
Radiohead's lead guitarist, Jonny Greenwood, indulges his passion for reggae music by mining through Trojan's extensive catalog and compiling his favorite tracks onto one album, Jonny Greenwood is the Controller. Coming out on March 6th, 2007, this one of a kind collection digs deep into rich Jamaican sounds and covers styles from classic Ska and Rocksteady to vintage Dub and Roots and includes the likes of Lee 'Scratch' Perry, Desmond Dekker, Delroy Wilson, Scientist & Jammy and many others.
After 6 months of endless listening, Greenwood narrowed down his choices to 17 faultless recordings.
"Really, all musical life is here." - Jonny Greenwood
"With Radiohead and dub reggae, the parallels are obvious -- studio as instrument, audible seams imparted by technology front and center, a spacy sense of dislocation a given... Greenwood picked a good one here." – Pitchforkmedia.com
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More on Jonny Greenwood release:
Written by Tio Esqueleto
Trojan Records has been at the
forefront of all things reggae since 1967. Roots, dub, dance hall, you name it,
it’s all been featured, helped along, and in many cases, born under their
imprint. The Trojan library ranges from mainstream crossover artists like Bob
Marley and the Wailers, Inner Circle, and Toots and The Maytals, to artists such
as Desmond Dekker, David “Scotty” Scott, and Horace Andy, equally valid
artists you may not know about depending on your dedication to the genre.
Needless to say, it is vast.
Now in their 40th year, Trojan has enlisted the help of fellow enthusiasts from
all walks of the musical spectrum for its Artist’s Choice Jukebox
series, a celebrity mix-tape for all things Trojan reggae. With recent releases
from Don Letts and DJ Spooky already available plus future releases from Lee
“Scratch” Perry and Fatboy Slim on the horizon, this latest installment
finds Radiohead guitarist Johnny Greenwood as “THE CONTROLLER”.
Greenwood’s take is an
interesting one. After six months of listening to nothing but reggae, he forgoes
the obvious crossover artists (no Marley, no Toots, no Circle), and instead opts
for the aforementioned lesser-known superstars of the Trojan roster. This album
is for the learned, which isn’t to say that one can’t, in turn, learn from
it. At just under 70 minutes, his choices run the full gamut of their catalogue,
each with a detailed description of both artist that penned it, as well as the
song’s origin and impact. He is thorough and informative without coming off as
a know it all. His passion and enthusiasm for the project are quite evident in
his selections and the words that accompany them.
The opening track, “Dread Are The Controller” by Linvall Thompson, has
heavyweights Sly and Robby providing the rhythm, and is the obvious inspiration
for this installment’s title. Next up is Derrick Harriott’s rendition of Van
McCoy’s “Let Me Down Easy.” Here we have the most accessible track on the
compilation. Full of soul and oozing with crossover potential, it does a
magnificent job of setting up the next two tracks in Greenwood’s wish list.
Marcia Aitken’s “I’m Still In Love With You” and the legendary Gregory
Isaacs’ “Never Be Ungrateful” are shining examples of the skillful
songwriting and musicianship that have been displayed in their most traditional
forms up to this point in the collection. It is with this next track that we
venture into the other defining (and altogether Johnny Greenwood) side of
reggae: its production values.
What better way to usher in the notion of the producer as reggae superstar than
with Lee “Scratch” Perry, the obvious star of this compilation. In his liner
notes, Greenwood compares Perry’s work to that of The Beatles during their
experimental phase. Perry’s ability was to make the studio an instrument in
itself. Not unlike Beatles producer George Martin, he made the traditional
acoustic instruments, voices, and microphones, upon playback, sound nothing like
the initial recording.
It comes as no surprise he would be so prominently featured by the man largely
responsible for bringing Kid A and Amnesiac into the world. One need only listen
to Greenwood’s own quirky instrumentation, laden with effects and trickery
both in the studio and on stage to hear the profound effect that Lee Perry (and
those that followed) has had on his work.
Perry appears three times in this collection. Track 5 is an out there,
echo-heavy, solo effort entitled “Bionic Rats.” Track 8, “Black Panta,”
is with his outfit The Upsetters and features a classic opening sampled
prominently in fellow dub enthusiasts The Orb’s “Outlands.” The final
Perry cut (track 15) is “Dreader Locks” and features Junior Byles, who shows
up earlier in the compilation with a fairly straightforward, but altogether
eerie, cover of “Fever,” another major highlight on the album. With similar
efforts from Lloyd’s Allstars, The Heptones, and Marcia Griffiths, the album
maintains this theme of traditional roots reggae interspersed with spaced-out,
production-heavy dub.
Now, one might question the variety on such a compilation. The common complaint
that “it all sounds alike” could be used here. To that, Greenwood simply
asks that you take a listen. It’s in the little nuances throughout, subtle
changes in tempo, rhythm, and overall mood. As an avid listener of all forms of
minimalist techno, long form disco, and a variety of motion picture soundtracks
(the closest I get to classical), I couldn’t agree more. There is far more
here than what is picked up on a first listening.
Mr. Greenwood starts his liner notes by stating that he is still discovering
Jamaican artists that he feels should have been included here. He wraps up by
saying that this is by no means a “best of;” it is merely a starting point.
If you come across something you like, be it voice, style, or tempo to simply
pursue and enjoy. With that, there are two tracks in particular that I will be
investigating further – Delroy Wilson’s “This Life Makes Me Wonder,” and
my personal favorite, The Jahlights “Right Road To Dubland.” Now, that’s
what a good compilation is supposed to do.
CHECK OUT THE VITAL SELECTION LINKS BELOW FOR MORE INFO ON ALL THE TROJAN SELECTOR PICKS!