Someone stole my idea.
In celebration of Darwin Day, someone has set the Origin of Species to Dub, a kind of music related to Reggae. No, really.
![]()
This new artistic endeavor is the creation of the Genomic Dub Collective, a group which aims to “create a new musical genre… that celebrates recent successes in the field of genomics and evolutionary biology.” Why someone didn’t think of this before, I’ll never know. The group draws talent from a Microbial Genomicist and a Jamaican scientist of some sort.
Each track is named after or takes inspiration from a chapter of the Origin, and you get two bonus tracks, the Dobzhansky Dance Trance and Ras Darwin. (For all you Sheriff John Browns, Ras refers to Erasmus Darwin, Chuck’s grandfather.)
You can listen to some samples here, or you can order the entire thing for 3.99 (about the price of a dime bag). These chaps are just trying to recoup their costs, so don’t kill the seed before it grows.
11 Comments
Prince Vegita · 15 February 2005
Is it a Jamaican scientist, or the dub band known as "Scientist"? The latter has been around for a while, the soundtracks to K-JAH in Grand Theft Auto III is probably their most widely known material.
Glenn Branch · 15 February 2005
A story about the album appears in the Birmingham Post for February 9, 2005.
Timothy Sandefur · 15 February 2005
I've said it before and I'll say it again. This is the greatest thing ever.
Steve Reuland · 15 February 2005
PZ Myers · 15 February 2005
I just downloaded the "International grandeur" track, and it's very nice -- I could listen to this stuff happily. I'm going to have to order the full thing.
Great White Wonder · 15 February 2005
This Genomic Dub Collective thing is a riot.
With respect to the "other" dub artist known as Scientist, a protege of King Tubby, let me state for the record that some of his early 80s albums for the Greensleeves label, e.g., "Scientist Rids the World of the Evil Curse of the Vampires" and "Scientist Wins the World Cup" are among my all-time favorites of any genre. Classic stuff.
In the past ten years, I've heard little that topped the Rhythm and Sound w/Tikiman disc (released by Basic Channel a few years back in a hemp digipak and probably still findable).
Most Exhaulted Ned Limpopo · 17 February 2005
Though you may be correct in that the Ras in "Ras Darwin" refers to Erasmus Darwin, I would prefer that they are instead calling him "Prince Darwin," much as Ras Tafari is "Prince Tafari" or "Lord Tafari." A prince of science, perhaps in unshackling us from earlier ideas.
Michael Rathbun · 19 February 2005
Mark Pallen · 22 February 2005
Hi,
I am flattered by all the above discussion, but should pick up on a couple of points:
"Though you may be correct in that the Ras in "Ras Darwin" refers to Erasmus Darwin, I would prefer that they are instead calling him "Prince Darwin," much as Ras Tafari is "Prince Tafari" or "Lord Tafari." A prince of science, perhaps in unshackling us from earlier ideas."
As we say in the explanatory notes (http://www.infection.bham.ac.uk/BPAG/Dub/Info), this was always a play on words, with Ras standing for Erasmus and for the Amharic word for Prince (which I think is cognate with Arabic/Hebrew ras/rosh, meaning "head"). I know that Charles Darwin's brother went by the nickname Ras, but I am not sure whether that abbreviation was common in his grandfather's time. The Ras Darwin stuff is a direct link to the previous year's Darwin Day in Birmingham, when these same lines were out by local Rasta dub poet, Benjamin Zephaniah. It was with that previous performance in mind that the idea of doing all this Darwiniana in dub was sparked off.
But of course as a republican revolutionary, I am not sure Erasmus Darwin would have liked to be called a "Prince"! I objected to the "loyal toast" at the meeting in Lichfield celebrating 200th anniversary of his death, with the words "long live the English republic!".
"According to the link provided by Glenn Branch, and this one from the Scotsman, the Microbial genomicist and the Jamaican scientist are the two who actually made the stuff. Pictures on their sight show that they're just a couple of white guys though. Sigh."
Why the sigh? Yeah, OK, I am a middle-aged (not quite dead) white European male, but my collaborator Dom is fully Jamaican, having lived there from the age of 6 weeks old till he was 20. He has a Jamaican passport and his dad and several other members of his family still live there. And as you can tell from the music, he speaks like a Jamaican, and unlike Ali G, he can't snap out of it: that's who he is! OK, he is white, but what was it Selassie said
"until the colour of a man's skin is of no more importance than the colour of his eyes...".
And if you can't have white Jamaicans, does that mean you can't have Black British? And if white people can't do reggae, does that mean that black people can't do opera (Jessye Norman and Willard White might object to that one). But of course one of the take away messages from our Darwin Day was from a talk on human evolution: humans are one of the least diverse of mammalian species, so we really are pretty much all the same under the skin! One love, one inity!
BTW, if you wanna sample media reponse to this mad project, visit:
http://www.infection.bham.ac.uk/BPAG/Dub/media.
And we are still looking to recover our costs (about half way there so far), so feel free to place an order!
Cheers
Mark
Professor Mark Pallen
Professor of Microbial Genomics
Bacterial Pathogenesis and Genomics Unit
Room 542, Institute for Biomedical Research,
The Medical School, University of Birmingham, BIRMINGHAM, B15 2TT
m.pallen@bham.ac.uk
tel ++44(0)121 414 7163
fax ++44 121 414 3454
http://www.infection.bham.ac.uk/BPAG/staff/mpallen.html
Dominic White · 23 February 2005
Greeting and Salutations,
Mi ah tell you dis well nice (I too am well flattered by this discussion). You guessed it I am the white guy from Jamaica. I Grew up in a humble little town called Oracabessa on the North Coast of the Island. Its the same town that is still home to Chris Blackwell, the founder of Island Records (http://www.bobmarley.com/life/island/). Yah man, he is a white Jamaican too.
Darwin and Dub is a culmination of a love of reggae music, a fairly good understanding of Charles Dawrin's work, and two groovy scientists (Mark and myself) who met decided to do this thing. I am just glad that you can dig it, and I hope that we can raise some funds to improve on what we have done.
Nuff love,
Dominic White
PhD student Clinical Genetics
Dept. of Paediatrics and Child Health
Birmingham Women's Hospital
Metchly Park Lane
B15 2TG
Tel: 0121 6272669
Steve Reuland · 23 February 2005