
Mittwoch
28.11.2007 / 20h / U-Club Wuppertal
live in concert
EEK-A-MOUSE & BAND
Eek
A Mouse is back! Auf seiner kommenden Tournee gastiert der Jamaikaner
auch wieder in Wuppertal. Nach seinem letzten Konzert im
U-Club vor genau zwei Jahren wird es auch höchste Zeit.
Seit Jahren dabei, hat sich der Singjay mit seinem Reggae Roots
Ragga Gesang mittlweweile auf der ganzen Welt einen Namen gemacht.
Seine Lieder wie "Ganja
Smugglin"
und "Wa Do Dem" sind seit Jahren Ohrwürmer der Regage
Gemeinschaft. Seine Bühnenpräsenz und seine konstanten
Tourneen haben Eek a Mouse die nötige Erfahrung gebracht
um auch den unerfahrenen Reggaehöhrer ins einen Bann zu
bringen. Der unikate Gesangsstil hat deutlich den heutigen Reggae
und Dancehall mitgeprägt.
Also freut euch auf einen Pionier der jamaikanischen Volksmusik,
denn wenn Eek A Mouse kommt steht das stets für volle Häuser
und ein wunderbares Konzert.
hotlink:
http://www.eeksperience.com
300
DPI PRESSEFOTOS
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Biography: Eek-A-Mouse
Born: Ripton Joseph Hylton
November 19, 1957. Kingston, Jamaica, West Indies.
It is not only Eek-A-Mouse's 6 feet 6 inches height that make him
one of Jamaica's most individual talents. He has created a style
all his own, and gone on to become something of an international
phenomenon quite apart from the rest of the world of reggae. Hylton's
unusual name was originally that of a racehorse upon which he frequently
lost money; when the horse finally won a race, he had, of course,
refused to back it.
"My Father's Land" and "Creation", his first
two releases, came out under his real name in the mid-70s. Not only
were they made while he was still in college, they were produced
by his math teacher Mr. Dehaney.
In 1980, he started recording with Joe Gibbs after working briefly
with the Papa Roots, Black Ark, Gemini, Jah Life, Black Scorpio
and Virgo sound systems.
"Wah Do Dem" was the 1980 single that made his name in
Jamaica. Even though it was considered too controversial for radio
airplay. It was followed by "Modelling Queen," another
JA hit single that appeared on his first album "Bubble Up Yu
Hip". Both were produced by singer Linval Thompson and issued
on his Thompson Sound label in Jamaica.
By 1981, he had teamed up with producer and Volcano sound owner
Henry "Junjo" Lawes and had achieved significant hits
with "Once A Virgin", "Modelling Queen" and
"Virgin Girl". Before the year was out, the artist had
joined forces with producer Junjo Lawes and remixer Scientist. Backed
by the Roots Radics, Eek cut "Virgin Girl" and "Noah's
Ark," before having another go at "Wa-Do-Dem," for
Greensleeves. The latter did the trick and Eek-A-Mouse had arrived
with a sound so unlike any other, equal parts singing, DJing, and
disconcerting Oriental-esque weirdness, that soon all of the island
was raving about the rodent.
He was the toast of Reggae Sunsplash in 1981, his bubbling lunacy
providing a cathartic release to a festival otherwise in mourning
for Bob Marley. "Biddy biddy beng" roiled out across the
crowd, and the audience shouted it back as one, instantly cementing
the syllables as the catchprase of the new decade. Eek saw out the
year with the holiday hit, "Christmas A-Come."
1982 was the year of the Mouse, with a litter of smash singles including
"Wild Like a Tiger," "For Hire and Removal,"
"Do You Remember," and "Ganja Smuggling," and
the seminal album "Wa Do Dem," rounding up most of the
hits and more. With "Operation Eradication," Eek proved
there was a thinking man inside the mouse costume on a single inspired
by the tragic vigilante killing of close friend and fellow DJ Errol
Scorcher. A rabid appearance at Reggae Sunsplash was also captured
on tape and released in 1984. "Skidip!" appeared before
the year closed and although it was less hit-driven than its predecessor,
was just as strong nonetheless.
More smash singles followed in 1983, while "Mouse and the Man"
proved to be another classic set. Again produced by Linval Thompson
and backed by the Roots Radics, this remains one of the artist's
masterpieces. The following year's "Mouseketeer", produced
by Junjo Lawes, included several hits, while also taking on contemporary
issues and finally answering fans' number one question on "How
I Got My Name." A distribution deal with Shanachie later put
these records in the hands of American reggae fans.
In 1985, Eek began working with producers Anthony and Ronald Welch,
for whom he recorded the "Assassinator" album, which was
his U.S. debut on the RAS Records label. It was a rather depressing
and violent affair thematically, although even the most serious
subjects have a comic irony under the artist's oddball delivery.
Surprisingly, or not, Eek's international audience was found amongst
the rock crowd. Which explains why "The King and I", also
released that year, was recorded in the U.K. with producer Cliff
Carnegie.But it was on 1988's wittily titled "Eek-A-Nomics"
that the DJ began seriously courting this new audience. Bolstered
by the hit single "The Freak," a version of the Addams
Family theme song.
Eek signed to the Island label the following year and even grabbed
a role in the film New Jack City, playing Fat Smitty. "I do
seven or eight minutes in the movie but they cut me down to one
minute and I was pissed. Lost my Oscar!," Mouse laments. He
later passed on a part in Steven Seagal's "Marked For Death,"
after reading the script. "It had some bad vibe about Jamaicans.
It have Rastaman doing all kinda voodoo and drugs."
The "U-Neek" album,which included tracks produced by Gussie
Clarke, Daddy-O and Matt Robinson, was the pinnacle of cross-pollination
between reggae and rock, highlighted by a cover of Led Zeppelin's
own Hindenberg attempt at reggae, "D'Yer Maker." The album
also spawned the hit single "You're The Only One I Need,"
and an appearance on The David Letterman Show. Unfortunately, this
was to be Eek's first and last album for Island.
It wasn't until 1996 that a new full-length, "Black Cowboy",
appeared on the Sunset Blvd./Explicit label. Though his voice seemed
to have dropped an octave, the breadth of subject matter, as well
as his patented "bingy-boingy" style indicated that Da
Mouse was still "in the house."
Mouse continued to tour almost constantly throughout the end of
the 90's and into the millenium, performing an amazing 200-250 shows
a year. While still finding time to appear on collaborations with
different artists including Cocoa Brovaz, POD, Papas Culture, MC
Torch, and BranVan3000. Also, appearing on various riddim albums
from the UK. before releasing "Eeksperience" on Coach
House Records in early 2001.
A chat with Eek-A-Mouse is something of an aural adventure. More
than a quarter-century of recording, global touring and enough years
of residency in the suburbs of Irvine to justify an accent heavy
on California mall girl-isms have hardly changed the dancehall godfather's
husky Kingston patois. Though his voice is smooth and rich in tone,
Mouse's unique re-imagining of English grammatical rules can prove
challenging to the unprepared ear.
Take a conversation touching on Mouse's feelings about his music's
place among reggae's current crop of dancehall favorites. While
a couple of decades removed from the early '80s Jamaican dancehall
scene that solidified his reputation as one of the genre's most
irreverent and oft-copied toasters, The Mouse — as he is fond
of calling himself — hardly feels his career has peaked or
that his time has passed.
"I'm Mouse, you know? I'm Mouse, so I can change my style any
time. There's different reggae now ... hip-hop, dance, regular reggae.
Just like Eek-A-Mouse. I'm also unique, you know? Different."
"I was singing when I was a child, yeah," said Mouse,
asked about his hand-to-mouth beginnings in Kingston's notorious
Trench Town ghetto. "I would sing with my mama. I was singing
all the while. Then the kids got interested, and sometimes I would
sing them songs. Sometimes there would be little concerts going
on in school and I would participate in singing, you know? But I
knew I was gonna be a singer soon."
Mouse's diverse list of early musical influences reads like a Magic
8-Ball of the varied styles that would eventually color his inventive
lyricism and instrumentation.
"I loved Nat King Cole, Marty Robbins, Cab Calloway, Patsy
Cline ... all different singers. Sam Cooke and The Beatles ... and
stuff like that," said Mouse, rhapsodically. "And then
I came up with my own original style."
That "original style" included elements of "sing-jaying,"
an early form of toasting (boastful catch phrases, singing and DJ
work) mixed with funky vocal gymnastics and effects. Mouse's contribution
to the genre was a percussive, nasally vocal style, and a talent
for using his voice as a musical instrument that moved The Boston
Globe to call him "the Al Jarreau of reggae." Much to
his chagrin, Mouse has also often been called the originator of
"sing-jaying."
"I don't know why they call me that," said Mouse, chuckling.
"Maybe ... it's a good vibe. Maybe a good vibe is what they
feel, you know? Using my voice as an instrument ... (it's) just
what I do, you know?
"Sometimes, if I'm freestyling lyrics ... I'm thinking about
the sound. I say, 'bam-ding-ding' and stuff like that to get the
lyrics together."
Over the years, Mouse's core audience has also happily accepted
his frequent lyrical switch-ups from half-baked humor ("The
Mouse and The Man" is about a Disney World meeting of the minds
with Mickey) and pointed social commentary ("Operation Eradication"
is about the murder of his friend Errol Scorcher by politically-motivated
Jamaican eradication squads).
"That just came natural," said Mouse, of not being pigeon-holed
to a sole lyrical style. "I never worried about ... sounding
the same because I'm always seeing stuff happen to people. And I'm
alive, you know? So I just sing about current stuff happening in
the world ... and just make it unique to The Mouse."
And as evidenced by some off-the-cuff long-distance crooning, what
seemed to be on The Mouse's mind of late was some serious fascination
with amour.
"I've got a song called 'Pretty Girl,'" said Mouse, offering
a track from this summer's still untitled followup CD to 2001's
"Eeksperience."
He began singing softly and sweetly, "She's a pretty girl.
Pretty like a diamond. Pretty like a-gold." After finishing,
Mouse shared a few verses from another gently performed love song
called "I'll Be Waiting," this one using all manner of
weather-related lyrical metaphors as a promise of keeping one's
love real.
You in love, Mouse?
"Yeah, you know ... but not really," he said, laughing
again. "I go through stuff sometimes, you know? — and
I'll sing about it. It's like stress release."
We know.
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