Stoke born reggae DJ Olbi Iyah talks about the lead up to Soul of the Movement, an event that he will be performing at, which will be the closing party of BASS Festival.
“In Cambridgeshire, where I grew up as a teenager, there wasn't really a Jamaican culture or real reggae scene”, says Olbi.
“I came to Birmingham when I was eighteen and I was immersed in reggae. “There was so much around, you're a small fish in a big pond”.
Since moving to Birmingham, Olbi has certainly established himself in the scene firmly.
Working alongside Jam Jah and Jibbering sound systems, he also collaborates with Matty Garber, under the name Lombard Royale.
“For years, we played at this place called Peckers, that used to be an underground little venue.
“It closed down because they found a different location in Digbeth, now known as PST in its first incarnation”.
Olbi continues, “we did our first night there and it was a ranging success.
“We got the name Lombard Royale because it's on Lombard Street, and it was so far from being royal.
“The classic irony and sarcasm of British humour, there was corrugated iron everywhere!”.
Olbi is also doing pretty well for himself outside of Birmingham and on a wider sphere of England.
“Festivals are always good in the summer, things like Secret Summer I've done in the past”, he says.
“Then Shambala is the big one.
“It's given me the biggest rites of passage out of any of them, I've played to thousands of people before Smith & Mighty and I'm like wow! I've arrived!”.
By now, it's becoming clear that reggae and collecting records has turned into a life long passion for the Stoke born DJ.
“When reggae hit me, it hit me really hard”, he says.
“I feel like I'm married to it.
“Reggae has been the one consistent thing in my life since fourteen onwards”, says Olbi.
“It's the one genre that can convey every single topic.
“There's tunes about every single political stance, every single country in the world, because it's a social commentary, probably before it was even a music type.
“Every possible human emotion can be felt and covered”, he says.
And how will Olbi's DJ set pay homage to reggae music at Soul of the Movement?
“I'm doing a reggae history revolutionary”, he says.
“Playing tunes for people that push the boundaries, revolutionising the way reggae was made.
“So Wayne Smith - Under Mi Sleng Teng produced by King Jammy, those kind of rhythms, the first all computerised rhythms.
“Then you've got tunes like Chim Cherie by Lee Perry which pre-dates that 70s, early 80s scene, which was a very digital rhythm.
“Lee Perry made remix culture”, explains Olbi.
“He'd make one tune and have it in different layers.
“He said he could make 6 million tunes out of it!”.
And finally, what does Olbi have planned for the future?
“Next year I'm going to put in an application for BASS festival.
“It's the Olympics and the Jamaican team are staying in Birmingham!”.
Catch Olbi Iyah performing at PST, the closing party for BASS festival. Soul of the Movement. 25th June, 11pm – 5am.