I've heard of all the terms in the last image, but the connection between Ska and Checkers escaped me. Google knows:
The checkerboard pattern in ska music and fashion represents racial unity and a fight against segregation. The pattern was popularized in the late 1970s during the second wave of ska music, also known as the "two-tone" era.
I remember Ska music being sort of popular once upon a time, but I didn't know any Ska tunes, so again I asked Google. This one struck me as 'authentic'.
Desmond Dekker & The Aces - 007 (Official Music Video)
Trojan Records Official
In the summer of 1967, Desmond Dekker & the Aces’ rude boy anthem, ‘007’ became one of the first Jamaican-produced recordings to breach the UK’s national Pop Singles charts; its unexpected international success prompting an urgent need for material to promote the 7” single.Consequently, Graeme Goodall, MD of Doctor Bird Records, the company behind its British release, hastily secured the services of respected Jamaican director, Perry Henzell, who wasted little time in filming the group live on stage and in the streets of island’s capital before editing the resultant footage and rushing it to the UK, where on the evening on 3 August, it was aired it on the BBC’s hugely popular ‘Top Of The Pops’ TV show.Notable for being one of the earliest promotional music films ever to be created in Jamaica specifically for a global audience, it now not only provides a truly fascinating glimpse of Desmond & the Aces in action, but also of Kingston street life back in the mid-Sixties.
Here's a couple of tunes that I know that are supposedly Ska, but I never would have thought so:
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