Around the explosive, political and musically transitional period of  the late '60s, America, Jamaica and England were affected by a new  production technique that first reared its head in Jamaican studios.   Special effects units like delays, echoes, and reverbs had gained  popularity through producers like Osbourne (King Tubby) Ruddock, who  owned a sound system and cut acetates at Duke Reid's Treasure Isle  Studio.  By accidentally leaving out parts of the vocal mix to a song,  Ruddock stumbled upon a new formula that offered more options for  performing studio magic.  He took this new mix with him to a dance, and  played the recognizable version first.  Then he played his 'accident,'  and the dub mix was born.  Not only did he blow the people away that  night; he ran back into the studio to do it again.
In the 1970s  when a single was released, it was often answered by another record that  gave the second artists' commentary on the first record.  Sometimes,  many spin-off versions came out of this technique, known as toasting.   This form of rapping caught on later in the United States via the  concrete jungles of New York City. On many Rap mixtapes and CDs, artists  would modify toasting by 'dissing' each other when they had beef among  themselves. Though some of the product was hard to find, fans ate up the  resulting, often-exclusive releases anyway. Toasting utilized  catch-phrases that incorporated the sharp Jamaican dialect--it added a  rhythmically expressive, deep melodic quality to Reggae music.  When  many of my fellow Jamaicans speak, their accents often make them sound  like the music: quite rhythmic, quite expressive, quite melodious, quite  harmonic, and quite textural.  Some popular Jamaican phrases follow:
Babylon - hard living, trouble   My yute - homeboy
Bwoyfren' - boyfriend    N'yam - eat food
Cool runnin's - it's all good   'Ole on a likkle - wait just a minute
Cho' - never mind    Oonu - you all
Diy'yah - over here    Pickney - children
Frock - a dress    Redi dress - showing out
Is fi' mi - it's mine     Roll tide - keep it moving
Good good - that's fine                  Selectah - a DJ
Gweh - get out of my face   S'mody - somebody
Gwine - going    Soccamibassa - dressed poorly
Gyalfren' - girlfriend    Tegereg - troublesome; a P.I.T.A.
Leggo beas' - wild, unruly   Tump you - hit you
Maahgah - skinny         Whe' mek? - why?
Dialects  of Jamaican 'patois' can be spoken fast, slow, or moderately.  Some of  the diction is easier to understand than others because it may depend  upon which region of Jamaica one is from. Some people may have emotional  inflections in their speech patterns, while others may have musical  ones.  One thing for sure is that unless you can't hear, you will  definitely know it when a person from the islands is talking or  singing...'yah, mon.' But even without vocals, this underground Dub  music of Jamaica was still shaping itself into a more defined entity.   By 1973, 'King Tubby' Ruddock was experimenting with instrumental  versions of songs by manipulating sounds on the tracks.  His equipment  contained a disc-cutter, mixing console, tape machines and effects  units.  He worked with the top producers on the island to compose and  release the dub album "Blackboard Jungle."
Instrumental versions  of songs soon showed up on the B-sides of singles, called 'dub mixes.'   Whether tracks were abruptly punched-in with buttons or smoothly  faded-in with the sliding fader, they were still given a heavy dose of  sound effects. In some cases, interesting effects were created by  running a looped tape over the heads of a tape machine.  To facilitate  this method, a section of the tape was identified for 'surgery' or  'splicing.'  Splicing occurs by putting the section of tape on a  'chopping block' with vertical and diagonal grooves etched into it.  The  grooves guided a razor blade as it sliced the tape at the beginning and  end of the section to be cut.  The two ends of the isolated tape were  then taped together and run through the tape rollers, which passed the  tape over the three heads (erase, record and playback) in a repeated,  looped manner.
The playback head picked up the signal and played  it till the 'stop' button was depressed.  If the splice wasn't precise,  this procedure could become tedious and time-consuming.  This method may  not have caught on in the fast-paced world of 'put it together quick'  Rap music, but sampling  sure did. Electronically-made sounds and  sampling went on to become worldwide phenomena. Like tape looping,  Jamaicans used sampling to create new music such as Dancehall Reggae.   You'll want to see  the chapter "What Makes Music" in the forthcoming  "Musicology 102" for more on sampling.  If the info in that chapter  tweaks your interest, we'll be covering more studio techniques that you  may find interesting in the sequel to that book, "Musicology 103."
Dub  remixes were released as a standard configuration by the mid '70s, and  DJ's constantly played them in the clubs.  The open relationship between  the United States and Jamaica allowed new reggae styles and trends to drift  between the two cultures.  By the end of the decade, Rap music made its  introduction by creatively looping drum and bass lines with a rhythmic  (non-melodic) vocal track and new sounds. Rap brought showmanship to a  new level by using the techniques of Jamaican Dancehalls and sound  systems, courtesy of innovative DJs like Kool Herc. In case you may have  forgotten, we opened up the book chapter by talking about the DJ who  brought thunder to the clubs. 'Big ups' to these unsung heroes--they  changed the era's musical protocol by breaking down music and remixing  it.  In America, R&B, Funk, Jazz and Dance music were also broken  down and rebuilt; adding anticipation, excitement and exhilaration to  physical activity (dancing) and other types of live performances.

 
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