

Tribal Seeds have toured throughout the United States, and have also performed in Mexico, Aruba, Tahiti & Peru.
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The band is currently recording their fifth full length album, schedule for release in early 2018. A new single followed, entitled “Rude Girl” which debuted among iTunes Hot Singles in the Reggae genre. In March 2017, Tribal Seeds won the San Diego Music Award for Artist of the Year. The album featured guest appearances from Don Carlos, Mykal Rose, and Midnite’s Vaughn Benjamin.
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The Soundwaves EP followed in 2011, while 2014’s Representing cracked the Billboard 200 albums chart.
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The album was the first of many to be released on the group’s own label, including a self-titled album in 2008 plus The Harvest from 2009. Formed in 2005 by the Jacobo brothers, singer Steven and producer Tony-Ray, the group issued its debut album, Youth Rebellion, that same year. There’s warm dub effects, bouncing rhythms, and romantic lyrics, and the energy even begins to reach its plateau on this track, surpassing every other track on the album in terms of passion and urgency.Įnding on a high-note, SoundWaves is a strong release that doesn’t really offer any expansion on the sound of Tribal Seeds or the sounds of SoCal in general, but it’s certainly a fine continuation of the group’s sunny reggae sound, and a beacon for great things to come.Based in San Diego, rock-reggae band Tribal Seeds come at their music from a different angle, more influenced by bands like Steel Pulse and Aswad than the common touchstone of Sublime. It’s a fitting closer for the album, encapsulating almost every aspect of the four preceding tracks (except for the guitar harmonies, thankfully). I admit that I was kind of hoping “In Your Eyes” would be a cover of the Peter Gabriel song, but Tribal Seeds does a fine job with it as an original.

It exacts a quixotic effect, periodically broken by mantra-like statements such as “wipe out the riches in your heart/realize that money couldn’t buy true love.” The track is a murky, hushed roots track, intoxicating like morphine, bringing the whole world to a near stand-still. “Slow” does quite literally slow everything down. Like fireworks in July, snare hits explode in mid-air and trickle across the backdrop as Steven Rene Jacobo and Eric Rachmany trade verses dissecting the power of music and sound on the human experience, their voices, too, slowly trailing off into darkness. “SoundWaves” lives up to its namesake, as rippling sound effects and synth sweeps soar across the dub shattered soundscape. Tony-Ray Jacobo’s synths hold a much more prominent role in the song’s atmosphere, arcing the song into a sensitive, ballad, which oddly reminds me of Gyptian’s 2010 summer smash “Hold Yuh.” They don’t really sound the same, but something in those vibes, buried deep in the groove, links the two songs in my mind. “I’ll Return Again” takes a different turn from the somewhat straight ahead roots-rock vibes of “Right On Time” taking a lover’s rock Hi-Fi approach. I guess not everything is complementary in reggae-rock. For some reason those harmonized guitar leads work wonders in a rock context, but I’ve never seen a reggae band pull it off. The album opens with “Right On Time” which is an overall solid song, except for the guitar harmonies in the introduction. continue to write songs about girls and good vibes, tempered every now and then with socio-political proclamations, but otherwise perfect mood music for summer days spent at the beach and summer nights at the bar. On their latest release, a five-track EP entitled SoundWaves, Tribal Seeds press on within the confines of the reggae-rock format, not really expanding upon the sound, but still offering another shiny, little ruby for the treasure chest that is the Socal reggae music scene. They’ve toured nationwide and even gotten as far from the mainland as Guam.

Based in sunny San Diego, Tribal Seeds have been churning out sun-bleached roots music with some added punk vibes for about six years now.
