After
the Skatalites disbanded in the mid-'60s, Jamaican producer
Clement Dodd brought in several of the group's members as the house band for his
Studio One facility, teaming them with some of the younger musicians he had discovered.
The Soul Brothers, as the in-house group was initially called, were led by keyboardist, arranger, and
soul master
Jackie Mittoo and the equally as talented tenor sax player
Roland Alphonso. Officially, this configuration recorded for
Dodd between 1965 and 1967, churning out hundreds of the now-trademark
Studio One-styled rhythms that
Dodd would use as backing tracks for his singing artists. Often, though,
Mittoo,
Alphonso, and company got to cut loose and create their own instrumentals over the rhythms, and several of these delightful sides are collected here. Recorded just as
ska was giving way to the deeper, slower rhythms of
rocksteady, tracks like the skipping and rolling
"Train to Skaville" (which isn't really
ska at all, although it shows up repeatedly on
ska collections in
the Ethiopians' vocal version), the push and pull feel of
"Take Ten," the ragged yet sure
"Chicken and Booze," and the infectiously bubbly
"Home Made" are closer to being a kind of unique Jamaican version of
soul-jazz than anything else (compare the one vocal track here,
"Got My Boogaloo," to
Jimmy Smith's version of
"Got My Mojo Working" to hear how close to American
soul-jazz this stuff really is). Whatever the label, it's all pure fun, and durable, as these incredible rhythms continue to be versioned well into the 21st century. ~ Steve Leggett