UB45 (Ultimate Edition) UB40
Album Info
Album Veröffentlichung:
2024
HRA-Veröffentlichung:
16.07.2026
Das Album enthält Albumcover
- 1 Home 03:47
- 2 Food For Thought 03:59
- 3 King 04:07
- 4 Champion (Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games: Official Anthem) 03:34
- 5 Tyler 03:17
- 6 Trouble 03:56
- 7 Red Red Wine 05:20
- 8 Fool Me Once 04:41
- 9 Cherry Oh Baby 03:03
- 10 Say Nothing 02:54
- 11 Sing Our Own Song 04:54
- 12 Gimme Some Kinda Sign 03:48
- 13 Kingston Town 04:08
- 14 Hope She'll Be Happier 04:26
- 15 Forever True 03:39
- 16 Homeless Dub 04:21
- 17 Foollish Dub 04:52
Info zu UB45 (Ultimate Edition)
UB40, die weltweit meistverkaufte Reggae-Band, wird am 19. April 2024 ihr 21. Studioalbum „UB45“ über SRG Records (Universal) veröffentlichen. Das Album mit 14 Titeln enthält brandneue Songs, darunter die kommenden Singles „Gimme Some Kinda Sign“ und „Home“, sowie Neuaufnahmen einiger der beliebtesten Hits der Band.
UB40 sind die weltweit meistverkaufte Reggae-Band mit über 100 Millionen verkauften Alben, 50 Singles in den britischen Top 40 und 10 Alben in den britischen Top 10. Die Band hat sich im Laufe von 45 Jahren bewährt, gemeinsam die Welt bereist und Musik aufgenommen, die von einem unzerbrechlichen Band der Brüderlichkeit durchdrungen ist – geprägt von ihren langjährigen Freundschaften und gemeinsamen Wurzeln in Birmingham. Die Besetzung umfasst stolz alle bis auf eines der noch lebenden Gründungsmitglieder und wird nun durch die belebende und neue Energie spendende Präsenz des Sängers Matt Doyle verstärkt.
Auf „UB45“ zeigt die Band, was sie am besten kann: mit Songs, die gesellschaftliche Brennpunkte furchtlos ansprechen und eine klare Haltung gegen die Ungerechtigkeiten der Welt einnehmen. Dies wird bereits beim Eröffnungstrack und der kommenden Lead-Single „Home“ deutlich, die mit den typischen UB40-Beats und den kraftvollen, zeitlosen Themen Gleichheit und Gemeinschaft aufwartet.
UB40
UB40
The story of UB40, and how this group of young friends from Birmingham transcended their working-class origins to become the world’s most successful reggae band is not the stuff of fairytales as might be imagined. The group’s led a charmed life in many respects it’s true, but it’s been a long haul since the days they’d meet up in the bars and clubs around Moseley, and some of them had to scrape by on less than £8 a week unemployment benefit. The choice was simple if you’d left school early. You could either work in one of the local factories, like Robin Campbell did, or scuffle along aimlessly whilst waiting for something else to happen.
By the summer of 1978, something else did happen, and the nucleus of UB40 began rehearsing in a local basement. Robin’s younger brother Ali, Earl Falconer, Brian Travers and James Brown all knew each other from Moseley School of Art, whilst Norman Hassan had been a friend of Ali’s since school. Initially, they thought of themselves as a "jazz-dub-reggae" band, but by the time Robin was persuaded to join and they’d recruited Michael Virtue and Astro – who’d learnt his craft with Birmingham sound-system Duke Alloy – the group had already aligned themselves to left-wing political ideals and forged their own identity, separate from the many punk and Two Tone outfits around at that time. The group had nailed their colours to the mast by naming themselves after an unemployment benefit form. Their political convictions hadn’t been gleaned second hand either, but cemented in place whilst attending marches protesting against the National Front, or rallies organised by Rock Against Racism.
By the time Chrissie Hynde invited them to tour with the Pretenders during the summer of 1980 and their debut single "King b/w Food For Thought" had sailed into the UK Top 5, all the essential elements of UB40 were already in place. Their line-up will remain unchanged for almost thirty years, and they will continue playing a mix of original material and inspired choice of reggae covers in a style that’s instantly accessible with its bright melodies and sweeping horn arrangements – one that’s allied to a formidable rhythm section, capable of holding its own with anything from Jamaica.
UB40’s first album was released the following September, on Graduate Records. Their deal allowed them more creative freedom than if they had signed with a major label. The cover artwork memorably duplicated an unemployment benefit card, with the title "Signing Off" rubber-stamped in red, but it was the music that quickly worked its way into the affections of a young, mainly student crowd with its knowing lyrics, solid reggae rhythms and dubby, instrumental passages, offset by warm horn solos and Jamaican style scatting. There was nothing else like it at the time. As a multi-cultural band from Birmingham, UB40 weren’t drawn into trying to sound "authentic," and there was considerably more depth to their music than that of many punk and 2Tone bands. "I’m a British subject, not proud of it, whilst I carry the burden of shame," they sang on one of the tracks. Accepting the truth of their own situation amidst a sea of other reggae songs proclaiming black heritage gave us a valuable insight into where UB40 were coming from. They were unafraid to stand up and be counted, and British audiences instinctively loved them for it. "Signing Off" duly went to No. 2 in the UK and stayed on the nation’s album charts for 72 weeks.
At the end of 1980, the contract with Graduate expired and UB40 formed their own record company, DEP International, with all eight members owning an equal share. They also signed a licensing deal with CBS, which ensured them far better distribution. "Signing Off" was still in the charts when they released their second album "Present Arms" in the summer of 1981. The sound was immediately brighter, harder and more professional, yet the spirit and commitment underpinning the band’s songs remained resolutely unchanged, as heard on "One In Ten," written about the UK’s record number of unemployed. With lyrics like "Nobody knows me, but I’m always there. A statistical reminder of a world that doesn’t care," "One In Ten" became an anthem of the British protest movement, and a genuine counterpart to the equally motivated songs being written by the likes of Bob Marley and Peter Tosh in the Caribbean. "One In Ten" will earn the rare distinction of being "versioned" by Jamaican reggae acts in future. Back in 1981, it formed part of the soundtrack accompanying the race riots erupting in places like Brixton, Handsworth and St. Paul’s in Bristol – hard pressed, inner city areas with large immigrant communities that had found themselves on the frontline in resisting the right wing policies of Margaret Thatcher’s government. More information, please visit: www.ub40.co.uk
Dieses Album enthält kein Booklet
