Friday, September 19, 2025

Higher Education by Naya Rockers

"Higher Education" by Naya Rockers [Naya Rockers & Floki Studios - 2025

Okay so, I definitely meant to get around to this one much sooner than I did but because I had  bit of catching up to do (and I'm old as hell), it took me so long that what started out as a preview is now a mini-review. Today we take a look at a very special project, pulled together by the Naya Rockers collective, "Higher Education". The album, which brings together many different artists from varying walks of life and places (like Iceland); and does so in the name of benefitting the famed Alpha School of Music in Kingston. WHAT AN AMAZING IDEA [!] one which certainly is deserving of our support and yours as well. Today we take a look at a beautiful album for an even beautiful[er] cause, "Higher Education" from the Naya Rockers, Floki Studios and Friends. BOOM!

1. 'Come With Us' by Clinton Fearon


BOOM! When I first heard the riddim on 'Come With Us' it made me smile and probably made me tear up a little as well. IT IS STUNNING (and wouldn't it make for a nice instrumental/dub????)! So nice and light and jovial with an old school HEART given to it courtesy of the legendary Clinton Fearon. 'Come With Us' is a musical celebration. It is a standing ALTERNATIVE TO NEGATIVITY ["Leave them guns and bombs outside"] and, REALLY, how can you possibly feel like doing something bad after hearing this tune. It's literally impossible! 

2. 'Higher Education' by Ivan Neville


I do know who Ivan Neville is, by name, but I couldn't name a single piece of work of his until he contributed the title track to the "Higher Education" project. This tune kind of combines a Jazzy feel to Reggae with Neville being from New Orleans in the US and it definitely makes it stands apart from the pack here, because of its sound. It's direction, however, is right in line with balance of the album as Neville puts forth the typical uplifting and inspirational messages that you've come to expect from the genre. A lovely song! 

3. 'Teach The Youths' by Sister Nancy


We all have to come together and do a better job in setting a proper example for the youth of the world is the sentiment behind Sister Nancy's offering to "Higher Education", 'Teach The Youths'. When I first heard this one (and still now) what I initially felt about it is that 'Teach The Youths' is very EASY. What I mean is that, while you will find other tunes here which maybe are more free and 'risky' (not literally, of course), Nancy keeps it very level-headed and consistent. She also introduces ideas such as humility and respect (of oneself and others) 

4. 'Thanks' by Hector Roots Lewis


Impressing St. Catherine native, Hector Roots Lewis, is one of a few here who can lay a significant claim to having the single strongest tune on the whole of "Higher Education" with 'Thanks'. This thing is GORGEOUS! It also fits in quite nicely with the theme, at least in my opinion as, along with the knowledge and education to be found within books, it's also important to be rewarding and fulfilling to YOURSELF on an emotional level and Lewis well wraps that within giving praise. A BEAUTIFUL SONG!

5. 'The Right Path' by Stephen Marley


Definitely the biggest name to leap out at you, on paper, is that of the great Stephen Marley who blesses the album with another of its genuine highlights, 'The Right Path'. Like the song it follows, 'The Right Path' (as its title suggests) is one more concerned with your spiritual health and morals over what you might pick up out of sitting in a more traditional and ACTUAL classroom.

"I say we learn from the past

Make our futures last

CHOOSE THE EARTH FIRST"

Although the vibe here is a SWEET one with an infectious bounce, it is the vocalist who takes the brigihtest of spotlights on 'The Right Path' as Mr. Marley delivers information in heaps and heaps which is not to be ignored.

6. 'Dub With Us' by Mad Professor & Clinton Fearon


What a shock! I mentioned how well the riddim to the opener, Clinton Fearon's 'Come With Us', might translate to an instrumental or a dub and look what we have here! The equally venerable, Mad Professor takes his hands to the tune and comes up with 'Dub With Us'. The Professor, as expected, doesn't take things in a straight course but what the dub lacks in that kind of 'wholesome' simplicity as the original song, it makes up for with a heavier but still fairly LOOSE vibe and it's the first from Mad Professor. He'll be back with us in a minute.

7. 'Long Way Down' by Mike Love


Despite the nature of his song, I'm going to make the assumption that, when he recorded 'Long Way Down', Mike Love was in a pretty good mood! He sounds like he is THOROUGHLY pleased with the material that he's singing and he's feeling the music behind him... and he has no reason not to feel good based on what I'm hearing. He's also trying to simplify things in his life and turn away from not all things modern but things that are contemporary and far from healthy.... downright poisonous at times:

"They'll make you ill then sell you pills

Call it medicine"

'Long Way Down' is a tune whose VIBE threatens to overwhelm its direction -- you can HAPPILY lose yourself in it and not hear a word Mike Love says, but a special gifts awaits those who take the time and do a bit more digging because the writer hits his notes as well. 

8. 'The Brotherhood' by Angelo Moore & The Tamlins


While I am familiar with his band, Fishbone, the name Angelo Moore was one commpletely unknown to me prior to "Higher Education", on which he gives us the delightful 'The Brotherhood', alongside the mighty Tamlins. There's a hint of old[er] school R&B (I guess that's what it's called. You know that song 'YMCA'? This one sounds NOTHING like it but something about it gives me that same genre for some reason... and maybe only me) here, mixed with Reggae, definitively, of a passed era. What results is a very unique vibe in support of theme of a pure unity from Moore and The Tamlins.

9. 'Words of Wisdom' by Queen Omega


LOOK WHO IT IS! Unsurprisingly, the tune that had me THE most excited to hear on "Higher Education" was definitely 'Words of Wisdom' as it is the handiwork of one of my absolute favourites EVER, the incomparable Queen Omega. Sitting as the album's longest track (clearly everyone involved knew with whom they were dealing), the Queen puts on an INFORMED display which builds up to a downright dazzling crescendo in its latter portion.

10. 'Same Lessons to Learn' by Micah Shemaiah


The well gifted Micah Shemaiah doesn't miss a beat following the Queen with his LOVELY effort, 'Same Lessons'. There is a well infectious BOUNCE to the riddim here and Shemaiah makes the most of the track with message of unity - in bringing up oneself, you also turn around and bring along others with you as well. That, INHERENTLY, applies to knowledge as it doesn't do much good taking it to the grave with you . PASS IT ON! 

"No man is an island, no man stands alone

Even the wickedest one will give their dog a bone"

11. 'Thanks Dub' by Mad Professor


The maddest of all mad professors, Mad Professor, returns to send us on our way in closing shop on "Higher Education" with his second creation, a dub of 'Thanks' which Hector Roots Lewis provided the original vocals for. I actually prefer 'Thanks Dub' to the previous 'Dub With Us', probably because it's a bit more straight forward. As I said (or at least I think I did), 'Dub With Us' takes the original sound in several different directions, that isn't the case with 'Thanks Dub', which is far closer to a straight instrumental (it isn't though, don't worry). The Professor's additives are more subtle but are sterling and, for me, delightfully go to accentuate what was already a HUGE creation. 


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