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Where Have All The Rude Boys Gone?

I'm a slow adopter when it comes to Ted Leo and the Pharmacists. It wasn't until his fourth CD, Shake the Sheets started gathering glowing reviews that I actually noticed the band. The disc has gathered favorable comparisons to the Clash, being tagged "punk rock for thinking people." The hype is pretty well on target. Watching Ted Leo passionately sing and play in Sarasota, I found myself getting caught up in the moment. Bits of the Jam and Thin Lizzy seemed to weave through the music. Wednesday, I hunkered down in the WMNF library catching up on the Ted Leo discography. What do you know; there are Jam and Thin Lizzy covers in the catalogue!
About half way though the set, Ted played a song that got me thinking in an entirely different direction. From the stage, Ted sang "Where Have All The Rude Boys Gone?" with a catchy chorus name-dropping the principal vocalists from the Specials. The song is a lament to the collapse of Third Wave Ska and it is a reasonable questions. Where have all the rude boys gone?

Playing with the Toasters has given Jason a chance to play his way across the US, Canada and Europe. He won't be on a Toasters CD until late in the year. They're planning on recording the next Toasters disc in Spain, where Bucket now lives. So the answer to Ted's question is the rude boys are still with us and the fans are still skanking, they're just doing it with a lower profile these days.

Megalith is the new flagship ska label headed up by Rob Hingley (aka Bucket when he's on stage with the Toasters). Moon was based in New York, but Megalith is based in the college town of Norman, Oklahoma. So far, the label has reissued some back catalogue by the Toasters and new releases from King Django, Victor Rice, Eastern Standard Time, the New York Ska Jazz Ensemble, Westbound Train and Desorden Publico. The most impressive release is a co-release with Jump Up Records called Still Standing, a four CD compilation of American ska bands who are still active. The compilation includes a lot of surviving Third Wave bands, but there are also quite a few new names.
One lesson I hope the rudies learned from the collapse of the Third Wave is sort of illustrated by the circular logic of this column. It was a thinking man's punk that got me thinking about ska this week. Bands like the Slackers and Mustard Plug survived the ska bust because they had strong ties outside the insular ska world. Jump Up Records survived the crash because they were a diversified label. I hope Megalith makes common cause with like minded musicians and fans. It's good for the music, good for the fans and it's good business.
Megalith Records: www.megalithrecords.com
Ted Leo: www.tedleo.com 
By day, Bob Pomeroy earns his coin working for a massively large financial institution. By night, he is a freelance writer and publishes the fanzine, MOE. Jazz is only one of his many musical obsessions.

