Alborosie

Italian-Jamaican reggae artist (born 1977) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alberto D'Ascola (Italian pronunciation: [alˈbɛrto ˈdaskola]; born 4 July 1977), better known by his stage name Alborosie, is an Italian reggae artist. He is sometimes called the "Italian Reggae Ambassador".

Born
Alberto D'Ascola

(1977-07-04) 4 July 1977 (age 48)
Marsala, Sicily, Italy
OccupationsSinger-songwriter, record producer
InstrumentsVocals, drums, guitar, keyboard, bass
Quick facts Background information, Born ...
Alborosie
Alborosie performing at Chiemsee Reggae Summer 2013
Alborosie performing at Chiemsee Reggae Summer 2013
Background information
Born
Alberto D'Ascola

(1977-07-04) 4 July 1977 (age 48)
Marsala, Sicily, Italy
GenresReggae, dancehall, dub
OccupationsSinger-songwriter, record producer
InstrumentsVocals, drums, guitar, keyboard, bass
Years active1993–present
LabelsGreensleeves, VP
Websitewww.alborosiemusic.com
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Music career

Early life (2001–2005)

Born Alberto d’Ascola and raised in Marsala, Sicily, Italy, but now residing in Kingston, Jamaica, he is a multi-instrumentalist, being proficient in guitar, bass, drums and keyboard. His musical career began in the Italian reggae band Reggae National Tickets [it], from Bergamo city, when he was 15 years old in 1993, in which he was known as Stena.

In 2001, Alborosie decided to try a solo career. He moved to Jamaica to be close to reggae music's roots and Rastafari culture.[1] There, he started working as a sound engineer and producer. He has also worked with artists like Gentleman and Ky-Mani Marley. His first solo album was called Soul Pirate. In the summer of 2009, he released his second album which was called Escape from Babylon.[2] In August 2008, Alborosie played at the Uppsala Reggae Festival.[3]

The name "Alborosie" comes from a name he was given in the early years after moving to Jamaica. "Borosie was what they used to call me. Let me put it like this. My early experience in Jamaica was... not nice. Borosie was a name they used to call me and it has a negative meaning. So I said, "I'm gonna use this name and mash up the place, turn a negative into a positive thing!". Basically my name is Albert so I add 'Al', Al-borosie. But I'm not gonna tell you what borosie mean!"[4]

Soul Pirate & Escape From Babylon (2006–2009)

In 2006, Alborosie released his debut album, Soul Pirate, which included hit singles: "Rastafari Anthem", "Kingston Town", and "Call Up Jah" on his own record label, Forward Recordings.

Alborosie performing live in concert in 2008

He released his second album, Escape From Babylon in 2009 on Greensleeves Records.[5] Through the years he has given concerts all round the world, including most of Europe and Jamaica. He also released a compilation, Escape from Babylon to the Kingdom of Zion on Greensleeves Records in 2010.[6]

Dub Clash, 2 Times Revolution, & Sound The System (2010–2013)

After releasing his first Dub music album, Dub Clash in 2010[7] and his third album, 2 Times Revolution,[8] Alborosie became the first white artist to win the M.O.B.O. (Music of Black Origin) Awards in the Best Reggae Act category for 2011.[9][10]

Alborosie released his fourth album, Sound The System on Greensleeves Records in 2013.[11] He followed it up with a dub music version with, Dub the System in 2013 on Greensleeves Records.[12]

He released Sound the System Showcase in 2014, a compilation album.[13]

Collaborations & Re-masters (2014–2015)

Alborosie released a dub album he collaborated with King Jammy called, Dub of Thrones – With King Jammy in 2013 on VP Records.[14]

In 2014, Greensleeves Records released, Specialist Presents Alborosie & Friends, a collection of collaborations with other reggae artists.[10] The album entered the Billboard Top Reggae Albums chart at #7.[10]

Alborosie collaborated with King Jammy on another dub album, Reality of Dub, which was released in early 2015.[15]

In 2015, his classic debut album Soul Pirate, which was released by Evolution Music Group, was re-mastered and released in Deluxe Remastered Edition with 4 never-before-released bonus tracks: "Call Up Jah", "Slambam", "Streets", and "Jamaica".

Freedom & Fyah & The Rockers (2016)

In May 2016, Alborosie's fifth album Freedom & Fyah was released on VP records.[16] In the end of 2016, Evolution Music Group released his classic album Soul Pirate in an acoustic version. The album was released on CD and CD+DVD formats.[17] He also released his sixth studio album, The Rockers on August 24, 2016.

He also released another dub album, Freedom in Dub on VP Records in 2017.[18]

Collaborations with The Wailers and Roots Radics (2016–2019)

His 2018 seventh studio album, Unbreakable: Alborosie Meets The Wailers United peaked at #6 on the Billboard Reggae Albums chart.[19]

Alborosie collaborated with Roots Radics on the 2019 album Alborosie Meets the Roots Radics: Dub for the Radicals.[20][21]

For The Culture (2021)

On June 4, 2021, Alborosie released his eighth studio album, titled In The Culture.[22] It features fourteen tracks that were written, produced, and performed in the during the COVID-19 pandemic using vintage analogue gear, dub sirens, reel-to-reel tape, and live instrumentation by Alborosie and the Roots Radics band. Special guest performers Alborosie collaborated with were Collie Buddz, Jo Mersa Marley, Quino of Big Mountain, and The Wailing Souls, the latest album of which–Back-A-Yard–was produced by Alborosie.[23]

In December 2021, Alborosie was nominated for the fans-choice "2021 Album of the Year" award by Surf Roots TV & Radio for their album For The Culture. Voting was determined by Facebook, Instagram and Twitter users. This was the band's first time being nominated with the reggae rock streaming TV channel on Amazon Fire TV, Apple TV, and Roku.[24]

Personal life

Alberto D'Ascola was born on 4 July 1977 in Marsala, Sicily, Italy.

His father is a retired policeman and his mother was a housewife.[25] D'Ascola developed an interest in reggae music and joined the band Reggae National Tickets in 1992 (at the age of 15.) He is a dual citizen of both Italy and Jamaica.

Discography

Solo studio albums

More information Year, Album ...
  Chart history[citation needed]
YearAlbumLabelBillboard peak
 2008Soul PirateSelf-produced
 2009Escape From BabylonGreensleeves Records
 20112 Times RevolutionGreensleeves Records
 2013Sound The SystemVP Records
 2016Freedom & FyahVP Records#2[26]
 2016The RockersThe Saifam Group/Get Up Music
2018Unbreakable: Alborosie Meets the Wailers UnitedVP Records#6[27]
2021 For The CultureVP RecordsTBD
2023 DestinyVP RecordsTBD
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Dub albums

More information Year, Album ...
  Chart history[citation needed]
YearAlbumLabelBillboard peak
 2010Dub Clash J.D.F.
 2013Dub The System Greensleeves Records
 2015Alborosie Meets King Jammy: Dub of Thrones Greensleeves Records
 2017Freedom In Dub VP Records
 2019Alborosie Meets the Roots Radics: Dub For The Radicals VP Records
 2021Back-A-Yard Dub VP Records
2024Dub PirateEvolution Media
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Re-edition albums

More information Year, Album ...
  Chart history[citation needed]
YearAlbumLabelBillboard peak
 2010Escape From Babylon to the Kingdom of ZionGreensleeves Records
 2010Specialists & FriendsGreensleeves Records
 2014Specialist Presents Alborosie & FriendsVP Records#7[28]
 2014Sound The System ShowcaseVP Records
 2015Soul Pirate: Deluxe Remastered EditionEvolution Music Group
 2017Soul Pirate: AcousticEvolution Music Group
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With Reggae National Tickets

  • Squali (1996)
  • Un affare difficile (1997)
  • Lascia un po' di te (1998)
  • La Isla (1999)
  • Roof Club (2000)

Produced by Alborosie

  • Alborosie presents His Majesty Riddim (2016), VP [29]

Awards and nominations

More information Year, Organisation ...
Year Organisation Award Result
2011 2011 MOBO Awards Best reggae act Won
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References

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