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Groundation|Here I Am

Here I Am

Groundation

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Northern California's Groundation has many of the accoutrements of the typical reggae group, from its syncopated rhythms to the horn charts, which hark back to ska, and including the lead vocals of lyricist/guitarist Harrison Stafford, who has a nasal, reedy tenor reminiscent of Bob Marley at his more hoarse moments. Also, Stafford's words are full of Jamaican patois with references to Biblical passages as filtered through references to Jah and Rasta. But there is lurking within Groundation's music a different impetus that distinguishes it from standard-issue reggae. At the start of "Run the Plan," the opening track on the group's sixth regular album, Here I Am, the musicians launch into what sounds like '70s jazz-rock fusion, if not the middle section of some long song by Traffic. It is only after a while that this abruptly stops and the band obediently lopes into a reggae beat behind Stafford's singing. But that element of jazzy improvisation, or jam band playing, never disappears completely. At any given moment, a song may give way to extended group interaction as the music stretches out and the musicians take off in unexpected directions. While that may keep them from being a classic reggae ensemble, it also seems true to an outfit that does not hail from Jamaica, and it makes them different in a field that can be doctrinaire.

© William Ruhlmann /TiVo

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Here I Am

Groundation

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1
Run The Plan
00:07:20

Groundation, MainArtist

(C) 2009 Young Tree Records (P) 2009 Young Tree Records

2
Everyone Could Lose
00:03:31

Groundation, MainArtist

(C) 2009 Young Tree Records (P) 2009 Young Tree Records

3
So Blind
00:04:35

Groundation, MainArtist

(C) 2009 Young Tree Records (P) 2009 Young Tree Records

4
Time Came
00:07:30

Groundation, MainArtist

(C) 2009 Young Tree Records (P) 2009 Young Tree Records

5
By All Means
00:03:48

Groundation, MainArtist

(C) 2009 Young Tree Records (P) 2009 Young Tree Records

6
Blues Away
00:04:54

Groundation, MainArtist

(C) 2009 Young Tree Records (P) 2009 Young Tree Records

7
Not So Simple
00:05:56

Groundation, MainArtist

(C) 2009 Young Tree Records (P) 2009 Young Tree Records

8
Here I Am
00:06:45

Groundation, MainArtist

(C) 2009 Young Tree Records (P) 2009 Young Tree Records

9
You Can Profit
00:03:55

Groundation, MainArtist

(C) 2009 Young Tree Records (P) 2009 Young Tree Records

10
Beating Heart
00:04:11

Groundation, MainArtist

(C) 2009 Young Tree Records (P) 2009 Young Tree Records

11
Walk Upright
00:04:48

Groundation, MainArtist

(C) 2009 Young Tree Records (P) 2009 Young Tree Records

12
Golan To Galilee
00:03:21

Groundation, MainArtist

(C) 2009 Young Tree Records (P) 2009 Young Tree Records

Album review

Northern California's Groundation has many of the accoutrements of the typical reggae group, from its syncopated rhythms to the horn charts, which hark back to ska, and including the lead vocals of lyricist/guitarist Harrison Stafford, who has a nasal, reedy tenor reminiscent of Bob Marley at his more hoarse moments. Also, Stafford's words are full of Jamaican patois with references to Biblical passages as filtered through references to Jah and Rasta. But there is lurking within Groundation's music a different impetus that distinguishes it from standard-issue reggae. At the start of "Run the Plan," the opening track on the group's sixth regular album, Here I Am, the musicians launch into what sounds like '70s jazz-rock fusion, if not the middle section of some long song by Traffic. It is only after a while that this abruptly stops and the band obediently lopes into a reggae beat behind Stafford's singing. But that element of jazzy improvisation, or jam band playing, never disappears completely. At any given moment, a song may give way to extended group interaction as the music stretches out and the musicians take off in unexpected directions. While that may keep them from being a classic reggae ensemble, it also seems true to an outfit that does not hail from Jamaica, and it makes them different in a field that can be doctrinaire.

© William Ruhlmann /TiVo

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