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Escaping Babylon by Jesse Bernard review – an intimate history of Black British music

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Jesse Bernard's memoir, *Escaping Babylon*, offers an intimate cultural history of Black British music, tracing its evolution from the late 1980s to the present. Structured like a mixtape, the book weaves Bernard's personal life with recollections of influential artists, such as Soul II Soul and Dizzee Rascal. It explores how various UK genres, including grime and jungle, stem from the roots of reggae.

A personal exploration of the sounds that defined a community, from Soul II Soul to Dizzee Rascal

The year 1989 was a landmark in Black British music: Soul II Soul were on their way to conquering America and Sade had already become a global sensation, while A Guy Called Gerald and Nightmares on Wax had the entire Hacienda dancing to their tunes. It’s a fitting moment for Jesse Bernard (who was born in that year) to start his excellent memoir-cum-cultural history, Escaping Babylon. Structured like a mixtape, it skips between skits and short interludes of fiction and poetry, via the loose narrative of Bernard’s own life as he matures from naughty schoolboy (he was expelled for sticking rotten fish in the school’s radiators) to musical explorer, DJ and journalist.

Bernard’s musical education started in his parents’ car, with Mica Paris, Soul II Soul and Carol Wheeler a constant accompaniment. It continued with Craig David performing 7 Days on Top of the Pops in 2000, one of the first times Bernard saw a “distinctly British R&B” singer. Personal memories like this are described alongside interactions with the artists he’s met over the course of his journalistic career to build an argument about the origins and direction of Black British music. Former Saxon sound system emcee Tippa Irie’s observation that reggae is a tree and that all UK sounds are branches that spring from it informs his approach. Through Bernard we meet and engage with many of that tree’s descendants – from UK funky to grime, jungle and drill.

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Originally published by The Guardian UK Read original →