The Selecter
From Free net encyclopedia
The Selecter were a British ska revival band from Coventry, England, formed in the late 1970s and who became one of the essential bands of the British ska movement. Image:Selecter.jpg Much of what set apart The Selecter from many of the other ska bands at the time was the voice of Pauline Black. She had to disguise herself as a man in order for the band to get gigs, but once they did, there was no disguising her voice. Like other bands of the ska movement, The Selecter featured a racially mixed line up, and songs about violence, politics, marijuana, a fictional spy's theme song, James Bond, and reggae classics. The name of the band is a reference to the Jamaican word for a music selecter, known elsewhere as the DJ. Also typical to the style is the mix of one vocalist singing, and the other toasting in a Jamaican style, a precursor to rapping.
The Selecter's first recording Too Much Pressure was recorded at the end of 1979 and beginning of 1980 and issued on the pre-eminent 2 Tone/Chrysalis label. Their second recording Celebrate the Bullet was issued in 1981. Though the band has continued to regroup and reform on and off, most of the many recordings available are recompiled selections from these first two albums, either live or studio recordings. The Selecter's first two albums are essential British ska recordings.
Pauline Black has been the singer in The Selecter since its formation in 1979 when the band spearheaded the Two Tone movement alongside The Specials releasing the singles "The Selecter", "Three Minute Hero", "The Whisper", "Missing Words" and "On My Radio" as well as two albums; "Too Much Pressure" and "Celebrate The Bullet". The Selecter were also featured in the cult film Dance Craze. After the band split in 1982, Pauline carved out a career in TV and theatre, appearing in dramas like The Vice, The Bill, Hearts and Minds and 2000 Acres of Sky. She won the 1991 Time Out award for Best Actress for her portrayal of Billie Holiday in the play All or Nothing At All and starred next to Christopher Lee in the schlock horror film The Funny Man. She reformed The Selecter in 1991 and has released several new albums and has toured all over the world.
Nick Welsh is probably best known for being the bassist in The Selecter and formerly Bad Manners but he has worked with some of the biggest names in Ska and Reggae, Prince Buster, Laurel Aitken, Rico Rodriguez, Dave Barker and most recently Lee "Scratch" Perry with whom he received a Grammy Award Certificate for his work on the CD Jamaican ET which won The Best Reggae Category in 2002. Nick also writes music for TV which has been used world-wide on shows as diverse as WWE (World Wrestling Entertainment), The Osbournes and even adverts for Ariel soap powder.
Contents |
Personnel on Too Much Pressure
- Compton Amanor: guitar
- Charley Anderson: bass guitar
- Charley 'H' Bembridge: drums
- Pauline Black: vocals
- Desmond Brown: Hammond keyboard
- Neol Davies: guitar
- Arthur 'Gaps' Hendrickson: vocals
Albums
- Too Much Pressure (1980) UK #5
- Celebrate the Bullet (1981)
- The Happy Album (1994)
- Hairspray (1995)
- Pucker! (1995)
- The Trojan Songbook (1999)
- The Trojan Songbook - Vol 2 (2000)
- Kingston Affair (with Dave Barker) (2000)
- The Trojan Songbook - Vol 3 (2001)
- Acoustic - Unplugged for the Rude Boy Generation (2002)
Singles
- "On My Radio" (Oct 1979) UK #8
- "Three Minute Hero" (Feb 1980) UK #16
- "Missing Words" (March 1980) UK #23
- "The Whisper" (August 1980) UK #36
Personnel, 1999
- Pauline Black - vocals
- Nick Welsh - bass
- Martin Stewart - keyboards
- Paul Seacroft - guitar
- Al Fletcher - drums
- Dave Barker - vocals