Home

Ska

Ska is a music genre that originated in Jamaica in the late 1950s, blending Caribbean mento and calypso with American rhythm and blues and jazz. It emerged in Kingston studios and through vocalists and bands that combined upbeat rhythms with jazz-influenced horn arrangements. The genre developed into a faster, more guitar-driven style that laid the groundwork for later Jamaican styles such as rocksteady and reggae.

Musical characteristics of ska include a walking bass line, guitar or piano chords played on the offbeat

Historically, ska arose from a fusion of Caribbean musical forms with American R&B and jazz, with key

Ska remains influential for its rhythmic vitality and its role in the global spread of Jamaican music.

(the
upbeats),
and
prominent
horn
sections
featuring
trumpet,
trombone,
and
saxophone.
The
tempo
is
generally
brisk,
often
around
110
to
140
beats
per
minute.
Vocals
range
from
smooth
to
exuberant,
with
occasional
toasting
or
early
rap-like
vocal
delivery
in
some
tracks.
The
distinctive
rhythm,
sometimes
called
the
“skank,”
drives
the
danceable
feel
that
defined
early
ska.
Jamaican
producers
and
bands
such
as
Coxsone
Dodd’s
Studio
One
and
the
Skatalites
helping
to
codify
the
sound
in
the
1960s.
Ska
evolved
into
rocksteady
and,
by
the
mid-1960s,
reggae.
In
the
late
1970s,
two-tone
ska
emerged
in
the
United
Kingdom,
a
fusion
of
Jamaican
ska
with
punk
rock
and
glitter
aesthetics,
led
by
bands
like
the
Specials,
Madness,
and
the
Selecter,
and
characterized
by
racially
integrated
lineups
and
social
commentary.
The
1990s
saw
a
third
wave
of
ska,
especially
in
the
United
States,
blending
ska
with
punk
and
other
genres
in
bands
like
No
Doubt
and
Reel
Big
Fish.