Thursday, 11 June 2026

Jammah Tammah. Jammah Tammah

Some time ago, I received an email about the band Jammah Tammah, forgot about it and now have to fit the news into the heavy release schedule before the summer break. But believe me, it is worth it to do so. I almost became consistent, as Jammah Tammah passed me by for 99.5% in the time it was active (1991 - 2003), because it was only the name that rang a faint bell, nothing more.

Reading the Wikipedia page of the band, which isn't up to date, it is clear that what was and is Jammah Tammah is not an easy answer. Fact is the band started in 1991 around singer Eddy Huizing, formerly of The Boegies, another 99.5% band for me, and Thuur Caris and focused on playing ska, rocksteady and mix it with European polka and punk. The drummer was an Atari machine! After many changes in the line up the band folded in 2003, although there are still former members working under the name Jammah Tammah Groove Experience since the 2010s.

Come 2026, and here is a live compilation album or so it often seems. It is not. It's far more complex. I'll get back to that. What you hear, is a complete dam burst of energy released through the decades, from the early 90s right to the mid 20s and all from a band that does not exist any more. I'll get back to that later also.

First, the music. Kicking off the album is a song called 'Black Monster'. It sounds like a Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention track that is going completely off the rails, something Zappa would never have allowed under any circumstances on penalty of ostracisation from the band. Not Jammah Tammah, the punk attitude is showing through for one 100%. The copper is everywhere, the rhythm absolutely leading, the seeming chaos is everywhere. The ska element ever more present. The secret is it is all under control, as this music really works. I can see Eddy (Piepke-Speedy-Mousie) Huizing bouncing across a stage in my mind's eye energising stages every time he climbs on one.

When the band started in 1991, ska, and especially the English Two-Tone version, was a thing of the past for some years already. All the bands had folded by that year. Enter Jammah Tammah. The band released three albums at the time. It must have been somewhere around that period, I came across the name but never heard any music, as far as I can remember.

When some of the band members decided to have the records on the digital platforms in 2023, they found a host of recordings that were never used, mostly of poorer quality. This is a relative comment. The reason these songs were never released at the time, is that the band always recorded live, to capture the energy. Somehow, the band never managed to record these songs without too many mistakes being made. The band couldn't fix at the time, so discarded the recordings. This led to a cunning plan.

What we hear on this album is a recreation of the past. Nearly all original members recorded their parts a new and separate from each other. That is what we hear today and despite this new version, the energy is captured as if this is a live recording. The only practical problem Jammah Tammah encountered was that singer Eddy Huizing, in this phase of his life, does not want to be associated with his past lyrics any more.  Enter modern technicalities. With the same sort of software programme Peter Jackson used to create 'Get Back', The Beatles documentary, Huizing's vocals were isolated from the recordings and mixed over the new recordings, including from real live recordings, audience and all. The result is as if the listener is in a venue listening to Jammah Tammah going at it. Do expect sudden fade outs but that takes nothing away from the fun had by all.

It may well have been, that I would not have liked the original recordings, as I wasn't into this kind of music. There is however a Gruppo Sportivo link every once in a while, so who knows what the answer would have been? Fact is, I never have learned of Jammah Tammah's (ja maar, toe maar in Groninger dialect) music at the time. Today I have and 'Jammah Tammah' is one huge party, from beginning to end. It's 2026 and it's never too late to get to know a new band. Wow!, is the word here.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght 

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