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Edward II and the Red Hot Polkas

                                                                                  

Edward II were a UK band which played a fusion of reggae and English folk music. They went through several line-up changes but were a seven-piece for much of their career.They split up in 1999.

Edward II had a unique style of music that could be described as the dance rhythms of the Caribbean blended with tradition-rooted English country dance tunes. According to Dirty Linen, "the multi-ethnic band takes that transcontinental journey one step further by mixing the heartbeat of jamaican reggae and ska with the squeezebox sounds of English traditional dance music. The result is a unique, invigorating, blend."

Formed in London's Notting Hill district in 1985, the group was initially called "Edward II & the Red Hot Polkas." Their 1986 debut album, "Two Step Heaven", was a mostly instrumental effort produced by British dub producer, the Mad Professor, and included such tongue-in-jowl ditties as "Bjorn Again Polka" and the title track. By the time that they released "Zest" on its own label, in 1996, the group had shortened its name and increasingly incorporated reggae-flavored original tunes. Edward II's 1998 album, This Way Up, included some pure reggae tunes, including "Don't Let the Fire Go Out," but the album's best moments remained the more-culturally blended songs. The band did two mind-blowingly brilliant perfomances at the Cropready Folk Festival held every year by Fairport Convention. One of these performances was released on CD entitled "Live at Cropready"

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Edward II and the Red Hot Polkas
Polkasteady

Released: 10/02/03    

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