Blame it on
No Doubt or blame it on
Sublime, but by the middle of the 1990s, very little of the pop music that was described as ska had anything to do with Jamaican dance music of the early '60s. Too many bands whose sole connection to the musical style had been a few singles by
the Specials or
the English Beat got it all exactly backward, with the punk influences drowning out what little Jamaican influence remained: the result was basically
Green Day with horns, and it wasn't any good for anyone. If
the Aggrolites have a stated mission, it's to remind modern audiences what proper ska sounded like, whether in Kingston in 1963 or in London in 1979.
The Aggrolites formed in 2002, originally getting together as the backing band for a one-off Los Angeles show backing Jamaican music legend
Derrick Morgan. Gathering members from two minor Southern California reggae acts, the new band consisted of lead guitarist
Jesse Wagner, rhythm guitarist
Brian Dixon, organist
Roger Rivas, bassist
J. Bonner, and drummer
Korey Horn. The concert was a success, and the band stuck together to record an album with
Morgan that was never completed. Emboldened despite the recording setback, the band took the name
the Aggrolites ("aggro" being a slang term of the ska-loving skinhead subculture of Britain in the 1960s and '70s, meaning pent-up aggression, and "lites" in tribute to the greatest ska band of all time,
the Skatalites) and became the go-to guys on the West Coast ska and reggae circuit, backing a wide variety of golden-age Jamaican and British artists on their American dates, including the great
Prince Buster and
Culture lead singer
Joseph Hill. On their own, with
Rivas' funky organ work taking the instrumental lead in substitution for their lack of a horn section and
Wagner taking vocal duties,
the Aggrolites recorded their debut album,
Dirty Reggae, at a live-in-the-studio session in 2003. Replacing
Horn with new drummer
Scott Abels (formerly of the popular third-wave ska band
Hepcat),
the Aggrolites signed to the Epitaph Records subsidiary Hellcat Records in 2005. Their second album,
The Aggrolites, was released in May 2006, with their third,
Reggae Hit L.A., following in June 2007, by which time drummer
Horn had returned to the fold along with new bass player
Jeff Roffredo.
–
Stewart Mason, Rovi