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H.R. (Human Rights) (born February 11, 1956 in London, England) is the stage name of Paul D. Hudson, the lead singer of the influential hardcore punk band Bad Brains. Often, in conflict with the other members of the group throughout the 1980s, H.R. would leave the band periodically and record solo albums which were more mellow reggae than Bad Brains' usual offerings. Though reggae is the main focus on H.R.'s solo material, rock and other musical genres are explored as well. As a result, he experienced an extensive solo career, gaining a reputation as an impressive singer and dynamic performer, with numerous reggae albums released on SST Records. He is the older brother of Earl Hudson, the band's usual drummer. He has collaborated with the Long Beach Dub Allstars on their song New Sun, on the Right Back album and with P.O.D. on their song Without Jah, Nothin', on the album Satellite. During the past several years H.R. has headlined DIA Records Global Rock Showcase tour. H.R. continues to play shows with his Bad Brains bandmates. The foursome released a new album, Build a Nation in 2007 produced by Adam Yauch of the Beastie Boys. It is a return to their hardcore punk roots, but also encompasses their unique reggae-punk hybrid sound expressed in I Against I, Quickness and later albums. This is the first original LP with the original lineup since 1995. He and his bandmates became Rastafarians around 1979. This spiritual direction influenced the music of Bad Brains via his vocals, and inspired the creation of his reggae band, Human Rights. A Village Voice review of a Bad Brains concert described him on stage like James Brown gone berserk, with a hyperkinetic repertoire of spins, dives, back-flips, splits, and skanks. In recent years H.R.'s performances have been markedly more mellow and restrained, focusing primarily on reggae, and Rastafarianism. This is a stark contrast to his wildly animated, aggressive stage performances of the late 70s and 1980s.[1] H.R.'s persona, once that of a leonine, no-nonsense, and politically vocal Rasta has also mellowed considerably. He is often seen on stage displaying a sort of Cheshire Cat grin and standing singularly at the microphone. H.R.'s interviews in recent years have also been quite eccentric and free-form, bordering on non-sensical and amusing. His eccentricities, however, have done little to diminish Bad Brains popularity or his own as a solo artist. H.R. currently resides in El Paso, TX playing local and international gigs with the Dubb Agents. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
H.R. (Human Rights) (born February 11, 1956 in London, England) is the stage name of Paul D. Hudson, the lead singer of the influential hardcore punk band Bad Brains. Often, in conflict with the other members of the group throughout the 1980s, H.R. would leave the band periodically and record solo albums which were more mellow reggae than Bad Brains' usual offerings. Though reggae is the main focus on H.R.'s solo material, rock and other musical genres are explored as well. As a result, he experienced an extensive solo career, gaining a reputation as an impressive singer and dynamic performer, with numerous reggae albums released on SST Records. He is the older brother of Earl Hudson, the band's usual drummer. He has collaborated with the Long Beach Dub Allstars on their song New Sun, on the Right Back album and with P.O.D. on their song Without Jah, Nothin', on the album Satellite. During the past several years H.R. has headlined DIA Records Global Rock Showcase tour. H.R. continues to play shows with his Bad Brains bandmates. The foursome released a new album, Build a Nation in 2007 produced by Adam Yauch of the Beastie Boys. It is a return to their hardcore punk roots, but also encompasses their unique reggae-punk hybrid sound expressed in I Against I, Quickness and later albums. This is the first original LP with the original lineup since 1995. He and his bandmates became Rastafarians around 1979. This spiritual direction influenced the music of Bad Brains via his vocals, and inspired the creation of his reggae band, Human Rights. A Village Voice review of a Bad Brains concert described him on stage like James Brown gone berserk, with a hyperkinetic repertoire of spins, dives, back-flips, splits, and skanks. In recent years H.R.'s performances have been markedly more mellow and restrained, focusing primarily on reggae, and Rastafarianism. This is a stark contrast to his wildly animated, aggressive stage performances of the late 70s and 1980s.[1] H.R.'s persona, once that of a leonine, no-nonsense, and politically vocal Rasta has also mellowed considerably. He is often seen on stage displaying a sort of Cheshire Cat grin and standing singularly at the microphone. H.R.'s interviews in recent years have also been quite eccentric and free-form, bordering on non-sensical and amusing. His eccentricities, however, have done little to diminish Bad Brains popularity or his own as a solo artist. H.R. currently resides in El Paso, TX playing local and international gigs with the Dubb Agents. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Without Jah, Nothin'
Shame in Dem Game
Rasta
It'll Be Alright
Fool's Gold
While You Were Sleeping
Youthman Sufferer
Just Because I'm Poor
Dancing Souls
Charge
Let's Have a Revolution
New Sun
Selassie Fee
My Mama
It's About Luv
Fool's Gold (Dub)
Human Rights
Rasta Time
Who Loves You Girl?
Happy Birthday My Son
I Luv King Jah
Let Luv Lead (The Way)
Saddest Day
It's Reggae
Luv Ain't Crazy
Jah Wings (feat. Chali 2na)
Who's Got the Herb?
Keep Out of Reach
Now You Say
No Return
Life After Death
Treat Street
Singin' In The Heart
Free Our Mind
We're Gonna Get You / Heaven Forbid
Prelude: Roots
Don't Trust No (Shadows After Dark)
Don't Break
Acting So Bad
Viva Azania
Conquering Judah
Power of the Trinity
jah like that
Stay Close
Yo Here We Go
Easy
Keep Out Of Reach (Dub)
Hey Wella
Luv Comes First
It's On
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