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4.5 Star Rating Read Reviews    5 Reviews
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Where was Ali
By Bets from Waukegan Illinois on 8/23/2008
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Lighting, Great Sound, Perfect Set List
Best For:
Everyone

I had a blast but was also very disappointed. I waited 28 years to personally see them perform and they showed up without their lead vocals. It was not the same. I give my respect to Duncan Campbell but Ali is the man. My wish before I die is to have one more opportunity to see them perform together as UB40.

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UB40 Concert
By divydee from Houston, Tx on 8/18/2008
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Lighting, Great Sound, Perfect Set List
Best For:
Everyone

UB40 live in concert, can't get any better than that!It was real good!

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UB40 was the best!
By Cosmic from Dallas, TX on 8/18/2008
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great lead singer sub, Great Lighting, Great Sound, Perfect Set List
Cons:
Lead singer absent, Too Short
Best For:
Everyone

great band

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UB40 still has it!
By moose from vacaville on 8/11/2008
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Sound
Cons:
Too Short
Best For:
Everyone

great venue, THE place to see a show!

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UB40 Biography

Named after a British unemployment benefit form, pop-reggae band UB40 were formed in a welfare line in 1978, and their multiracial lineup reflected the working-class community their members came from. The band consolidated its street credibility with political topics appealing to dissatisfied youth and got a boost from fans of the waning 2-Tone ska revival movement. Brothers Robin (lead guitar) and Ali Campbell (guitar, lead vocals) formed the centerpiece of the group, which also included bassist Earl Falconer, keyboardist Mickey Virtue, saxophonist Brian Travers, drummer Jim Brown, percussionist Norman Hassan, and toaster Terence Astro Wilson. The band purchased its first instruments with compensation money Ali Campbell received after a bar fight, even though few of the members knew how to play them.

But by the end of the year, the group was invited to tour with the Pretenders. Their Food for Thought single reached the U.K. Top Ten in 1980, beginning a long streak of chart appearances. Signing Off and Present Arms were big sellers in Britain, if not America, and addressed the political issues of the day in songs like One in Ten, a Top Ten hit blasting Margaret Thatcher for the country's unemployment rate. Released in 1983, Labour of Love, an album of reggae cover songs, gave the group its first chart album in America and first number one U.K. hit with Neil Diamond's Red Red Wine. Several albums of original material sold well in the U.K., but only respectably in the U.S., where the group's biggest hit was a Top 30 cover of Sonny & Cher's I Got You Babe featuring the Pretenders' Chrissie Hynde.

In 1988, the group performed Red Red Wine at a Nelson Mandela tribute concert, and a Phoenix radio station trotted the single out for a second go-round. Listener response was far more enthusiastic, and Red Red Wine reentered the charts and went all the way to the top. Finally having hit on a way to conquer the lucrative American market, UB40 responded with another covers album, Labour of Love II, which produced Top Ten singles with versions of the Temptations' The Way You Do the Things You Do and Al Green's Here I Am (Come and Take Me). The group scored a huge hit in America with Elvis Presley's Can't Help Falling in Love, which was initially featured in the Sharon Stone film Sliver and spent seven weeks at number one. By this time, UB40 had largely abandoned their trademark left-wing politics and were concentrating more on perfecting their reggae oldies covers than their original material however, the gimmick resulted in huge sales figures in both the U.S. and U.K., with Promises and Lies reaching number six in the States and number one in Britain.

In the spring of 1998, UB40 released Presents the Dancehall Album in the U.K. A third Labour of Love collection followed a year later. In fall 2002, UB40 bounced back with yet another collection. The Fathers of Reggae, which appeared on Virgin in November, highlighted the band's roots in reggae in a selection of classics. In 2003, the band scored a major hit in the U.K. when its version of the spiritual Swing Low with the multicultural choir United Colours of Sound became the official anthem for the 2003 English Rugby team. The song was featured on the 2003 album Homegrown. As their 2005 album, Who You Fighting For, was being released, an announcement was made that the band would be working with Birmingham's Repertory Theatre to stage a new musical in the spring of 2006. Two years later their album Twentyfourseven became their last with vocalist Ali Campbell and keyboardist Michael Virtue. Their 2010 release Labour of Love IV introduced Alis brother Duncan as the groups new lead singer. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi