Brent Clough will call Whanganui home for the rest of the year. Photo / Bevan Conley
Brent Clough will call Whanganui home for the rest of the year. Photo / Bevan Conley
Climbing a fence to interview Bob Marley is one of many high points in the career of reggae champion Brent Clough.
The radio producer, presenter and DJ will call Whanganui home for the rest of the year, and he’s getting straight into the local music scene.
Clough, AKASenor Bambu, has formed Te Awa Dub Club with fellow reggae die-hards Tom Langford (Naram) and Taupuruariki Brightwell (Queen Big Punch).
He said his love of reggae stretches back to his youth.
When Bob Marley came to New Zealand in 1979, then-17-year-old Clough bought a ticket and made the pilgrimage from Tauranga to Auckland to see the concert.
“Once I got to Auckland, I thought, ‘Hey, I edit the school newspaper, I might as well try to interview him’,” he said.
“I headed down to Western Springs the day before, when the band was rehearsing, jumped a fence and told their manager Don Taylor I edited the Ōtūmoetai College newspaper Spartacus and wanted to interview Bob.
“He said, ‘Sure, come back the day after the concert’.”
Clough obliged and, along with “a truckload of journalists”, waited patiently at the White Heron Hotel in Parnell two days later.
“Bob was far more interested in football, so he, the band, members of the record company and [music journalist] Dylan Taite just played in a park next door,” he said.
“It went on and on and, eventually, all the other journalists left. I hung around - I was happy to watch Bob Marley play football.”
In the end, only Taite, Clough and a local Hare Krishna group got an interview.
Western Springs was Marley’s only concert appearance in New Zealand. He died two years later.
“Some of the roots reggae bands in [Vanuatu’s capital] Port Vila are very reminiscent of Bob in the 1970s,” he said.
“I was interested to see how young people were making new music in the Pacific that was totally influenced by Jamaican music, and particularly by Bob Marley and the Wailers.
“In Vanuatu, the first recorded reggae used a traditional rhythm from Pentacost - an island in the northeast - which fitted perfectly with reggae but probably went back hundreds, if not thousands, of years.”
Clough, who has a collection of over 20,000 records, said roots reggae fit perfectly in New Zealand as well.
He said he was a big fan of Raetihi-based reggae artist Brutha Rodz, who had a new release coming out later this month.
One of Clough’s favourite albums is Herbs’ debut What’s Be Happen?
Mike Tweed is an assistant news director and multimedia journalist at the Whanganui Chronicle. Since starting in March 2020, he has dabbled in everything from sport to music. At present his focus is local government, primarily the Whanganui District Council.