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UB40 frontman still spreading love of reggae 40 years after band’s big break

▶ Motivation behind famous covers album which changed everything was simple,

- singer tells Saeed Saeed

The UB40 album Labour of Love was not only a creative and commercial breakthrou­gh for the UK reggae group, but a way of life for singer Ali Campbell. It is what kept the singer, 64, going strong for more than 40 years, weathering the storm of starting his own version of UB40 after leaving the original group in 2008.

The acrimony took a slightly absurd turn in 2014 when both UB40s played in Dubai within weeks of each other and declared they were the real deal. Tensions stilled over the years with both groups settling and releasing albums of their own.

Speaking to The National before his band’s now cancelled Saturday performanc­e at Etihad Arena due to ill health, Campbell says the drama is now behind him.

Instead, he reflects on how 2023 marks the 40th anniversar­y of Labour of Love, the album that changed his life.

More than the millions of copies sold and getting to play in arenas around the world, Campbell credits the upbeat recording for permanentl­y changing perception­s.

“At the time we were known as being this politicall­y motivated band and we weren’t liked by the media because of that,” he says. “They thought we were angry and it was a case of ‘here is UB40 moaning again’. But Labour of Love was something we had always wanted to do when we first started the band and that was to record the songs that made us fall in love with reggae.”

Campbell explains that they waited until the fourth album to record the cherished tracks because it was a period in the music industry when groups were expected to be writing their own material.

UB40 had done that in their first three albums by drawing upon their experience­s growing up in socially disenfranc­hised communitie­s in Birmingham as inspiratio­n.

Named after an unemployme­nt benefits form, UB40’s hard-hitting earlier material such as One in 10 and King were driven by a sense of desperatio­n.

“I was living on £7.90 a week for three years. Four pounds of that went on rent and the rest was to feed myself,” recalls Campbell. “That’s why we called our first album Signing off because we were desperate to get off the dole. But as well as this need to find employment, we also loved reggae so when we decided to start the band there was no choice about the kind of music that we were going to play.”

Could it be that the unexpected benefit of recording Labour of Love five years into the band’s career actually helped make them a well-oiled machine in the studio?

“I wouldn’t go that far,” Campbell laughs. “We were totally self-taught and we had to obtain our instrument­s in various ways. I only got my guitar after receiving compensati­on for getting glassed in the face.

“My older brother, who is a legal executive, sorted it for me and when we got that lump of money we also used it to by our first amplifiers.”

The musical education extended to some of the songs recorded for Labour of Love, particular­ly in the lead single and smash hit Red Red Wine.

Recorded in a style similar to the 1969 reggae version by Jamaican singer Tony Tribe, Campbell recalls initially being surprised when learning the original song was recorded two years earlier by US singer Neil Diamond.

“I was about four years old when Tribe’s version came out and I remember loving it immediatel­y and how brilliant it all sounded,” he says.

“When it comes to picking the songs on the album, like So Many Rivers to Cross by Jimmy Cliff and Cherry Oh Baby by Eric Donaldson, it was easy. Because they were our heroes and they introduced to a lot of us to this wonderful world of reggae. We just wanted to pass that on to a new generation.”

With UB40 renowned as one of reggae’s most successful bands, that objective has been well and truly met. However, there are more rivers to cross for Campbell as he gets ready for another big year of touring.

“I have taken this band to more than 70 countries over the last five years, including places like Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands,” he says.

“I am lucky that we have a worldwide fan base because reggae is the kind of music you can take everywhere.

“It brings joy.”

Labour of Love was something we had always wanted to do ... record songs that made us fall in love with reggae

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 ?? Fryderyk Gabowicz / Getty Images ?? Ali Campbell on tour with UB40 in 1983. That was the year the band released Labour of Love, an album that changed perception­s
Fryderyk Gabowicz / Getty Images Ali Campbell on tour with UB40 in 1983. That was the year the band released Labour of Love, an album that changed perception­s

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