Wah Wah 45s, the UK independent record label synonymous with homegrown danceable soul, jazz, funk, dub, disco and afrobeat, turns 25 this month. It seems fitting that it began life on the dancefloor.
“Wah Wah began as a club night in the early ’90s, run by Hospital Records label boss Chris Goss and his late brother Simon when they were students,” Dom Servini, DJ, broadcaster and current boss of Wah Wah 45s, tells me. “Having proved its worth at The Albany in the West End, the night was brought to The Jazz Cafe in Camden in the late ’90s by booker Adrian Gibson. Adrian suggested to Chris and Simon that they start a record label to reflect the music they were playing at their night – classic wah wah funk,
disco-jazz, afrobeat and what was then the ‘nu-jazz’ sound that was permeating through the scene.”
Get the latest news and insight into how the Big Issue magazine is made by signing up for the Inside Big Issue newsletter
The label was originally conceived as a reissue vehicle, unearthing hard-to-get funk and disco gems and pressing them on to 7-inch vinyl, but it was quickly determined that this model would be unsustainable.
“Reissuing old music was becoming increasingly expensive, and harder to do as the major labels started to get a stranglehold on smaller labels that had previously released independent funk and soul records,” Servini explains. “After a year or so of running the label, we realised that both financially and artistically, concentrating on working with new artists was the way forward.”
- How Matthew Halsall enticed new ears to Manchester’s magical jazz scene
- How the UK’s jazz explosion led to a rebirth of cool
Despite covering a vast breadth of genres within its niche, the quality of new acts Wah Wah 45s has broken over the past 25 years has never faltered in its consistency. Recent favourites of mine include London based duo Lawne, who blend the exhilaration of high-octane, sustain-and-release style jazz with intellectual electronica, and a collaborative project made up of Ghanaian xylophonist Isaac Birituro and multi-award-nominated producer and musician Sonny Johns, aka the Rail Abandon, whose music sounds in part like it grew out of the earth.