'Police On My Back' was written in England by Eddy Grant and recorded by his group, The Equals, in 1967. Since then it has been covered by a number of artists. In this article I am concerned with the original and four covers. Over the 40 years between the Equals' version of the song and the final version with which I am concerned, the meaning of the lyrics has changed from being an expression of Jamaican rude boy culture to being a song that expresses the oppression of migrants from British and European colonies living in the metropoles of the colonisers. This article tracks the changes in musical and lyrical expression in the song against the increasingly oppressive circumstances of those migrants and their descendents. These are the circu...
An article about Rock Against Racism including book reviews of Rock Against Racism Live. 1977-1981, ...
When reggae emerged in the late 1960s, it came as a cultural bombshell not only to Jamaica but the w...
“While nuff ah right and rahbit; we write and arrange”, is taken from a statement made by the Britis...
This article examines the complex racial and national politics that surrounded British post-punk mus...
One song that can be read as a marker of the changing experience of migrants in Britain and Europe i...
This article discusses What’s Be Happen?, New Zealand’s first reggae album, released by the band Her...
'Ob-La-Di Ob-La-Da' is commonly considered to be one of the Beatles more trite songs. A slice of hap...
In this article, I reflect on the importance of the dancehall song 'British Love (Anything 4 You)' r...
This article explores the role of Reggae music and Rastafari in the creation of alternative public a...
his dissertation evaluates and explores the way in which class signification operates within British...
explores how the music of the multi-ethnic French band Zebda examines issues of citizenship and belo...
This paper attempts to examine the mediation's and negotiations that occur when the Other appropriat...
As debates on the rise of violent crime in London unfold, UK drill music is routinely accused of enc...
This Article focuses on Calle 13, a musical duo from Puerto Rico, and examines that duo’s use of soc...
Britain’s COMMUNITY BANDS of the late 1960s and early 1970s. MUSIC IS a soundtrack to popular cul...
An article about Rock Against Racism including book reviews of Rock Against Racism Live. 1977-1981, ...
When reggae emerged in the late 1960s, it came as a cultural bombshell not only to Jamaica but the w...
“While nuff ah right and rahbit; we write and arrange”, is taken from a statement made by the Britis...
This article examines the complex racial and national politics that surrounded British post-punk mus...
One song that can be read as a marker of the changing experience of migrants in Britain and Europe i...
This article discusses What’s Be Happen?, New Zealand’s first reggae album, released by the band Her...
'Ob-La-Di Ob-La-Da' is commonly considered to be one of the Beatles more trite songs. A slice of hap...
In this article, I reflect on the importance of the dancehall song 'British Love (Anything 4 You)' r...
This article explores the role of Reggae music and Rastafari in the creation of alternative public a...
his dissertation evaluates and explores the way in which class signification operates within British...
explores how the music of the multi-ethnic French band Zebda examines issues of citizenship and belo...
This paper attempts to examine the mediation's and negotiations that occur when the Other appropriat...
As debates on the rise of violent crime in London unfold, UK drill music is routinely accused of enc...
This Article focuses on Calle 13, a musical duo from Puerto Rico, and examines that duo’s use of soc...
Britain’s COMMUNITY BANDS of the late 1960s and early 1970s. MUSIC IS a soundtrack to popular cul...
An article about Rock Against Racism including book reviews of Rock Against Racism Live. 1977-1981, ...
When reggae emerged in the late 1960s, it came as a cultural bombshell not only to Jamaica but the w...
“While nuff ah right and rahbit; we write and arrange”, is taken from a statement made by the Britis...