Wednesday, 22 April 2015

Draft - Double page spread


Draft - Contents Page


Draft - Front cover


Photoshoot - Schedule


Time
Model
Costume
Props
Pose
Shot Type
5 Minutes
Robyn
Black Top (Bob Marley on it)
Black trousers
Make up
Necklace
Hat
Serious face
Biting on to the necklace
Smiling
Close up – Looking into the camera/ Laughing into the camera
5 minutes
Maeva
Black top
Hair out
 
Hat
Serious face
Close up -
10 minutes
Robyn, Meava & Salima
All Black clothing
Hat
Make up
 
Robyn, Maeva and Salima looking thrilled being together/ arms on their shoulders, hugging eacthother.
Maeva and Salima looking into the camera being serious.
Full body shot
 
 
 
Mid shot

History - Reggae


Genre: Reggae History

Reggae’s origins are in traditional African and Caribbean music; American rhythm and blues; and in Jamaican ska and rock steady. In 1963, Coxsone Dodd of Studio One asked Jackie Mittoo (pianist of The Skatalites) to run recording sessions and compose original music. Mittoo, with the help of drummer Lloyd Knibbs, turned the traditional ska beat into reggae by slowing down the tempo.
Image result for Bob marley
Bob Marley, who played an important role in popularizing reggae worldwide, recorded ska, rock steady and nyabinghi-drumming records early in his career. The word reggae may have been first used by the ska band Toots and the Maytals, in the title of their 1968 hit Do the Reggay.

The Oxford English Dictionary says the origin of the word is unknown, but may be derived from the Jamaican-English word rege-rege, meaning quarrel. Other theories are that the term came from the word streggae (a Jamaican slang term for prostitute) or that it originated from the term Regga, which was a Bantu-speaking tribe from Lake Tanganyika.

By the late 1960s, reggae was getting radio play in the United Kingdom on John Peel’s radio show, and Peel continued to play much reggae during his career. Reggae has always had a fairly large following in the United Kingdom, especially during the 1970s and 1980s.

In the second half of the 1970s, the UK punk rock scene was starting to take off, and some punk DJs played reggae records during their DJ sets. Certain punk bands, such as The Clash, The Slits and The Ruts incorporated reggae influences into their music. Reggae includes several subgenres, such as roots reggae, dub, lover’s rock and dancehall.
 
 
 

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