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Soul rebels and dubby conquerors. Reggae and dancehall music in Germany in the 1990s and early 2000s

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 December 2017

Martin Pfleiderer*
Affiliation:
Institute for Musicology Weimar-Jena, Music University Franz Liszt Weimar, Carl-Alexander-Platz 1, 99425 Weimar, Germany E-mail: martin.pfleiderer@hfm-weimar.de

Abstract

In the 1990s, a vibrant reggae and dancehall scene emerged in several German cities, and in the early 2000s songs of reggae artists such as Gentleman, Seeed or Jan Delay rose to the top of the German pop charts. In this article, the German reggae scene of this time is depicted in respect to its formation, infrastructure, transnational relationships and sub-genres, and is related to general social and cultural developments in reunited Germany, e.g. a new national self-consciousness, tendencies towards a multi-ethnic society and new kinds of youth scenes. These findings are illustrated by a close reading of two songs from the seminal albums Searching for the Jan Soul Rebels by Jan Delay and New Dubby Conquerors by Seeed, both released in 2001. While Jan Delay's lyrics reflect the singer's commitment to the antifascist youth scene, Seeed celebrates a hedonistic lifestyle in the new capital Berlin.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2017 

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Discography

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