Ska (Music)

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Information for Authority record
Name (Hebrew)
סקא (מוזיקה)
Name (Latin)
Ska (Music)
Other forms of name
Bluebeat
Ska (Music) Jamaica
See Also From tracing topical name
Popular music Jamaica
Reggae music
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
Wikidata: Q54365
Library of congress: sh 96007124
Sources of Information
  • Work cat.: 96703679: Ska spectacular, p1993.
  • New Grove(Ska. A style of urban popular music and dance, originating in Jamaica in the late 1950s; dominant there until middle 1960s, largely then supplanted by "rock steady" which later became Reggae.)
  • New Grove dict. of mus. online, May 10, 2001(Ska (bluebeat); under Reggae: ska known in England as bluebeat)
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Wikipedia description:

Ska (; Jamaican Creole: skia, [skjæ]) is a music genre that originated in Jamaica in the late 1950s and was the precursor to rocksteady and reggae. It combined elements of Caribbean mento and calypso with American jazz and rhythm and blues. Ska is characterized by a walking bass line accented with rhythms on the off beat. It was developed in Jamaica in the 1960s when Stranger Cole, Prince Buster, Clement "Coxsone" Dodd, and Duke Reid formed sound systems to play American rhythm and blues and then began recording their own songs. In the early 1960s, ska was the dominant music genre of Jamaica and was popular with British mods and with many skinheads. Music historians typically divide the history of ska into three periods: the original Jamaican scene of the 1960s; the 2 tone ska revival of the late 1970s in Britain, which fused Jamaican ska rhythms and melodies with the faster tempos and harder edge of punk rock forming ska-punk; and third-wave ska, which involved bands from a wide range of countries around the world, in the late 1980s and 1990s.

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