The Daily Telegraph

Rememberin­g when reggae went romantic

‘Lovers Rock’ recalls an all-too-brief craze in UK music history. By Chris Harvey

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This Sunday, the second of director Steve Mcqueen’s Small Axe films, Lovers Rock, is on BBC One. It takes its name from a feel-good musical movement that emerged from the British West Indian community in the Seventies.

It’s set in a fictional party in a large house in west London in 1980, before Notting Hill became Hugh Grantrifie­d, and a considerab­le portion of its 68 minutes is spent on the dance floor. There’s still time for lots of chatting-up, confrontat­ion and queues for the loos on the stairs, but in some ways it’s a mood piece, a tone poem of a film that sets out to capture the genuine feel of a time and place. Lovers rock, a blend of sweet soul and reggae, had reached the peak of its popularity in the UK charts in 1979.

It was romantic, heartbreak music, created by brilliant, innovative Seventies producers such as Dennis and Eve Harris, who set up the Lovers Rock label in Brockley, south London, and Jamaican Dennis Bovell, who specialise­d in adding quirky melodic elements to a rocksteady beat.

It owed little to the dominant reggae forms of the era – effects-laden dub, “toasting” MCS, and hard-edged political Rastafaria­nism – and much more to the love songs that began to make their way from Jamaica into the UK charts in the early Seventies, like Ken Boothe’s cover of Bread’s Everything I Own, which went to number one for three weeks in 1974.

Lovers rock tended to replace the beautiful male falsetto vocals of those songs – which had made it into ska and reggae all the way from Chicago via the early Sixties’ doo-wop soul of Curtis Mayfield and The Impression­s – with teenage girl singers, though not exclusivel­y, which gave the songs a wistful, wide-eyed quality.

Willesden-born Louisa Mark, for instance, whose Keep it Like it Is gets a spin in Mcqueen’s film, was just 14 when she made a stir with Caught You in a Lie, while the ages of the girl band trio 15-16-17 are not hard to decipher. Their debut album featured a lovely cover of the Bee Gees’ Emotion, produced by reggae star Dennis Brown, who had relocated to the UK from Jamaica, and in 1978 re-recorded his 1972 track Money in My Pocket and made the Top 20. Meanwhile, before she went “back to life, back to reality” with Soul II Soul, singer Caron Wheeler was part of lovers rock trio Brown Sugar, who sang the adorable I’m in Love with a Dreadlocks in 1977.

Lovers rock was to reach its apogee, though, with Janet Kay’s 1979 hit Silly Games, which reached number two in the charts, and is still popular to this day. It’s the high point of Mcqueen’s film, too, quite literally. He dramatises Bovell’s desire to make the Londonborn Kay go all the way up to the sort of glass-shattering high note that he’d seen jazz great Ella Fitzgerald deliver in a TV advert for Memorex cassette tapes.

“When I wrote Silly Games and put that high note in there, it meant that every female in the dance would try and sing that note,” he said in 2014, and that’s what happens in the film: the DJ turns the volume down and all the women try to get up there with Kay; it’s a joyous sequence.

Lovers rock never really caught on with the Skinheads who embraced ska in the early Seventies, while the punks that came through in the late Seventies genuflecte­d to Jamaican music, but preferred dub and political reggae. The Clash, though, did famously include the (frankly terrible) paean Lover’s Rock on their 1979 masterpiec­e London Calling. All of which meant that lovers rock felt from the outside like a scene that belonged to its creators and the young women and men who danced and flirted to it at parties like this one, until it finally hit the Top Ten. There’s an exclusivit­y to the party in Mcqueen’s film – and likely a deliberate role reversal, whites are on the periphery for once – but it looks like a lot of fun, especially landing in the middle of Lockdown 2, and the music is fantastic.

Lovers rock reached the peak of its popularity in the UK in 1979

Small Axe: Lovers Rock is on BBC One

on Sunday at 9pm

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 ??  ?? Party on: Francis Lovehall and Ellis George in Steve Mcqueen’s Lovers Rock; singer Janet Kay, below
Party on: Francis Lovehall and Ellis George in Steve Mcqueen’s Lovers Rock; singer Janet Kay, below

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