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UB40UB40 is a popular dub reggae / reggae pop music band formed in 1978 in Birmingham, England. The band may be the world's most culturally diverse dub reggae band with English, Turkey, Wales, African and Jamaican parentage musicians. The band is named from the paper form issued by the U.K. for claiming unemployment benefits (UB40 = Unemployment Benefits, Form 40); during the Thatcher years, British slang referred to unemployed people as UB40s. UB40 were influenced by the many Blues Party they attended as teenagers in multiracial Birmingham, their love of ska and reggae inspired such original tracks as "King", "Madam Medusa", "Ivory Madonna", "Signing Off" and "One in Ten", later covered by 808 State. Their early music style was unique, with a heavy influence of analogue synthesizers, psychedelic music Rock and roll guitar, saxophone and Dub Reggae producer techniques which were later perfected by the late Pablo Falconer. Other artists that UB40 have collaborated with include: Pato Banton, Bitty McLean, Chrissie Hynde and Afrika Bambaataa. Its members include: *Jim Brown (drums) *Ali Campbell (guitar, lead vocals) *Robin Campbell (lead guitar, vocals) *Earl Falconer (Bass guitar, vocals) *Norman Hassan (percussion) *Brian Travers (saxophone) *Mickey Virtue (keyboards) *Terence Wilson (percussion, trumpet) *Astro (toasting vocals) *Pablo Falconer (producer) The band purchased its first instruments with compensation money Ali Campbell received after a bar fight. They have had a number of hits, most commercially and to amusement of the band, "Red Red Wine", a cover version of a Neil Diamond song (in an arrangement similar to that of Tony Tribe's version). Many of UB40's later recordings were inspired by 1960's ska and early lovers rock songs that would have otherwise been forgotten in the public eye. Their new injection of life into so many old Jamaican hits has resulted in many musicians and producers renewed popularity and income. UB40's music has often tackled social issues such as racism and unemployment. ==Discography== ===Albums=== *''Signing Off'' (1980), UK #2 *''Present Arms'' (1981), UK #2 *''Present Arms in Dub'' (1981), UK #38 *''UB 44'' (1982), UK #4 *''UB40 Live'' (1983), UK #44 *''Labour of Love'' (1983), UK #1 *''Geffery Morgan'' (1984), UK #3 *''Baggariddim'' (1985), UK #14 *''Rat in the Kitchen'' (1986), UK #8 *''UB40 CCCP: Live in Moscow'' (1987); Live in Moscow, Russia 1986 *''The Best of UB40 - Volume One'' (1987), UK #3 *''UB40 (album)'' (1988), UK #12 *''Labour of Love II'' (1989), UK #3 *''Promises and Lies'' (1993), UK #1 *''The Best of UB40 - Volume Two'' (1995), UK #12 *''Guns in the Ghetto'' (1997), UK #7 *''UB40 Present the Dancehall Album'' (1998) *''Labour of Love III'' (1998), UK #8 *''The Very Best of UB40'' (2000), UK #7 *''Cover Up'' (2001), UK #29 *''Homegrown (UB40 album)'' (2003), UK #49 *''Who You Fighting For?'' (2005) UK #20 ===Single (music)=== *"King"/"Food For Thought" (1980), UK #4 *"My Way Of Thinking"/"I Think It's Going To Rain" (1980), UK #6 *"The Earth Dies Screaming"/"Dream A Lie" (1980), UK #10 *"Don't Let It Pass You By"/"Don't Slow Down" (1981), UK #16 *"One In Ten" (1981), UK #7 *"I Won't Close My Eyes" (1982), UK #32 *"Love Is All Is All Right" (1982), UK #29 *"So Here I Am" (1982), UK #25 *"I've Got Mine" (1983), UK #45 *"Red Red Wine" (1983), UK #1 *"Please Don't Make Me Cry" (1983), UK #10 *"Many Rivers To Cross" (1983), UK #16 *"Cherry Oh Baby" (1984), UK #12 *"If It Happens Again" (1984), UK #9 *"Riddle Me" (1984), UK #59 *"I'm Not Fooled"/"The Pillow" (1985), UK #79 *"I Got You Babe" (1985), UK #1 *"Don't Break My Heart" (1985), UK #3 *"Sing Our Own Song" (1986), UK #5 *"All I Want To Do" (1986), UK #41 *"Rat In Mi Kitchen" (1987), UK #12 *"Watchdogs" (1987), UK #39 *"Maybe Tomorrow" (1987), UK #14 *"Reckless" (1988), UK #17 *"Breakfast In Bed" (1988), UK #6 *"Where Did I Go Wrong" (1988), UK #26 *"Come Out To Play" (1988), UK #77 *"I Would Do For You" (1989), UK #45 *"Homely Girl" (1989), UK #6 *"Here I Am (Come And Take Me)" (1990), UK #46 *"Kingston Town" (1990), UK #4 *"Wear You To The Ball" (1990), UK #35 *"I'll Be Your Baby Tonight" (1990), UK #6 *"Impossible Love" (1990), UK #47 *"The Way You Do The Things You Do" (1991), UK #49 *"One In Ten" (1992), UK #17 *"(I Can't Help) Falling In Love With You" (1993), UK #1 *"Higher Ground" (1993), UK #8 *"Bring Me Your Cup" (1993), UK #24 *"C'est La Vie" (1994), UK #37 *"Reggae Music" (1994), UK #28 *"Until My Dying Day" (1995), UK #15 *"Tell Me Is It True" (1997), UK #14 *"Always There" (1997), UK #53 *"Come Back Darling" (1998), UK #10 *"Holly Holy" (1998), UK #31 *"The Train Is Coming" (1999), UK #30 *"Light My Fire" (2000), UK #63 *"Since I Met You Lady"/"Sparkle Of My Eyes" (2001), UK #40 *"Cover Up" (2002), UK #54 *"Swing Low" (2003), UK #15 *"Kiss And Say Goodbye" (2005), UK #19 ==See also== *Best selling music artists — World's top-selling music artists chart. ==External link== *[http://www.ub40.co.uk/ UB40 official web site] British musical groups Reggae musical groups UB40Why exactly is the accuracy of this article disputed it seems fine to me User:Gem 23:22 24 Jun 2003 (UTC) We have a vandal that mixes good edits with bad, apparently deliberately: it takes too much time to check all his edits, so we just delete the lot. He has been invited to discuss his behavior, but has so far not taken the opportunity. User:The Anome Full, long reading of it is at User_talk:Michael/ban. - User:Hephaestos 23:25 24 Jun 2003 (UTC) I've found some info on the band here http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll User:Gem 23:32 24 Jun 2003 (UTC) From my recollection of the band, the current contents of the article look accurate. -- User:Arwel Parry 23:47 24 Jun 2003 (UTC) Various factual errors, misremembered years, imagined titles ... the typical Michaelisms. [http://www.wikipedia.org/w/wiki.phtml?title=UB40&diff=1077956&oldid=1077952 see here]. User:Koyaanis Qatsi 23:48 24 Jun 2003 (UTC) Good catch on the pipes and Birmingham--I was focusing on getting all the years right. ^_^ Which reminds me, here's this that I removed from the page; anyone know anything about them?: * ''More UB40 Music'' (1983) * ''Little Baggaridim'' (1985) * ''The UB40 File'' (1985) (no one agrees about when this album was released; and the official UB40 site says it was released in 1995, with singles off it charting in 1980 (!) * ''Anansi (anansi)'' (1995) When did UB40 ever do ska? User:Heidimo See other meanings of words starting from letter: UUA | UB | UC | UD | UE | UF | UG | UH | UI | UJ | UK | UL | UM | UN | UO | UP | UR | US | UT | UW | UX | UY | UZ |Words begining with UB40: UB40 UB40 |
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YouTube.com videos better site than Turbo Tax 2007 |
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