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Ska'd for Life: A Personal Journey with The Specials

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Madness look beyond the Caribbean, too. There's an upswing take on the Kinks' 'Lola' that doesn't grate quite as much as it could. A potential cod-reggae calamity is averted on their rendition of the Supremes' 'You Keep Me Hanging On', thanks to Madness's lightness of touch. You'll let Madness off for things that you would never let, say, naff old UB40 get away with. It’s a rite of passage for any aspiring musician but with Death of Guitar Pop we have been able to taste the fruits of our hard labour.” Read More Related Articles

It was animated and it was fun – it was like watching a musical. My younger brothers were still in nappies but we’d all be together skanking to it. I decided there and then that that was what I wanted to do.” And that meant not only returning to his first musical love, ska, but also to the summer house at the bottom of his nan’s garden in Warley, Brentwood, where he wrote and rehearsed his very first songs. We love songwriting and we love performing and we take that seriously while having fun doing it. What I’m trying to say is that we’re professional about what we do.” Lots of nice photos included tho not enough discussion of the clothes (yeah, yeah, he discusses why not but still!). It's also interesting because this came out like a year before they all reunited (sort of...) and he's very generous in his evaluations of everyone's contributions and pretty forgiving of everyone's various quirks and you do kiiiind of wonder whether he'd write some of this the same way now. Overall tho, it's a fun read and a neat look at one of my cat's favourite bands. The result is that he and bandmate Top Kat – another Essex boy, from Ongar – have developed a sound that’s classy, brassy, fun and frisky and has grown steadily since the formation of DOGP in 2016.DOGP have enjoyed good support from the very word go but neither Silky nor Top Kat have forgotten the years they spent learning the ropes with their previous bands. The internet gives us more opportunities so we are trying to use it to build relationships with our fans, and I run the record label from my one-bedroom flat. As bass player with the Specials, in his second-hand suit and pork pie hat, Horace Panter was a member of one of the most innovative and exciting bands to come snarling out of the punk era. Founded by Jerry Damners, their fusion of punk, reggae and ska created a new musical fashion, spearheaded by their own record label Two Tone. They stood for unity and racial harmony in a polarised society. They even got British men dancing again. Listen to any of DOGP’s debut album 69 Candy Street or watch any of their slightly south of sensible videos and you can see that Madness influence burning brightly.

I was in my previous band for 13 years and it was a gruelling apprenticeship,” said Silky. “We had a record deal but it didn’t work out and we lost money at gigs.Fast forward five years, and a bevy of rising bands are busy stealing the tension, genial blokeishness and ska homages that Madness, the Specials et al traded in at the cusp of the Eighties. There's the Ordinary Boys, beloved by Morrissey, and a gang of their fans, the Ordinary Army, born well after Madness's heyday. There's Hard-Fi, who, arguably, owe a greater debt to the Specials than Madness. But Hard-Fi have proved once again that this particularly British double helix of cheer and unease, one shared by many of the home-grown bands of the early Eighties, makes for peculiarly successful pop music.

Madness were my first musical love,” he said. “I remember when I was five my dad gave me a copy of Divine Madness in VHS and from that moment I just wanted to be Suggs! Over the last thirty years I’ve read allot about The Specials and the Two Tone bands and although this doesn’t really add anything to the story it is great to hear it first hand from someone who was there rather than watching on, which I was doing myself. The stories reverberate with a freshness particularly in the parts of the book which were taken directly from the tour journal Horace kept throughout the American and Japanese tours which ultimately led to the break up of the band.Horace vividly describes his life before The Specials, the band's formation, their meteoric rise to the top of the charts, and their equally swift disintegration. Though the band comprises just the two of them, they regularly perform as a nine-piece including a full brass section and it’s clear these guys are taking having fun very seriously indeed.

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