Listening to Intergalactic Sounds – Articulation of Rastafarian Livity in Finnish Roots Reggae Sound System Performances

Authors

  • Tuomas Järvenpää University of Eastern Finland

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33356/temenos.48463

Keywords:

Rastafari, Sound System, Localization, Re-enchantment, Ethnography, Reggae

Abstract

Rastafari is an Afro-Jamaican religious and social movement, which has since the 1970s spread outside of the Caribbean mainly through reggae music. This paper contributes to the academic discussion on the localization processes of Rastafari and reggae with an ethnographic account from the Nordic context, asking how Finnish reggae artists with Rastafarian conviction mobilize this identification in their performance. The paper focuses on one prominent Finnish reggae sound system group, Intergalaktik Sound.


The author sees reggae in Finland as divided between contemporary musical innovation and the preservation of musical tradition. In this field, Intergalaktik Sound attempts to preserve what they consider to be the traditional Jamaican form of reggae sound system performance. For the Intergalaktik Sound vocalists, this specific form of performance becomes an enchanted space within a secular Finnish society, where otherwise marginal Rastafarian convictions can be acted out in public. The author connects the aesthetic of this performance to the Jamaican dub-music tradition, and to the concept of a ‘natural life’, which is a central spiritual concept for many Finnish Rastafarians. The article concludes that these sound system performances constitute a polycentric site where events can be experienced and articulated simultaneously as religious and secular by different individuals in the same space.

Author Biography

Tuomas Järvenpää, University of Eastern Finland

Master of Theology, PhD Candidate of Cultural Studies in the University of Eastern Finland

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Published

2015-01-07

How to Cite

Järvenpää, T. (2015). Listening to Intergalactic Sounds – Articulation of Rastafarian Livity in Finnish Roots Reggae Sound System Performances. Temenos - Nordic Journal for the Study of Religion, 50(2), 273–293. https://doi.org/10.33356/temenos.48463

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Articles