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{{Jamaicanmusic}}
''This article is about the Jamaican music. For the No Doubt album, see [[Rock Steady]]''

'''Rocksteady''' is the name given to a style of [[music]] popular in [[Jamaica]] between [[1966]] and [[1968]]. The term comes from a dance style which [[Alton Ellis]] named in his
recording "Rock Steady". The Rocksteady dance was a more relaxed affair than the earlier, more frantic ska moves.

A successor to [[ska]], and a precursor to [[reggae]],
rocksteady saw the flowering of Jamaican vocal harmony groups such as The
Gaylads, The Kingstonians, [[Toots & the Maytals]] and [[The Paragons]]. Key musical differences
between ska and rocksteady were a more relaxed tempo, a diminished use of
horns, and a change of the role of the bass. With ska the bass had tended to play
quarter notes in an even "walking" style, but in rocksteady the bass part became more
broken-up and syncopated, using aggressive, repetitive lines which were often doubled by a guitar.

Rocksteady arose at a time when young people from the Jamaican countryside were flooding
into the urban ghettos of Kingston, in neighborhoods known as [[Riverton City]], Greenwich
Town and, most notoriously, [[Trenchtown]]. Though much of the country was
optimistic about their future in the immediate post-independence climate, these
poverty-stricken youths did not share in this sentiment. They eschewed the frenetic
energy of ska, and the cultural mores of the time, many becoming delinquents who
despite being anti-social, exuded a certain coolness and style. These unruly youths became known as [[rude boy]]s. The rude boy phenomenon had existed in the ska period but was expressed more obviously during the rocksteady era in songs such as "Rude Boy Gone A Jail" by the Clarendonians, "No Good Rudie" by Justin Hinds & the Dominoes, "Don't Be Rude" by the Rulers. Though Alton Ellis is generally said to be the father of rocksteady for his hit "Girl I've Got a Date", other candidates for the first rocksteady single include "Take It Easy" by Hopeton Lewis, "Tougher Than Tough" by [[Derrick Morgan]] and "Hold Them" by Roy
Shirley.

The [[record producer]] [[Duke Reid]] released Alton Ellis' "Girl I've Got a Date", on his Treasure Isle label, as well as recordings by [[The Techniques]], [[The Silvertones]], [[The Jamaicans]] and [[The Paragons]]; his work with these groups helped establish the vocal sound of rocksteady. In addition to the harmony trios, solo artists such as [[Delroy Wilson]], [[Bob Andy]] and [[Ken Boothe]] were also hugely popular. Rocksteady lyrics tended to deal with love, rude boys, or were simple dance tunes, and while singers sometimes covered American hits, many Jamaican artists composed fine original songs. Musicians who were crucial in creating the music included guitarist [[Lynn Taitt]], keyboard player [[Jackie Mittoo]], drummer Winston Grennan, bassist Jackie Jackson and saxophonist [[Tommy McCook]].

Several factors contributed to the growth of rocksteady into reggae in the late
1960s. The emigration to Canada of key musical arrangers Jackie Mittoo and Lynn Taitt along with
the modernization of Jamaican studio technology had a marked affect on the sound and
style of the recordings. Musically, bass patterns became more complex and increasingly dominated
the arrangements, as the piano gave way to the electric organ and the horns faded even farther into the background. A scratchier, percussive rhythm guitar and a more precise and intricate style of drumming came into prominence. Lyrical content changed, as the honeymoon of Jamaican independence had ended by the late 1960s with the average Jamaican seeing little relief from widespread poverty. By the early 1970s as the Rastafarian movement gained in popularity, songs tended to be focused less on romance and more on black consciousness, politics and protest. Although rocksteady was a short-lived phase of Jamaican popular music, it was hugely influential to the reggae and dancehall styles that followed, and many basslines originally created for rocksteady songs continue to be recycled and used in contemporary Jamaican music.

----

More on the history of Jamaican music can be found here: [http://niceup.com/history/ja_music_59-73.html]

==Lyrics==
[http://www.jamaicalyrics.com.ar/index.php?mod=search Rocksteady Lyrics]

{{reggae}}
[[Category:Jamaican styles of music]] [[Category:Rocksteady]]

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Revision as of 17:59, 15 July 2008