UB40 “Labour of Love II”

UB40 “Labour of Love II” 1989. 80’s reggae via the UK, the band’s 9th LP, all cover songs. I just got this record yesterday, for free, from an old friend whose cousin’s husband does crime-scene and hoarder house cleanups for a living. You can’t make this shit up. Anyway, he had a couple crates of records to unload so I got the call. This was the only one I scooped (we had pretty much everything else already that was worth having), and mostly for the UB40’s cover of “Here I Am (Come and Take Me)”, originally by Al Green (’73). It’s my all-time favorite UB40 track and reminds me both of freshman year of college (’89-’90) as well as a trip to the Bahamas (’08) when this track was on heavy rotation while I lounged for endless hours beside the pool. Really excellent memories all around. Their version of “Here I Am” went to #7 in the US and to #46 in the UK. UB40 had a couple of other singles from Labour Of Love II: “Kingston Town,” originally by Lord Creator (’70) went to #4 in the UK but didn’t chart in the US. Better received was their cover of the The Temptations‘ “The Way You Do the Things You Do,” which went to #6 in the US but only to #49 in the UK. While not released as a single in the US, “Homely Girl” became a hit in Europe, going to #6 in the UK. The original soul single was by The Chi-Lites (’73). Also pretty great on the album is “Groovin’” originally by Byron Lee (who introduced the electric bass guitar to Jamaica; he and his band The Dragonaires appear in the James Bond movie Dr. No and he owned Dynamic Sounds at which musicians like The Rolling Stones recorded).
Daily (maybe) pulls from the vault: 33-1/3, 45, 78, old, older, classic, new, good, bad. Subjective. Autobiographical. Occasionally putting a record up for sale.





