We've spoken quite a bit in the past about the shift that I experienced in regards to the music of Vaughn Benjamin and Midnite. When I was much younger, the sound wasn't something that I was capable of appreciating. It wasn't very catchy. It often seemed like he did not care much at all for melodies or even if he was in-tune with the riddim behind him. It was not (and often still is not) the type of music that immediately draws you in and that's fine. While I don't think that there is an age requirement for enjoying the music of Akae Beka, I do think there may be a life experience requirement. Benjamin's music, at least in my opinion, is best served as a tool for PROVOKING THOUGHT and the depth of your thoughts surely increases with the amount of life that you've lived... with the amount of things that you have gone through, personally.
Today I want to take a look at an album which is a personal landmark for me because, if I recall correctly, it was one of the ones which directly opened the door for me to Benjamin's work. I can remember buying "Jah Grid". I was still in university, it was probably a week or two old and I bought it just to buy it (and it wasn't my first Midnite album either. I THINK that distinction belongs to "Ainshant Maps" and I'm still working on that one as well)! A trait that I inherited from my wonderful Mother (and her wonderful Mother, both of whom are healthily and happily still with us) forces me to occasionally buy things just because I like buying stuff (a problem for a habitually broke college student at the time). I'd listened to Midnite's music before and, as I said, I didn't particularly care for it and I bought "Jah Grid" presuming that I wouldn't care for it either and, at least initially, I was correct. "Jah Grid" was... skeletal. The music was just fine but for someone who Dancehall would have been what I was listening to most at the time (and I was definitely listening to Roots music as well but it would have been... Sizzla, Capleton, Anthony B... kind of Dancehallish Roots music) Midnite's music was a bridge I had yet to even attempt to cross. But I paid my money for it, it was mine and, every so often, I'd come back and listen to "Jah Grid" and somewhere along the line, the shift began. Prior to that, however, I had begun to listen to the works of the likes of NiyoRah, Yahadanai, Army & Aincent King whose work came via a label that also would stick with me, I Grade Records, which also helped. I want to say that it didn't take THAT long for an album released in 2006 but I can remember a point when "Jah Grid" ceased to have any semblance of a presupposed (on my part and my part, alone) 'barrier' to it and what stood in its place was the start of a WONDERFUL journey of comprehension that continues to this day and will only end for me at my grave.
In the latest addition to our Modern Classics series, we take a look at an album which helped to open a very large door for me, personally: "Jah Grid" by Akae Beka.
1. 'Enter'
I've spoken about this one previously. 'Enter' is one of the greatest songs I've ever heard... from like anyone and it so PERFECTLY exemplifies the process that I've gone through with this music.
"If you plan fi live good, open Jah door and enter"
I don't know if this is the case but I'd like to think that someone specifically decided that it was so powerfully positioned at the beginning of the album because it sets the stage for what is to come not only musically but, specifically, by what Vaughn Benjamin says. ESSENTIALLY, he is saying that if you are willing to continue down this road, something immensely powerful awaits you. I should also mention just how damn THICK this song is, musically. The riddim sounds like something that grew out of the ground (oooooold, fertile ground) - a credit to the extremely gifted players of instruments behind it.
2. 'In Tent'
'In Tent' is a song where Benjamin actually does make an honest attempt at being melodic and I can actually remember a point, before this album fully opened up for me, where it may've actually been my favourite song here. These days while it may not rank as high, comparatively, I'm even more fond of it because I hear things in 2026 that simply did not exist for me in 2006. 'In Tent' is a very FULL experience and it exists for me as a social/life commentary (with a spiritual helm, of course) as Benjamin covers a variety of different topics and that's what stands out so brightly for me in this time. It's almost as if he jumps in and tackles one thing; jumps out, jumps back in and goes on something else. Take them all in a fractured state and you have something very solid (which I would have actually been capable of appreciating twenty years ago. Kind of viewing this tune as an impressive string of one liners), however, if you are capable of finding a common ground for them all and thus, receiving them all at once - well, then you have something special. 'In Tent' was special.
3. 'My Joy'
Grrrr. Despite its title, 'My Joy' came in with a bit of fury and is a more than welcomed deviation in its delivery. 'My Joy' does actually stay true to its name but in an expectedly very spiraling manner (a signature of Vaughn Benjamin's). The song was, essentially, him gardening. He was cleansing away the impurities and strengthening the soil so something would grow and he was mowing the lawn clear of overgrowth.
"Situation of the dream: Well nightmare haunt
ANYWHERE DEM KILL SEED, DIMENSION PLANT"
If you do these things well, what stands will deliver goodness for YEARS and, all of this time later, I am still enjoying the ripe fruits from 'My Joy'.
4. 'Kin Dread'
One of the undeniable signatures from "Jah Grid", 'Kin Dread', finds the chanter (in a very SMOOTH way, particularly when compared to 'My Joy' just ahead of it)... just.... obliterating and annihilating everything, EVERYWHERE! Seriously, what the hell is this:
"New methodology, dem have it inna dem ghetto, mi seet
Dem new ghetto: Di chatroom
You don't have di password
You can't afford di software
You don't fit in yahso
Dem have it set up so dem deh alone can be pon di cutting-edge of di scientific community
Anything dem waan fi sociology do-
Anything dem waan fi economically do, dem can just do it"
"Whole heap a critic-
Dem just labba, run off dem mouth ah talk seh-
'Wi shoulda dun gone Addis Ababa'
'Wi shoulda dung deh a Shashamane'
Here a small story, mi ah tell you short story about a farmer
Plant up di most itiful garden, but di youths dem only want softdrinks and Babylon flavour
But hear yah now
Dem ya a mi kin dread
Dem a mi kin dread
Dem a mi kin dread
Di harvest is ripe and di labourers are few
Selfishly, dem waan fi depart when dem know seh that dem deh pocketbook can take care of dem deh just dem few"
At its core, 'Kin Dread' is a unity piece. It's about bringing us all together, warts and flaws and all but the journey to get there may take us AGES (and I ain't complaining about it). I would suppose that the majority of this song was a vibe. I've actually seen video of Vaughn Benjamin actually writing lyrics and while I would guess (and do so acknowledging that I could be completely wrong) that it was his preferred method of writing songs, I wouldn't think that he wrote much of 'Kin Dread' at all before he started it. It has a very LOOSE feel to it which isn't a frequent occurrence in his work (his delivery often comes off as unrehearsed but the man seems to know PRECISELY what he wants to say most times) and was one of several reasons that 'Kin Dread' left its mark.
5. 'Under Management'
Along with maybe one or two others, 'Under Management' is a song that has experienced as much of a SHIFT that I can think of. I can recall a point where I listened through "Jah Grid" and came upon 'Under Management' and... literally, had NO CLUE what I was listening to. It might as well have been recorded in Japanese or Latin - not because I couldn't understand what was being said but because I would have had just as much of an opportunity of digging sustenance out of it in those days had I been totally walled-off to what was being said. On top of that, can you find a melody here? Benjamin didn't give a damn about it and what little of it there was was very difficult to get to. 'Under Management' was just a tough song to listen to and remained so, even after much of the album had begun to develop for me.
Today? There is a group of my absolute favourite songs on "Jah Grid"; there're three of them. I just told you about one of them and the other, 'Enter', started us off. Outside of those... I cannot definitively say that there is a better song than 'Under Management' on this album (one might be pretty close). There are a few others that I will, depending on the day (and maybe even the time of day), rank higher, but if you were to come back and ask me what I think a few minutes later, I'd probably change my mind. 'Under Management' is GOLDEN as Vaughn Benjamin puts on a display of the spoken word for the ages. He says SO much on this one and covers SO much ground that you can stop it TRULY anywhere and hear something powerful. For example:
"Multiple psychology experiment on tv look like entertainment"
And it allows you an entry point into such a powerful track of thought. And there is a melody! The riddim also ranks as one of the finest compositions on the whole of "Jah Grid" for, as minimal as it may be (and it is), if you REALLY listen to it closely, there is a certain intensity behind this song that does not leap out at you but is definitely there.
"I've seen it recently"
6. 'Spin Doctor'
The word that comes to mind today in reference to 'Spin Doctor' is "dilution". The term 'spin doctor' is used to describe a mouthpiece of a person who will often change and DILUTE a thought or a message to make it receivable amongst whoever it is being presented to. It is often used in the political sense.
"Teams of people who've been hired just to do this thing, believe it or not
They get on the news and in the room
Sit around and decide how the outcome must come down, smooth-
And shape it in the news"
Certain messages require no "mouthpiece", however, and certain 'Candidates' are beyond the "spin". In order to illuminate this point, Benjamin takes a route which goes through physics, looking at the nature of spin doctors on a molecular level. For its unusual sound (and it is strange, with a kind of a Jazzy vibes to it), 'Spin Doctor' is a HEALTHY point of discussion and one of the finest written songs on "Jah Grid".
7. 'Royal Habits'
I've alluded to 'Royal Habits' here already: When I was talking about 'Under Management', I mentioned that I have a group of three all-conquering favourites on this album but outside of those maybe only one more tune could lay claim to being better than 'Under Management'. That song was 'Royal Habits' and it is a flawless example of what a song that would not have done a damn thing for me when I first came across it but now does the world for me. This song is messy, it's scattered and it's pretty consistently off-key.
It's also beautiful. It's brilliant and it's poignantly POWERFUL. 'Royal Habits' also stands as one of the few tunes on which Benjamin had a little 'over-fun' with on the vocals. You'll know exactly what I mean if you're familiar with it but for the balance of the tune, it's what you're thinking that it is. We all need to do a bit better because we know a bit better. That's the source behind this song which, though it may take awhile, will reveal its true power only if given the opportunity.
"If you have it, exhibit royal habits"
8. 'The Bringers'
Though its music threatens to steal the show, 'The Bringers' does turn out to be a wonderful tune. First of all we do have to talk about that riddim: Silky, syrupy SMOOOOTH it is. Sounding like something directly halfway between Reggae and Jazz, the composition for 'The Bringers' features the handiwork of the venerable likes of Tippy I, the incomparable Tuff Lion (who DESTROYS on this song) and others. Just as a piece of music, it's winning but now we get to add in the works of Vaughn Benjamin. For his part, the chanter seems intent to match the fluidity of the players of instruments and while we can debate on how well he does on that end, what he does do (as he always does) is excel with his words. Here, he puts on a LOVELY display that I took in tribute and honour to our "bringers" [DUH!], meaning our parents, our forebears and ancestors who have done so much in bringing us to where we now are.
"Enough praise, I cannot give
Enough thanks, I cannot give"
Benjamin levels 'The Bringers' up when he goes EVEN HIGHER at one point when he asks one question:
"Should I not give all these things and more unto Jah?"
And I won't get into it... YES I WILL!
"His Majesty unified all these minds into one place
Wrote the law on their hearts in one place
Solidified by distance
3,000 miles away"
HE who set bloodlines and lineage into motion is THE BRINGER. THE is The Bringer who brought 'the bringers'. I listen to these songs and I wonder if its my overactive brain that piles on ideas here or if I'm really on to something but songs like this one mean so much me now.
9. 'YHWH'
I'll come back and explain it, in closing, fully, later but 'YHWH' sits as sort of the GLUE of "Jah Grid". It is the source code behind it all as far as my experience with the album has gone. However, until then, there's this.
"Choose before a place where no choices be
HIM, Haile Selassie spoke to these issues in specificity
Before the escalate happened early, happened early
Humbling to livity
Now it's not for triviality
Rastaman elevate the wisdom tree-
For souls to live in joy
Resonating, marinating in beauty
Let the positive rhetoric and economics interlock and purify I & I wholly
Haile. Holy"
"This" is one of the single finest written tracks on this album and I say that, again (kind of), without giving its true strength here but 'YHWH', along with 'Enter' has positioned my line of thinking in regards to this sound so perfectly and here we are There isn't a chorus to this song; such a thing would have only held it back and yet it is still quite pleasing to listen to. More on this one in a second.
10. 'Before I Lose My Strength'
I say "TEARS" when I want to let the reader know that whatever song I'm talking about makes me kind of emotional; it gets me "in my feels", as the kids like to say. I'm not going to say that about 'Before I Lose My Strength'; instead, I'll say this: THIS SONG MAKES ME CRY. It does and has been doing that for the last.... seventeen or eighteen years probably, but especially nowadays. The third of the trio of mountainous songs on "Jah Grid", 'Before I Lose My Strength' hits me heavily and I'll tell you why. For me, this song is about making the absolute most out of life that you possibly can - WHATEVER that may mean for you. It's about contributing and doing your part to improve life on this planet during the time you have on it.
"Before I lose my strength
ALL OF THE DAYS OF SINGING
All my days of strength
ALL OF I DAYS HAVE VIBES"
Now, let's specify a little bit about whom we are discussing. Vaughn Benjamin left us, physically, in late 2019.
"Before I lose my strength
ALL.
OF.
THE.
DAYS.
OF.
MY SINGING."
"ALL OF I DAYS HAVE VIBES"
Now I don't want to exaggerate or embellish or over-dramatize the moment but this man stated a mission... I don't even know if I want to use that word, "mission"... he stated a natural urge, an "instinct" (something implanted him by The Most High) - something he had to do [!] before the end of his days. Why???
"To maintain internal heights"
It made him feel good. It was something his biology required of him and he did it BEAUTIFULLY. Also, I wouldn't be doing a good job if I didn't talk about the music here. 'Before I Lose My Strength' is another kind of crawling sounding tune and it is gorgeous (THAT THING IS CRISP!). It'll take you a bit to arrive at that point (I'm an example of that) but this song, in particular, is the type of music that changes people's lives in my opinion. It is of THAT ilk. This man never lost his strength. He wrote HUNDREDS of wills and left it to the world.
11. 'Third Eye' by Jah Rubal
Let's talk a little about Jah Rubal. I'd like to think that -- both indirectly and directly -- Akae Beka did a great deal of work in terms of bringing along others and introducing them to the masses. I would think that we're already enjoying a generation of Rootsmen and women who have, in one way or another, been inspired by Vaughn Benjamin's work (I've always thought that about someone like Reemah) (and you see what she's gone on to do. That woman is a genius) but he's also brought some of them along for the ride. He's produced full albums for some of his peers (like Ancient King) and then there's Jah Rubal. I think most people first became acquainted with Rubal's work via his appearing on several Midnite projects and now he's a fully decorated and esteemed veteran with at least three full albums of his own off the top of my head (I should probably review one of them one of these days... think I might start researching that after this). EASILY, one of his most memorable features was on 'Third Eye' from "Jah Grid" - it also ranks, at least in my opinion, as one of his single strongest tunes to date.
Rubal's style is a little messy but simple (and I mean both of those in good ways) and he's aided here by Benjamin, himself, who provides 'Third Eye' with a bit of background singing and harmonies. At times, such as this one, he also doesn't give a damn about melodies or song arrangement and things like such. He has something on his mind to get off and that's what Jah Rubal does, for the most part (he has a very unusual way of... doing unexpected choruses. They just kind of pop up when you are not expecting them). Although 'Third Eye' definitely does summit in its first verse, the entire thing -- after a nice long period of working on it -- does not head back down to the nadir and, again, at least for me 'Third Eye' sits as one of the finest pieces of output that Rubal has done to date as he suggests that we all take a closer, and perhaps more unconventional, look at the world around us.
12. 'High Place'
"I have seen the high place"
TEARS! 'High Place', at least for me, has become this kind of lumbering... hard working giant of a song. It has something to do and somewhere to go but it isn't in the slightest hurry to get it done or to get there. It's going to take its slow ass time and you're going to sit there and let it. As it does progress, however, what you end up with is a tune which is wholly STUNNING at times.
"I have seen the high place
Inna likkle youth with the strangest question:
'How come they don't have lions?
How come they don't have mane?'
I say, 'hey, well ask ya daddy'
But it's the high place CURIOSITY"
The song is about non underestimating people and being able to appreciate BEAUTY and POWER everywhere you find it - even in the simplest, most innocuous of things. There is a joy here that I was incapable of appreciating AT ALL, initially and, even today, I can hear why I was lost. Now? Vaughn Benjamin says that he has seen the "high place".
I've seen it as well: On an album that I once left for dead.
13. 'On'
Courtesy of 'On', "Jah Grid" literally CRAWLS over the finish line. There was a point where I would have actually said that I disliked 'On' and if you're there as of now, I probably shouldn't fault you for it... but I am. 'On' is one the best songs on this album to my ears nowadays. Take its rather odd pacing and 'delicacy' out of play for a minute (we'll come back to it in a second) and just HEAR it for what it is.
"Let the vibes of reciprocation flow on and on
Those who have been the recepient of good and have done wrong
Remember, in your day, in your time when you can make a difference with your mind
With your deeds
Remembering the day, the people who have made your way"
The song is one about progression and progressing! Benjamin takes a good look at the good and the bad (and he almost had to in a song like this but it circles around so PERFECTLY and SUCCINCTLY.
"Let the vibes of Jah flow on and on"
That is a signature of the man's work. I'm not going to say no one else CAN do it, but no one else DOES do it (at least not in the consistent sense). It is one of a kind. It belongs to him. Now, about the way that 'On' sounds - it GROWS! First of all is that riddim which is a five minute chunk of divinity within its simpleness. And the delivery on it, this kind of singing/chanting which sits around a more straightforward talk, works so well for it. He has something to get off his mind and he's acknowledging the moment:
"A caring thought
A considerate remembrance"
And, as it turns out, 'On' goes on to be one of the more sonically pleasing selections on the whole of this grid.
Synopsis
"IT'S GONNA TAKE OVERSTANDING AND MATURITY"
I mentioned that I consider 'YHWH' to be the "glue" of Jah Grid. It's what holds my experience with the album all together and it's because Benjamin says things like this. I hear blips of so much of what I've gone through on this journey (and am still going through, DELIGHTFULLY) in this record.
"THINGS ARE COMING CLEAR, TRUE
IT TAKE A PAINFUL, A LOT OF ERA
A LOT OF MISCUE"
That final word there, "miscue", means so much to me here. I'm sure he didn't have it in mind when he wrote it but it was going to help open up my ears (and maybe, HOPEFULLY, many other pairs as well. It's okay to make mistakes in here and it's also okay if you don't comprehend what you're hearing. I remember seeing an interview of Tippy I and he, himself, who's produced so much of Vaughn Benjamin's work said that he'd constantly ask questions when he couldn't follow along. If he heard something and couldn't figure out the intention, he'd ask Benjamin what he meant and he'd tell him. I'm almost jealous of such an opportunity on one hand, but on the other I am SO DAMN grateful for the opportunity to work my own way through this work and to draw my own conclusions.
"Destiny is subject to the decisions I & I make"
But I had to grow up mature and live life in order to earn the opportunity to draw my own conclusions and make my own decisions. However, with that being said, all of the time that I spent thinking that this music just wasn't for me also wasn't exactly bereft of value. I've had so many conversations with readers about how it just doesn't work for them and because of all the work I've done, I'm able to point them in a certain direction and make suggestions and... who knows, maybe it still doesn't resonate but PERHAPS they hear their own 'YHWH'. Maybe it comes via more 'accessible' material like "Beauty For Ashes" or "Kings Bell" or "Better World Rasta" or maybe they find it in small pieces through HEAVIER work like "Be Strong" but the fact that I've done it, myself, makes it such a satisfying experience any time I can maybe pass along a vibe or steer someone in this direction because what comes after is... unspeakable. It's a lifelong journey. For me that trek began to make an actual progress through work such as that which is found on "Jah Grid", a bona fide Modern Reggae Classic!
{Note: Also credit goes to the presentation of this album. Artiste Marcus Wilson did the cover which has thirteen stones (including the center), mirroring the number of songs on the album and then the actual CD has the songs title also circling around on the perimeter of the disc}


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