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Jamaican reggae music is one of the best-known genres of music
around the world, uniting people of all countries, all races, and
all religions with a sound that is dedicated to searching for the
answers to life, to conflict, to humanity, to the world, to love.
There are few artists in this music genre today that are creating
the epitome of this artistic insight, professing subjects that are
so often glazed over by mainstream music. Hailing from
Washington D.C. - reggae band SOJA is on the forefront of this
revolution, telling the roots story, but from the other side:
America. SOJA embodies musicians unlike any other band in any
genre of music, to date. The members: Jacob, Bobby, Ken, Ryan,
and Patrick have been a team since childhood with lifelong musical
goals, which they are still pursing today.
Lead singers Jacob Hemphill (vocals, guitar) and Bob Jefferson
(bass) met in first grade in Virginia, shortly after Jacob had
returned from living in Africa with his family. The two
instantly became best friends, and in middle school found a common
love for hip hop and rock music. Throughout middle and high
school, they met Patrick O’Shea (keyboards), Ryan Berty (drums), and
Ken Brownell (percussion) - who would later form SOJA. During
this period, reggae music was becoming an addiction for the budding
musicians. Lead singer Jacob shares, “We loved rock and hip
hop, but there was something missing in the message. Even with our
favorite artists, you would get one song that hit home and touched
you, then three that were about nothing. With our favorite
artists in the reggae genre, Bob Marley and Peter Tosh, they were
singing about something beautiful that truly mattered in every song.
We never really got over it.”
SOJA’s first album was recorded independently with renowned sound
engineer Jim Fox. Jacob notes, “Jim told us that he would work
with us and so we could afford to make our first record, and when we
ran out of money he started making up ‘discounts.’ It was
awesome. I asked him why a while back, and he said ‘I didn’t want to
see a good thing stop.’ What was even crazier was at the time
he wasn’t working with bands that were from the US, just Jamaican
artists. Big ones like Black Uhuru, Israel Vibration, Burning
Spear, Don Carlos, and Inner Circle. Jim worked with us
independently and recorded, mixed, and mastered the whole thing.
That is how it all started.” SOJA’s first album, “Soldiers of
Jah Army EP” was released at the beginning of 2000.
In 2002, SOJA released their first full-length album, “Peace in a
Time of War.” Though the band was young, the album had hits.
“True Love,” “Rasta Courage,” and “Peace in a Time of War” were the
first songs to bring the band strong attention nationally and
internationally and cement them in the reggae world. Tours
became larger, their fan base expanded rapidly and they grew up
smart in the independent music industry. In 2006, the band
released “Get Wiser,” their second full-length album. The
album was a break through for the band, as they explored the duality
in their music, combining beautiful, longing melodies with hard drum
and bass, and layered with intricate lyrics. SOJA created their
musical style with a new complexity and depth that they would carry
with them to their future albums. Jacob shares, “When you
listen to an artist you can either have a series of one liners, or
you can tell a story with your music. We set out to tell a
story, it’s like poetry - dancing around an entire theme, but never
putting a period on anything. It is like the two sides of a
coin, but you can see them at the same time.” “Get Wiser”
debuted in the Top 10 Reggae Albums on iTunes and has remained in
the top 100 since its release. Singles off the album including
“Open My Eyes, “You Don’t Know Me,” and “Can’t Tell Me” remain in
heavy rotation on college radio across the United States, and have
also received major radio play internationally in places such as
France, Brazil, Argentina, Puerto Rico, St. Maarten, Costa Rica,
Mexico, Venezuela, Guam, and Tahiti. The success of “Get Wiser” took
the band on three years of intense touring nationally, and
internationally. In 2008 SOJA released their EP “Stars and
Stripes.” They blended new sounds and new rhythms with their
existing reggae sound, growing into what SOJA was becoming.
The EP contained three new songs plus remixes and new versions of
popular songs. In early 2009 the band released the documentary
DVD “SOJA Live in Hawaii: A Marc Carlini Film,” showcasing the power
and energy of their 2008 Hawaiian tour which included four islands,
five cameras, four shows, and everything in between.
Now, SOJA is ready to unleash their third full-length album “Born in
Babylon” - the culmination of all past efforts on their label DMV
Records. Set to be released August 25, 2009 exclusively on
iTunes, “Born in Babylon” focuses on telling the same roots story
that reggae artists have been singing about for decades, but their
way, from the flip perspective of kids who grew up not in poverty,
but in a government saturated community in Arlington, Virginia,
across Mason-Dixon Line from the White House. SOJA shares
about their new album, “This is the album we’ve been wanting to make
for ten years. At first we were hard-core old school, then we
got new school and inventive. This is what we’ve learned from
all that. ‘Born in Babylon’ is hard roots drum and bass, big
wide guitar and vocal melodies, and two and three sided lyrics, with
two and three sided messages.”
For the rest of 2009 and moving into 2010 - SOJA plans on touring
the United States extensively while promoting “Born in Babylon” with
mainstay horn players Hellman Escorcia (saxophone) and Rafael
Rodriguez (trumpet). Currently, SOJA averages 150 shows a year and
the group has toured every major city in the US and internationally
throughout Canada, Puerto Rico (avg 2500), Brazil (avg 4000),
Argentina, Uruguay, New Caledonia (16,000 in attendance) Palau,
Saipan, Guam (avg 3500), Hawaii (avg 2,000 on each island), Sweden,
Switzerland, France, Portugal (avg 2000) and Holland. The band
has also shared the stage with notable artists such as Citizen Cope,
Matisyahu, Ben Harper, Slightly Stoopid, Damian Marley, Govt Mule,
Umphrees McGee, and Steel Pulse to name a few.
In addition to their new music and touring, the band remains
committed to creating real music, music that cant be ignored.
Jacob pauses, “Bob Marley’s fans all feel like when he is singing a
song, it’s to them. You could be from anywhere, any situation,
rich, poor - it doesn’t matter; the song is directed at them.
He speaks to you, the love songs too. That is what we are
after. Not one side of the story, the whole thing, both sides
of the coin. Just listen to ‘Born in Babylon.’”
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Artist's Web Site
Hear an mp3 clip from Soja
See a YouTube clip from Soja
Presented In Conjunction With Landshark Entertainment
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