"Brutal,"
Black Uhuru sing on the album's title track, "the whole world is brutal." And so it must have seemed to
Duckie Simpson and
Puma Jones in 1985. The previous year, the group had won a Grammy for their album
Anthem, but they'd crashed from such dizzying heights in a matter of months. The pair were left in the lurch when founding member and main song writer
Michael Rose quit to pursue his solo career, and their relationship with
Island Records came to an equally unsatisfactory conclusion. Regrouping, the duo brought in
Junior Reid, a bit of synchronicity, as the singer had often worked in the past with
Don Carlos, himself a founding member of
Uhuru. More telling, however, was
Reid's last project,
Worry Struggle & Problem, a trio that also included
Sugar Minott.
Reid would bring an unexpected
dancehall feel to the
roots masters. Signing to
RAS, and with
Sly & Robbie and a party's worth of other musicians in tow, the trio set to work on the
Doctor Dread-produced
Brutal. Sadly, it's the production that lets down, and although
Dread did his best to recapture the
Taxi sound so integral to the group's previous albums, the best he can create is a kind of
Taxi-lite. Producer
Arthur Baker, in contrast, brought his own trademark sound to
"Great Train Robbery," a masterpiece of beats, screaming guitar solos, and electronic wizardry wrapped around a stunning
new wave arrangement. Of course, it was a club hit, although the trio were almost incidental to the song itself. Urban fans were satiated by the title track, while
"Let Us Pray" and
"Fit You Haffe Fit" were aimed straight at the heart of the
dancehall crowds. An older Jamaican audience apparently was catered for by
"Vision" and
"Reggae With You." This pair drew the trio deep into the island's past, the '60s in the former's case and early reggae in the latter's.
"Reggae," with its upbeat lyrics and just happy to dance attitude, seems particularly surreal coming from a formerly classic dread band. Only
Ducky Simpson's
"Conviction or a Fine" returns the group to their previous rootsy stylings.
Brutal may have garnered
Uhuru another Grammy nomination, but it boded badly for the future. Their last few albums had been almost as eclectic, but they had been built around unique hybridizations, not a pastiche of styles. Here, only
"Dread in the Mountain" is a successful blend of genres, elsewhere the trio's trademark roots are overwhelmed. And the less said about
Jones' foray into
disco territory the better. But for all its flaws, there's still moments of greatness within. ~ Jo-Ann Greene