Last year was a busy one for British funk band Cymande. Getting it Back, Tim MacKenzie-Smith’s documentary charting their decades-long journey to worldwide recognition, was released in February, followed by screenings and Q&As around the UK and US, live gigs and, finally, a slot on Later… with Jools Holland. After 53 years of making music together, it was, inexplicably, their first ever appearance on UK TV.
The group formed in Balham, South London, in 1971. The children of Windrush immigrants, their music blended jazz, soul, rock and Caribbean influences against a backdrop of cold weather and racial tension. America was receptive – they reached the Billboard chart and toured with Al Green – but success in the UK eluded them and a long hiatus followed the release of their Promised Heights LP in 1974.
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Many people who discovered their music in subsequent years, including several of those interviewed for Getting It Back, assumed they were American. The first time I heard Cymande’s music was in a record shop in Memphis. Founding members Steve Scipio and Patrick Patterson are still incredulous. “It’s surprising how people connect with the music but they didn’t realise the source,” Scipio tells me. “I think they all recognise now that we’re South London guys.”
Despite the wait, the band are humbled by the attention they’re finally receiving in the UK. “It’s great that our music, having come back after all this time, has garnered the audience and the amount of respect that it has done. Jools Holland’s show was ideal,” Patterson says.
Scipio agrees: “That we are now getting the recognition at home, it’s wonderful what’s happening now. People are really buying into the music. They’re buying into the history of the band. And there’s a connectedness with Jools also – he’s a South London man, isn’t he? Even though you have recognition abroad, to some extent, recognition at home is more important.”