
I became a fan of ska music in a distant foreign land where such music is unheard and unheard of: the mountains of western North Carolina. Madness was my entry point, which led to the English Beat, the Specials and the rest of the 2 Tone scene, and eventually brought me to skaโs Jamaican roots in the Skatalites and Prince Buster. Content with my many obscure interests, I knew ska was never going to be a thing in the land of my birth, and that was okay.
Fast forward to the spring of this year, when I was visiting my family in Waynesville and found some info my sister had printed about a free summer concert series in the neighboring town of Sylva. The scheduled acts for the Concerts on the Creek series ran the gamut of expected local tastes: classic rock, bluegrass, country, beach music, Jimmy Buffett covers. But hello, whatโs this odd little listing?
Friday, Aug. 19: SKA City, ska music (7-9 p.m.)

ZOMG what in the…? Wait, thatโs a typo, right? A ska band? Performing for my ancestral homefolk? Who are presumably meant to show up voluntarily? Is this real life? No, it couldnโt be… but yes it is.
Immediately I was determined to witness this show. More than that, I needed to connect with Ska City and find out what theyโre all about. There was surely a kinship to explore here, a bond between geographically unlikely troubadours and blogger, each of us fighting the good fight for musical skappreciation in the wilds of North Carolina!
The history of Ska City dates back to 2019 when some Asheville-area musicians met up through Craigslist to form a small ska group that included Will Chatham (drums), Dennis Owenby (sax) and Vinnie Sullivan (guitar). The lineup shifted and expanded into the current population of nine Ska Citizens, rounded out by Julia Ruff (lead vocals), Rob Grace (keyboards), Garrick Smith (baritone sax), Dave Wilken (trombone), Gabe Holguin (trumpet) and Rob Heyer (bass). Rob Grace is an expatriate from Coventry, lending the enterprise a dash of authentic British ska cred. Out of the other members, Will is my only fellow native North Carolinian, with the rest drawn from various parts of the U.S. by Ashevilleโs renowned weirdo magnet.
So what gave Ska City the courage to skank it up in a ska-less land where black and white checkerboard means the NASCAR race is over with?

โOne of the theories behind this group is that weโd either do well or go down in flames,โ Vinnie says. โThe reason being, is a ton of people we spoke to about doing a ska band would say, โSKA! Holy crap, I used to go to ska shows all the time!โ We knew the audience was there, just werenโt sure if weโd get people coming out. But weโve been doing pretty good, getting bigger audiences and better gigs as we go along.โ
Can it really be as easy as that? Ska bands are famously disrespected by the unenlightened, and us rude boys and rude girls have been subjected to simple rudeness. Has Ska City ever had to pacify a hostile crowd by resorting to โRawhideโ or โStand by Your Manโ?
โHa! Great question. No, never had to appease a crowd,โ Vinnie says. โI assume weโre winning over anyone with an open mind, if theyโve never heard of or liked ska in the first place. We pepper the set with originals and classic ska and other covers, some covers that a country fan, for example, might recognize and get into.โ
And what about covers that readers of this blog might get into? Of course I had to ask Vinnie, where does Ska City stand on Madness?
โWe love Madness, a few of us have been ska fans since WAY back.โ Unfortunately, there are no Madness or Prince Buster numbers in Ska Cityโs current set, but Vinnie suggests that could change. โIโd love to do โOne Step Beyondโ or โOur House,โ classics for sure.โ

The Ska City show took place at Sylvaโs Bridge Park, which has a nice bandstand pavilion in front of scenic Scott Creek, with a big lawn where itโs BYO folding chairs and blankets. A paved patch in front of the stage serves as the dance floor. It turns out the band previously played here in 2021, so clearly it went over well enough for them to be invited back. The gathering all-ages crowd was already showing signs of interest during the sound check, which further boded well for the evening ahead. Ska City started the show proper will a peppy take on Otis Reddingโs โI Canโt Turn You Loose,โ widely recognized as the Blues Brothersโ opening theme. That made me smile in light of my earlier questions about any possible Bobโs Country Bunker nightmares.
The set list shrewdly kept the band engaged with a fair number of familiar songs without at all pandering: โThe Tide Is Highโ (originally recorded by Jamaican rocksteady group The Paragons before Blondie made it a hit), Stevie Wonderโs โYou Can Feel It All Over,โ Dusty Springfieldโs โSon of a Preacher Man,โ Van Morrisonโs โBrown Eyed Girlโ (rendered with the original lyric of โBrown Skinned Girlโ), Billie Eilishโs โBad Guy,โ and an inventive take on Johnny Cashโs โRing of Fire.โ
But Ska City is no novelty cover band. They pride themselves on original compositions that slot in nicely beside the multi-genre standards in their set. A couple of drinking-related songs went down well with the crowd: Dennis Owenbyโs โRaise Your Glassโ and Dave Wilkenโs โPizza and Beer.โ Another original (whose name I didnโt catch) addressed the challenges of finding romantic time with kids in the house, which must have resonated with the young parents of the rugrats running around all night. I enjoyed the bandโs self-titled theme song, which Julia introduces as a primer on the meaning of ska. โThereโs a little place (Ska City!) Iโm gonna take you to (Ska City!) Youโre gonna love it there! Bring your mama to (Ska City!)โ The lyrics namecheck Prince Buster, 2 Tone, Coventry, The Specials, Selecter, The English Beat… but alas, not Madness. I has a sad. ๐ข
Ah well, I can forgive โem that. I could still feel the archetypal presence of Madness at work, if only in my mind. Rob Heyer has a jazzy Bedders bounce in his bass, and Rob Grace conjures cool Barson energy in his porkpie hat and shades while laying down mellifluous organ. Most striking of all, saxman Dennis Owenby is the Lee Thompson of North Carolina, in stature as well as impish demeanor. โThis next oneโs a song we didnโt write,โ Dennis quipped. โItโs still pretty good, though.โ

Ska City had me hooked from the start. It was all over early in the set when the horn section heralded โRudy, A Message to Youโ and I had to haul my ass straight to the dance floor. I did my best to exhort the crowd to take heed of Rudyโs cautionary tale, jumping around the concrete slab with some kids and a few senior citizens. (Plus the one dad in a ska T-shirt who joined in later, bless him.)
That huge classic led directly into the best moment of the night, a spectacular interpretation of โTake Fiveโ by Dave Brubeck. Ska City is far from the first ska or reggae act to tackle this revered jazz standard, but they really nailed it. The band got a serious Skatalites stretching-out groove cooking, with about everyone taking extended solos breaks in turn โ just thoroughly impressive. The other high points for me were a blazing runthrough of Toots & The Maytalsโ call-and-response colossus โ54-46 (Was My Number)โ, and the joyous shifting tempos of Dexyโs Midnight Runnersโ โCome on Eileenโ that closed the show with a suitable bang.

All in all, Ska City delivered an evening of personal affirmation for me, and hopefully an entertaining discovery for other attendees. People always ask โWhat is ska?โ But itโs something you canโt explain in words, or with YouTube videos, and maybe not even by playing great records. The only way to understand ska is to hear a good band play live. In this respect, my new comrades in Ska City are doing a fine public service.
Like the song says, I literally did bring my mama to Ska City โ and my sister too. And I think now they know me a little better.
Thanks to Vinnie Sullivan and Rob Grace for graciously chatting with me for this article. Check out Ska City at Ska.City and on Facebook and YouTube.






















