Tuesday 1 September 2009

1978 10cc: Dreadlock Holiday

The concept of smug white men playing reggae is not something that's going to whet too many appetites, but what about men playing ironic reggae? Now there's a niche genre. 10cc had never been a band to play anything with a straight bat, but by 1978 they had split in two after Godley and Creme quit to leave Graham Gouldman and Eric Stewart as the core of the band augmented with whatever session musicians happened to be knocking about. 'Dreadlock Holiday' was to be the last hit from a band in decline.

Mention it to anyone and like as not the first thing they'll shout is the 'I don't like cricket, I LOVE it' refrain from the chorus. Amusing yes, but in the context of the song it has it's own purpose - 'Dreadlock Holiday' is the (supposedly true) tale of a hapless tourist getting out of his depth on the bad side of Jamaica and being robbed by four locals. The love of cricket cry is intended as a way to get on the good side of the muggers by identifying a common interest, the idea being that all West Indians are obsessed with cricket and they wouldn't do harm to a fellow fan (he also goes on to claim 'I don't like reggae, I LOVE it' for the same reasons). You can take this one of two ways, which is quite neat because it also sums up the two ways you can take the song; either
with a good humoured amusement, or as an offensive display of outrageous racist stereotyping.

The case for the prosecution is a strong one. For a start, the song seems hell bent on not portraying Jamaican folk in too flattering a light. All have 'dark voices' with the men engaged in robbery with menaces, the women deal in dope and everybody, when they aren't mugging or getting high, are out playing cricket. Presumably with reggae blasting over the PA system. To compound this injury, Gouldman and Stewart adopt cod-patois accents throughout that hark back to the Typically Tropical affair with their "Don't you cramp me style, don't you queer on me pitch" jive. But what sounded fresh and effervescent in the mouths of Althea and Donna now sounds smug, piss-taking and yes, vaguely offensive when coming from some middle aged, middle class white men. And to make sure these voices are heard, the reggae backing is a subdued chink chink affair instead of the genuine article's chunk chunk, suggesting that the band are parodying both Jamaicans and their music.


In its defence, 'Dreadlock Holiday' is a well crafted song and, to be fair, the sheer unexpectedness of that 'I don't like cricket' yell is still amusing even when you know it's coming. At heart though, there's a mean and spiteful edge to it all that both belies and negates the sunny, feel-good nature the song aspires to. The humour lands wide of the target somewhat, making it the sound of a clever, clever band being not quite as clever as they think they are. Reggae fans will hate it on sight and if non reggae fans are looking to dip their toes in the water then there a better places to start than this.


7 comments:

  1. Spot on. I think this piece of nasty twaddle stains the record of a great band that produced classics like Rubber Bullets, Art for Arts Sake and Life is a Minestrone. Best forgotten.

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  2. I don't like critics (oh no),
    I hate them (oh yea)
    Douch bags all the way
    Sing it with me!

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  3. “Reggae fans will hate it on site”… wrong, like most of this pestiferous critique. I was literally in a Jamaican food restaurant, ran by folks from Jamaica 2days ago. They had a really nice sound system playing great sounding reggae music and yep, they jamned this joint by 10cc. 🤷🏽‍♂️👍🏼

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    1. Exactly. Just leave it to Millennials of any race. They're so cock sure of their hot takes, sometimes you want to metaphorically lap them in the face and say "will you just STFU?"

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    2. Millennial? I was born in 1968. 'Dreadlock Holiday' is an awful, embarrassing song not worthy of the band. If you don't agree then that's fine, write your own blog and tell the world why it's so great. But there's a word for people who seek to deny someone else their opinion. It seems to me you're a white, late middle age male frustrated because the world you once knew is changing and you you're no longer comfortable you know your place in the new one. There are generations coming up behind you who no longer care what you have to say and see you as an anachronism, a sad old man who doesn't know why he can't call the barmaid 'darling' and slap her on the arse anymore. Cheer up though, you'll be dead soon. Thanks for reading anyway.

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  4. Crime-averse tourists will hate Jamaica on sight and if ganja-neophytes are looking to dip their toes in the water then there a better places to start than Jamaica.

    IOW, the lyrics hail from white, late middle age male (Eric Stuart) who was accosted as described, verbatim. He was no doubt frustrated enough with the whole debacle
    to howl at the moon. Just like you've done here.

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    1. Well not really; there are any number of apocryphal tales online about what might have happened to Stewart or Gouldman or Justin Hayward in Jamaica or Barbados, none of them consistent and all of them carrying the whiff of cobbled together, after the fact alibis. But what if your own version below is 100% true? Frustrated and howling at the moon? ‘Dreadlock Holiday’ has all the frustration of a childish, petty minded internet troll trying to score points while sniggering behind the safety of their keyboard. Paul McCartney was mugged and robbed of his demos in Nigeria, did he write a comedic song sending up the country and its people? No, he has more class than that.

      I myself once had a bad experience with drunken thugs in Scotland; maybe I should have written ‘Tartan Holiday’, layered it with bagpipes and sung a lyric in a broad ‘och aye’ accent that stereotyped the country’s people as drugged up, Tennents Super drinking, deep fried Mars bar eating NEDS looking for violence at the drop of a hat. Fortunately, just like Mr McCartney, I have more class too. And it’s not 1978 anymore so I wouldn’t be able to get away with it.

      I can tell from your post the quality of cloth you’re cut from, so I won’t waste any more time on this (and I would hate you to think I’m trying to defend myself), but I will say that I’m far from ‘howling at the moon’; as an exercise in writing discipline I tasked myself with setting out my views on every UK number one at the rate of one every three days. I wrote about ‘Dreadlock Holiday’ simply because it was next on the list. I didn’t single it out for special attention. If a different song had sold more copies for the single week it was number one then my views on it would have gone unrecorded. If you disagree with me then that’s fine. God bless you. And don’t fret, I’m not trying to get the song banned or ‘cancelled’ or whatever. It’s still there, fully available for you to listen to on auto repeat 24/7 if you want. Knock yourself out. But if the fact that, in liking it, a complete stranger thinks your judgement is flawed and that causes you angst then that’s your problem, not mine. Thanks for reading though. X

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