Roots Manuva
Roots Manuva | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Rodney Smith |
Also known as |
Lord Gosh Hylton Smythe Rodrick Manuva Brigadier Smythe Cecil P.Y.L.M. Pim Pimpernel |
Born | 8 September 1972 |
Origin | Stockwell, London |
Genres | Alternative hip hop, trip hop, dub, electronica |
Occupation(s) | Vocalist, rapper, producer, remixer |
Instruments | Vocals, rapping |
Years active | 1994–present |
Labels | Big Dada, Banana Klan |
Associated acts | Ricky Ranking, DJ MK, Mr. Scruff, Toddla T, Lotek, Hi Fi, Leftfield, Speech Debelle, DELS, Gorillaz, Martina Topley-Bird |
Website |
rootsmanuva |
Rodney Hylton Smith, better known by his stage name Roots Manuva (born 8 September 1972), is an English rapper and producer. Since his debut in 1994, he has produced numerous albums and singles under his label Big Dada, achieving commercial success with albums such as Run Come Save Me and Slime & Reason. He has been described as "one of the most influential artists in British music history."[1] His most recent studio album, Bleeds, was released in October 2015.
Biography
Smith grew up around Stockwell, London, England. His parents were from a small village in Jamaica where his father was a preacher and tailor. He spent much of his early life in poverty and this and his strict Pentecostal upbringing had an influence on his music as can be heard in many of his tracks such as "Sinny Sin Sins" and "Colossal Insight".
Of his early discovery of music he says:
It was as a kid. Before I even knew what a sound system was. I was walking past Stockwell skateboard park and there was this sound being set up. They were probably just trying out their speakers. I was with my mum, holding my mum's hand. And I remember my mum being quite intimidated by the whole affair. Such a barrage of bass coming from it! And these dodgy-looking blokes standing beside it just admiring the sound of their bass. It's just a bass thing. A volume thing. I don't know if I rose-tint the memories, but I remember it sounded so good, so rich. It's not like today when we go to clubs and it hurts. It was more of a life-giving bass.[2]
Smith made his recorded debut in 1994 as part of IQ Procedure through Suburban Base's short-lived hip hop imprint Bluntly Speaking Vinyl. He debuted as Roots Manuva the same year on Blak Twang's "Queen's Head" single, before releasing his own single, "Next Type of Motion" the following year through the same label, the Sound of Money. 1996 saw the release of his collaborations with Skitz ("Where My Mind Is At"/"Blessed Be The Manner") on 23 Skidoo's Ronin label. The release of "Feva" on Tony Vegas' Wayward imprint followed in 1997. This was also the year that saw the first releases from Big Dada, a collaboration between Coldcut's Ninja Tune label and hip hop journalist Will Ashon.
Releasing for Coldcut's renowned experimental/hip hop label Ninja Tune in 1998, some of his music may be seen as a predecessor of grime. The following year he released his debut album, Brand New Second Hand. A reference to his family's modest lifestyle, the title is a phrase his mother used for presents he got as a youngster that were pre-used. The single "Witness (1 Hope)", from his second album Run Come Save Me, with its lyrical flow and heavy shuffling squelch bass (allegedly a result of Smith trying to copy the Doctor Who theme) is a UK rap anthem. He had such an impact on the UK rap scene that The Times said that "his is the voice of urban Britain, encompassing dub, ragga, funk and hip hop as it sweeps from crumbling street corners to ganja-filled dancehalls, setting gritty narratives against all manner of warped beats." Manuva was rewarded for his breakthrough with a MOBO as Best Hip Hop Act that year.
The lyrics of his songs have a British edge, with critics highlighting his references to eating cheese on toast and drinking bitter as examples of this.
He can be heard on many songs performed with other artists such as Chali 2na (and Ozomatli), Jamie Cullum, DJ Shadow, Mr Scruff, U.N.K.L.E., Fun Lovin' Criminals, Nightmares on Wax, The Cinematic Orchestra, Beth Orton, The Herbaliser, Leftfield, Saian Supa Crew and Coldcut. He also made an appearance on the Gorillaz album, Demon Days, on the track "All Alone".
Manuva headlined the Lounge on the Farm festival 11 July 2009.[3]
Discography
Studio albums
Title | Album details | Peak chart positions | Certifications | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
UK [4] |
FRA [5] |
IRL [6] |
NOR [7] | |||||||||||
Brand New Second Hand | 167 | — | — | — |
| |||||||||
Run Come Save Me |
|
33 | 140 | — | — |
| ||||||||
Dub Come Save Me |
|
75 | — | — | — | |||||||||
Awfully Deep |
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24 | 110 | 30 | 31 | |||||||||
Alternately Deep |
|
139 | — | — | — | |||||||||
Slime & Reason |
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22 | 127 | 48 | — | |||||||||
Duppy Writer |
|
109 | — | — | — | |||||||||
4everevolution |
|
59 | — | — | — | |||||||||
Bleeds |
|
51 | — | — | — | |||||||||
"—" denotes a recording that did not chart or was not released in that territory. |
EPs
- Next Type of Motion (1995)
- Awfully De/EP (24 October 2005)
- Banana Skank EP (21 January 2013)
- "Stolen Youth EP" (6 August 2013)
Live albums
- Live from London (iTunes) (15 August 2008)
Singles
- "Juggle Tings Proper" (22 February 1999)
- "Motion 5000" (5 July 1999)
- "Witness (1 Hope)" (23 July 2001) UK No. 45[9]
- "Dreamy Days" (8 October 2001) UK No. 53[9]
- "Yellow Submarine" (14 October 2002)
- "Colossal Insight" (17 January 2005) UK No. 33[9]
- "Too Cold" (21 March 2005) UK No. 39[9]
- "Buff Nuff" (30 June 2008)
- "Again & Again" (25 August 2008) – featured on the EA TRAX soundtrack for the EA Sports videogame Fight Night Round 4
- "Let the Spirit" (27 October 2008)
- "Do Nah Bodda Mi" (29 June 2009)
- "It's On (Banana Klan)" (28 April 2011)
- "Here We Go Again (feat. Spikey Tee)" (3 October 2011)
- "Don't Breathe Out" (22 September 2015)
Guest appearances
- Amon Tobin – "Saboteur mix" (from Ninja Tune compilation Xen Cuts)
- Audio Bullys – "Made Like That" (feat. Roots Manuva & Mr Fox) (from Generation)
- Blak Twang – "Queen's Head" (from Dettwork S.E. promo); "Shhhoosh" (from 19 Long Time)
- Breakage – "Run 'Em Out"
- The Cinematic Orchestra – "All Things to All Men" (from Every Day)
- Cornish Waters – "Look to Myself for Faith" (from UK Hustlerz – The Return, under the pseudonym Brigadier Smythe)
- Coldcut – "True Skool" (from Sound Mirrors) UK No. 61[10]
- DJ Mentat – "Rugged Wid' It" (with Seanie T)
- DJ Shadow – "GDMFSOB (UNKLE Uncensored mix)" (from "Mashin' on the Motorway")
- DJ Skitz – "Inner City Folk" and "Fingerprints of the Gods" (from Countryman)
- Dobie – "Connectivity" (from The Sound of One Hand Clapping)
- Freq Nasty – "Boomba Clatt" (from Bring Me the Head of Freq Nasty)
- Fun Lovin' Criminals – "Keep on Yellin'" (from Classic Fantastic)
- Gorillaz – "All Alone" (from Demon Days alongside Martina Topley-Bird)
- The Herbaliser – "Lord Lord" (from Take London); "Starlight" (from Very Mercenary)
- INORAN – "Rat Race" (from Sou)
- Jamie Cullum – "Love for $ale" (from "Momentum")
- King Kooba – "Barefoot" (from Indian Summer)
- Killa Kela – "Here Comes The Submarines feat. Roots Manuva" (from Elocution)
- Leftfield – "Dusted" (from Rhythm and Stealth) UK No. 28
- Lotek HiFi – "Move Ya Ting" (from Mixed Blessings)
- The Maccabees – "Empty Vessels"
- Massive Attack - "Dead Editors" (from Ritual Spirit EP)
- Mr. Scruff – "Jus Jus" (from Keep It Unreal), "Nice Up The Function" (from Ninja Tuna)
- N'fa – "My Style" (from Cause An Effect)
- New Flesh for Old – "Norbert & Cecil" (from Understanding, under the pseudonym Cecil P.Y.L.M. Pim Pimpernel)
- Reachout – "For Whom the Heart Beats" (from The Bristo Sq. EP)
- Ty – "Oh U Want More?" (from Upwards) UK No. 65[11] (also "So U Want Morre? (refix)" on Upwards new edition)
- Saian Supa Crew – "Hey Yo My Man"
- Colossus – "Thrupenny Bits" (from "West Oaktown") (OmRecords 2002 – pseudonym Hylton Smythe)
- Nightmares on Wax – "70s 80s (Up Bringing Mix) (feat. Roots Manuva & LSK & Rodney P & Tozz 180)" (from "70s 80s" single)
- The Herbaliser – "Something Wicked (Roots Manuva's Haunted House Dub)" (limited free release from Ninja Tune website to celebrate forthcoming Ninja Tune boxset).
- DELS – "Capsize" (from GOB – 2011)
Other
- Badmeaningood Vol.2 (7 October 2002) (19 tracks selected by Rodney Smith for the Badmeaningood series.)
- Back to Mine: Roots Manuva (24 October 2005) (18 tracks selected by Smith for the Back to Mine series.)
- The Blacknificent 7 – Riding Thru Da Undaground! (collaboration with Seanie T, Rodney P, Skeme, Est'elle, Karl Hinds, Jeff3)
- Black Whole Styles – "Uranium 235" (with Drunken Imoortals & New Flesh) & "Feel Da Panic"
- Extra Yard: The Bouncement Revolution – "Dreamy Days(Loteck Productions) featuring Ricky Rankin, "Born Again" featuring Wildflower, "Witness The Swords" featuring Fallacy, Rodney P, Blackitude, Big P & Skeme, "Bashment Boogie"
- Sound01: A Big Dada Sampler – "Skiver's Guide" featuring Black Twang & Gamma
Trivia
- Witness (1 Hope) was played in the UK game show Total Wipeout International special episode.
- Awfully deep was used as a background track in series 2 of TFI friday.
References
- ↑ "SHOWS > THE BRITISH MASTERS". www.noisey.vice.com. Vice. Retrieved 30 April 2016.
- ↑ "Big Dada: Roots Manuva". bigdada.com. Retrieved 4 January 2009.
- ↑ "theDISH Roots Manuva to Headline LOTF". the-dish.co.uk. Retrieved 18 June 2009.
- ↑ Peak chart positions for albums in the United Kingdom:
- All except Brand New Second Hand, Alternately Deep and Duppy Writer: "Roots Manuva" (select "Albums" tab). Official Charts Company. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
- Brand New Second Hand, Alternately Deep and Duppy Writer: Zywietz, Tobias. "Chart Log UK: The Rabble Army – RZA". zobbel.de. Tobias Zywietz. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
- ↑ "Discographie Roots Manuva". lescharts.com (in French). Hung Medien. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
- ↑ "Discography Roots Manuva". irish-charts.com. Hung Medien. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
- ↑ "Discography Roots Manuva". norwegiancharts.com. Hung Medien. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
- 1 2 "Certified Awards" (enter "Bloodhound Gang" into the "Keywords" box, then select "Search"). British Phonographic Industry. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
- 1 2 3 4 Zobbel (16 June 2007). "Chart Log UK". Zobbel. Retrieved 10 September 2008.
- ↑ Zobbel (16 June 2007). "Chart Log UK". Zobbel. Retrieved 10 September 2008.
- ↑ Zobbel (16 June 2007). "Chart Log UK". Zobbel. Retrieved 10 September 2008.
External links
- Official website
- Roots Manuva interview at musicOMH.com
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