Jah Wobble's Invaders Of The Heart
Without Judgement

Restless    7 72750-2  (1990)

Rock/Pop
CD, 21   Tracks, 69:20  Length
01 Bungalow Park David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams 05:10
02 What The Problem Is David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams 04:18
03 Anything Can Happen David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams 00:56
04 A13 David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams 03:47
05 Drowned And The Saved David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams; Michel Schoots 05:18
06 So Many Years David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams; Michel Schoots 02:51
07 Message From Our Sponsor David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams 00:13
08 Coypu David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams 01:10
09 Burger Bar David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams 01:48
10 What Will You Say David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams; Michel Schoots 04:14
11 Spirit David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams 08:54
12 Voodoo David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams; Michel Schoots 05:26
13 Psyche David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams 03:04
14 Good Ghosts David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams; Michel Schoots 01:39
15 Saracen David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams; Michel Schoots 04:52
16 Eternal Vendor David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams 01:30
17 Invisible Cities David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams 06:10
18 Inferno David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams; Michel Schoots 01:14
19 Location David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams 00:48
20 Uncommercial Road David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams 01:58
21 Will The Circle Be Unbroken David Harrow; Jah Wobble; Justin Adams; Michel Schoots 04:00
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Live Yes
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Bass Jah Wobble
Keyboards David Harrow
Guitar Justin Adams
Drums Michel Schoots
Producer Cheb Ali
Engineer Hugo Scholten
Personal Details
Index # 3875
Owner Dave
Tags Experimental
User Defined
Purchased Used
Notes
Following his split from P.I.L. in the early '80s, bassist Jah Wobble was more likely to be found sweeping tubeway stations than performing on stages, and by the middle of the decade, his musical output had all but ground to a halt. It was not until 1986, when Wobble met guitarist Justin Adams, that his creative juices began flowing again. The two hit it off musically, and began experimenting with a diverse palette of pop, dub, Middle Eastern, and North African influences. This laid the foundation for what would eventually become their new group, Jah Wobble's Invaders of the Heart. Keyboard/percussionist David Harrow and Urban Dance Squad drummer Michel Schoots joined soon after, and the quartet began earnestly working on new material. By 1987, the band had worked out a polished live set and decided it was time to take the show to the Netherlands (where Wobble still had an avid following), do a tour, and record. The result was JWIOTH's debut album Without Judgement.

Pieced together from live, two-track DAT recordings made during performances in Holland, the album managed to sound relaxed, free, and spontaneous while maintaining an air of calculation and precision. Unlike most live albums, the fact that Without Judgement was, indeed, recorded live was not immediately apparent. The only crowd noise present occurred during the fade-out of the last track and the album itself was edited together in such a way that full songs found themselves placed among snippets of instrumental interlude and sound atmospherics. This unconventional approach may have seemed like a recipe for disaster, but in the talented hands of editor Step Parikian, the flow between musical ideas was tasteful, seamless, and, above all, interesting.

All of the influences that would later define Jah Wobble's style could be found on Without Judgement, in their raw forms. Wobble's characteristically simple, catchy, and repetitive bass-hooks were just coming into maturity, and served as the main driving force throughout the album. Typified by tunes like the menacing-but-groovy "What the Problem Is" and the Bowie-esque "What Will You Say," Jah Wobble's bass mantras proved to be as creative as they were insistent. His songwriting was also maturing and subject matter ran the gamut from the spiritual ("Good Ghosts") to the satirical ("Burger Bar"). The North African and Middle Eastern influences (which permeated all of Wobble's later work) could be found peppered throughout Without Judgement, and were most apparent in Justin Adams' psycho-arabic guitar solos and David Harrow's ethnic-tinged samples. With all of these fresh elements, raw guts, and polished execution, Without Judgement still shines as the toughest album Jah Wobble has made under his own name. Fans of his later, more ambient work (mid-'90s and beyond) may find this record's aggressiveness alarming; but longtime fans will agree, although not representational of Jah Wobble's entire body of work, Without Judgement is absolutely essential.