playlist on Spotify. In between Lord Kitchener’s infectious calypso postcard London Is The Place For Me (1948) and Captain Ska’s The Windrush (2018), you’ll find Sonny’s Lettah (Anti-Sus Poem), Linton Kwesi Johnson’s forceful indictment of the way in which racist elements within the police force abused the “Suspected Person” law to stop, search and arrest black youths in disproportionately high numbers. A highlight of the Forces of Victory album (1980), the track encapsulates Johnson’s deft knack of chronicling black British history in poems that are both eloquent and relatable.
Johnson’s ability to convey incisive insights into socio-political matters has seen him become the first living poet (also, the first black poet) to be published in Penguin’s Modern Classics series (Mi Revalushanary Fren, 2002). In the book’s afterword, he succinctly describes his work, and its motivation: “Poetry for me was never a calling. It was more like a visceral need for self-expression. Much of what I wrote came out of the Black experience in Britain and our struggles for racial equality and social justice.”
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Paperback Blighters - The books every record collector should read.
The books every record collector should read. Vinyl, you may have heard, has made a big comeback. In 2022, sales of vinyl albums surpassed compact discs (CDs) for the first time in more than three decades in terms of global revenue, racking up more than $1.2bn.
"Beware the Savage Lure/of 1984..." - David Bowie is one of the most venerated musicians ever. But even he had his bad periods.
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Someone needs to come and empty the bins behind the Lloyds Bank branch in Kingston-upon-Thames. It’s been raining and flattened cardboard slumps next to a flytipped air conditioning unit and a rusting clothes rack. There are two signs at head height on the red brick wall. One warns that you’ll be clamped if you park here; the other, a stainless-steel plaque, marks Nipper’s 100th birthday. Nipper, the dog at the heart of the HMV and RCA Victor logos, was a white terrier with chocolate brown ears, maybe a Jack Russell, Smooth Fox, or Bull Terrier, more likely a mix. This is his final resting place. He was buried under a mulberry tree but, you know, urban sprawl, progress, etc. The plaque was unveiled by the Chairman of HMV Stores on 15 August 1984, while Captain Sensible, Janice Long, and a Nipper doppelganger looked on. Round the corner, at HMV and Our Price, George Michael’s Careless Whisper was flying off the shelves, and every copy turned at 45 RPM.
STARS ON 45s
A BUNCH OF MUSICIANS - 45, COUNT 'EM! RHAPSODISE ABOUT THEIR FAVOURITE SINGLE
THE TORTURED SHOPPER'S DEPARTMENT
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Young American
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MOD ALMIGHTY
Steve Ellis began his career as a mod in flower-power clobber as frontman of chart-toppers Love Affair. Quitting in 1970, he worked with The Who's Roger Daltrey then gave up music to become a docker before a near-death experience. Interest in his work was rekindled after hooking up with long-time fan Paul Weller. Lois Wilson hears how his romance with music endures.
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EXACTLY 45 YEARS AGO, CRASS, THE ANARCHIST ACTIVIST COLLECTIVE, WERE FINISHING PIVOTAL SECOND ALBUM, STATIONS OF THE CRASS.
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David Cassidy was arguably the biggest solo star of the immediate post-Beatles era, yet his fame as well as his boyish good looks and extracurricular excessesovershadow the excellence of his breathily intimate, musically accomplished records. Simon Goddard, RC contributor and author of an acclaimed series of books on David Bowie, hails the work of the tortured pop idol
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