Spaghetti western's influence on Lee Perry
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- | {{Template}}During the 1970s, the imagery of [[spaghetti western]]s was of influence to Jamaican reggae musician [[Lee Perry]] | + | {{Template}} |
- | Related: Lee Perry - spaghetti westerns | + | As Daniel & Seth Nelson first noted in the late 1990s in on-line magazine [[Perfect Sound Forever]], during the late [[1960s]] and early [[1970s]], the imagery of [[spaghetti western]]s was of influence to Jamaican reggae musician [[Lee Perry]]. |
- | Eastwood rides again | + | Albums Perry recorded with [[The Upsetters]] such as ''[[Clint Eastwood (album)|Clint Eastwood]]'', ''[[Eastwood Rides Again]]'', ''[[The Good, The Bad & The Upsetters]]'' and song titles such as "[[For a Few Dollars More]]" and "[[Return of Django]]", all suggest western movie themes. |
- | Clint Eastwood, Bruce Lee, and the movie world in general have also had a big impact on Lee Perry and on his music. Spaghetti westerns (Old West movies from the 1960s made in Italy, some of which starred Clint Eastwood) heavily influenced Lee Perry's work with the Upsetters during the late 1960s and early '70s. Albums such as 'Clint Eastwood', 'Eastwood Rides Again', 'The Good, The Bad & The Upsetters' and song titles such as 'For A Few Dollars More' and 'Return of Django', all suggest western movie themes. | + | |
- | Although Lee Perry & The Upsetters' music was 100% pure reggae, most of the songs were instrumentals, and the band was therefore free to name the songs anything they wanted to, not being restricted by song lyrics. They could have named the songs and albums in an unlimited amount of ways, but they chose to saw fit to base their material on strong, cowboy heroes. | + | Most of the songs were instrumentals, the band was therefore free to name the songs and they chose to base their material on strong, [[cowboy]] heroes. Sonically too, these works hint at sounds from the Old West: cowbells mimicking horse hooves, organs imitating the "Western" music, gun shots and yelping. Visually, the covers of these albums portray people with cowboy clothes, brandishing guns, and featuring settings of desert-like area. |
- | The work by the Upsetters also features hints of sounds straight from the Old West: A cowbell mimicking horse hooves, organs imitating the music that can commonly be heard in these movies, gun shots, yelping, and many more such examples. The covers of these albums also support this spaghetti western influence, portraying people with cowboy garb, usually brandishing guns, and the setting is usually a dry desert-like area. And once again, good always defeated evil in these movies, which most definitely was to Perry's liking.--Good Always Conquers Evil: The Musical Genius of Lee Perry by Daniel & Seth Nelson, http://www.furious.com/perfect/leeperry/leeperry2.html [Jun 2004] | + | == External links == |
+ | *[http://www.furious.com/perfect/leeperry/leeperry2.html Good Always Conquers Evil: The Musical Genius of Lee Perry, June 1998, Daniel & Seth Nelson] | ||
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Revision as of 12:39, 14 September 2013
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As Daniel & Seth Nelson first noted in the late 1990s in on-line magazine Perfect Sound Forever, during the late 1960s and early 1970s, the imagery of spaghetti westerns was of influence to Jamaican reggae musician Lee Perry.
Albums Perry recorded with The Upsetters such as Clint Eastwood, Eastwood Rides Again, The Good, The Bad & The Upsetters and song titles such as "For a Few Dollars More" and "Return of Django", all suggest western movie themes.
Most of the songs were instrumentals, the band was therefore free to name the songs and they chose to base their material on strong, cowboy heroes. Sonically too, these works hint at sounds from the Old West: cowbells mimicking horse hooves, organs imitating the "Western" music, gun shots and yelping. Visually, the covers of these albums portray people with cowboy clothes, brandishing guns, and featuring settings of desert-like area.
External links