BELOW THE BASSLINE: What Kind of World

Text: Chris­t­ian Bosoni


From Studio One to the River – The Evolution of an Immortal Groove

To under­stand how a rid­dim can achieve immor­tal­i­ty, you only need to lis­ten to the open­ing bars of Mor­gan Heritage’s mod­ern mas­ter­piece, ”Down By The Riv­er”.

Released in 2000, the track feels like a warm embrace. But that heavy, hyp­not­ic bassline was­n’t born at the dawn of the mil­len­ni­um. To find its birth­place, we have to trav­el back across the decades and drop the nee­dle on a dusty piece of rock­steady wax from 1968.

The Midnight Session at Brentford Road

The year is 1968. Inside the humid walls of Clement ”Cox­sone” Dodd’s leg­endary Stu­dio One, a young vocal trio known as The Cables is cut­ting a track called ”What Kind of World”. While the orig­i­nal vinyl jack­et prais­es the beau­ti­ful har­monies of the singers, the sleeve leaves a mas­sive ques­tion mark over the men hold­ing the instru­ments.

The musi­cians present in those years to record this incred­i­ble rid­dim were The Soul Ven­dors, a leg­endary, rotat­ing col­lec­tive that was already shift­ing and mutat­ing into what the world would soon come to know as Sound Dimen­sion. In these years, the Soul Ven­dors were formed by extra­or­di­nary tal­ents, includ­ing the genius direc­tor Jack­ie Mit­too on keys, a young prodi­gy named Leroy Sib­bles on bass, Eric Frater and Hux Brown on gui­tars, along­side drum­mers like Fil Cal­len­dar and Joe Isaacs.

Togeth­er, they caught a vibe as a sin­gle, breath­ing unit. Sib­bles laid down an incred­i­bly hyp­not­ic bassline, while Mit­too paint­ed a remark­ably sweet, soul­ful melody on the keys in response to the vocals. With the gui­tar and drums lock­ing the groove into a tight, unbreak­able pock­et, they weren’t just cut­ting a back­ing track; they were engi­neer­ing a blue­print.

Changing Clothes: Roots and Dancehall

A great rid­dim is a shared her­itage, and pro­duc­ers treat­ed this spe­cif­ic bassline like a pre­cious heir­loom. In 1977, as the music shift­ed into the spir­i­tu­al dread of the Roots era, Cox­sone Dodd slowed the tape down and gave Sug­ar Minott the space to pour his heart out over the rid­dim for ”Change Your Ways”.

By the ear­ly 1980s, the ana­logue sweet­ness gave way to the rugged ener­gy of the Dance­hall explo­sion. The leg­endary Roots Radics band res­ur­rect­ed the groove for pro­duc­er Hen­ry ”Jun­jo” Lawes, tough­en­ing it up to shake the fences of Kingston’s sound sys­tem lawns. On this heavy new play­ground, Bar­ring­ton Levy danced through ”21 Girls Salute” and Sis­ter Nan­cy dropped ”A No Any Man Can Test Nan­cy”. The rock­steady tune had trans­formed into a street-smart anthem.

The Return to the Source

When pro­duc­er Dean Fras­er refreshed the groove in 2000 and hand­ed it to Mor­gan Her­itage for ”Down By The Riv­er”, the cir­cle was com­plete. They weren’t just singing a new song; they were chan­nelling over thir­ty years of evo­lu­tion. The soul of The Cables, the con­scious­ness of Sug­ar Minott, and the weight of the dance­hall were all vibrat­ing simul­ta­ne­ous­ly inside that sin­gle rid­dim.

When we look below the bassline, we find the fin­ger­prints of Leroy Sib­bles and the ghost notes of Jack­ie Mit­too. The singers change, the decades pass, but the foun­da­tion remains for­ev­er unshak­able.



Below The Bassline: Giv­ing Cred­it to the Archi­tects of the Foun­da­tion

When we lis­ten to a reg­gae clas­sic, our minds nat­u­ral­ly drift to the singer. We remem­ber the vel­vety vocals, the con­scious lyrics, and the charis­ma of the front­man. But every true reg­gae head knows a deep­er truth: in Reg­gae music, the voice is just the tip of the ice­berg. Beneath the sur­face, locked in a per­fect son­ic pock­et, lies the rid­dim, where the hyp­not­ic pulse of the bass, the steady chop of the gui­tar, the click­ing rimshot of the drum, and the warm skank of the keys blend into an unbreak­able force.
Behind those time­less grooves are extra­or­di­nary ses­sion musi­cians who far too often were left lit­tle to no recog­ni­tion on the orig­i­nal vinyl jack­ets, over­shad­owed by the names of the vocal groups or the pro­duc­ers.
This col­umn was born to shed some light on these unsung heroes. It is an ongo­ing musi­cal exca­va­tion into the bedrock of the foun­da­tion, where we will look back at his­toric record­ing eras to fig­ure out who actu­al­ly played on your favorite tracks.
Turn up your sys­tems – we’re div­ing below the bassline.

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