The Reggae Thread

Two years after Dim The Light Winston Reedy followed up with the excellent Crossover album (1985) mixed at UB40’s Abbatoir Studio and released on the bands Dep International label.
Similarly produced and arranged by Jackie Mitttoo with a mix of Lovers and Roots material but musically more faster paced and uptempo and less analogue sounding with the electro programming and syn drum sound that was pervading eighties Reggae, featuring Roots Radics drummer Style Scott also Sly and Robbie, Bingy Bunny, Jackie Mittoo. Mikey Dread recorded an album Pave The Way around this time that came out on UB40’s DEP International and he contributes his mixing skills here on the track Superstar.

A great follow up album, Winston could have gone on to greater success but for whatever reason he faded away after this album and wasnt heard of musically for 20 plus years and hasn’t done anything to match the quality of this or Dim The Light since, such a shame
Despite being on UB40’s label I dont think it’s ever been re issued, so again original vinyl is the (only) way to go

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The previously mentioned Mikey Dread DEP International album.
1985 the wonderfully idiosyncratic Mikey Dread Pave The Way pts 1 & 2 double gatefold album.
Another of those DEP albums that afaik have criminally never been reissued. There was a single vinyl version and later a truncated CD released by the Canadian Heartbeat label, again original vinyl is the only way to go.
The varied recording studios and musicians is a Reggae trainspotters delight interestingly including Paul Simonon (appearing courtesy of CBS records) whom Mikey collaborated with to great effect working with The Clash. Iirc The Clash were all but finished in 1985 which hints that this album is a rounding up of material dating from his Clash period and newer material of the time. A kind of odds n sods but which manages to sound complete as a double album.
I wonder how many people here will remember the CH4 series Rockers Roadshow that Mikey presented around this time, its theme song Roots And Culture included here.
One of the true innovators in the genre he passed on too soon in 2008 succumbing to a brain tumour.
Sadly missed, respect due

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Rewind and come again…
In the beginning Mikey Dread had studied electronics and worked at Jamaica’s JBC Radio as an engineer. Unbelievably back then in the 70’s Reggae didnt get airplay.
Legend has it that Mikey tried to convince the conservative attitude of JBC management to play Jamaican music, apparently the management didnt like the idea of a “dread” presenting a radio show, they somehow relented but apparently wouldnt allow Dread to speak on air and gave him the graveyard through the night slot. Undettered Mikey presented a non stop show, titled Dread At The Controls perhaps as a dig at management, of the cream of the crop of JA music mixed non stop and interspersed with jingles and bizarre sound effects instead of his own voice
He eventually fell out with JBC and went on to become a recording artist and producer in his own right.
Bootleg cassettes of his Dread At The Controls Show sold around JA and Mikey recorded a sort of recreation of the show for his first album
African Anthem - The Mikey Dread Show Dubwise
Countless brilliant albums and singles followed including the classic Dread At The Controls & World War III, various dub albums and productions of other artists and of course working with The Clash.
His productions coming out on his brilliantly distinctive D.A.T.C label
Brilliant and bonkers in equal measure, a genuine dub classic, featuring some crack musicians of the period, aided and abetted by Prince Jammy & King Tubby, it’s the Dread At The Control Michael Campbell To Thrill Your Soul…alright?..alright!

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Happy 420 to one and all
toshlegjaffe

Peace
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A contemporary of Darcus Howe? Whose views and presence on TV, and in the media, I really miss. Will have to check out that show.

Enjoying that album, cheers :slight_smile:

Yes indeed
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Another absolute gem from 1982. Many regard the mid seventies as the golden period for roots Reggae, however a phenomenal amount of great music was produced in the '79 to '82 period, when the music was going through another transitional period, with the Roots Radics Band replacing The Revolutionaries at Channel One with the distinctive dub mixing of Scientist at King Tubbys. Greensleeves licenced much of the best and this is another.
The brilliant Roots vocalist Hugh Mundell with the combination of Roots Radics and Scientist heavy punchy dub mixes and trademark feedback transients, the saxophone and trombone of Deadley Headley and Nambo Robinson adding at times an ethereal quality.
Uplifting and boots yer boxes, love it!

(2002 remastered and expanded edition)
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Errol Flabba Holt bass player with Roots Radics

Play Reggae Bass Like Flabba Holt

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1982 again!
Deadley Headley Bennett - 35 Years From Alpha
The Alpha in the title being the Jamaican Alpha Boys School run by nuns who taught poor, underprivelidged and “wayward” youth skills including music. Many of Jamaicas fine musicians were alumni including saxophonist Headley Bennett.
In 1982 as the Roots Radics band were forming Dub Syndicate in the UK with Adrian Sherwood’s OnU Sound he recorded this fine solo album on which Rico and the lovely vocalist Bim Sherman also appear.
A fine fusion of elements of free Jazz, funk and Dub.
I recommend it wholeheartedly


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More Toots!
Toots & The Maytals Live At Hammersmith Odeon
As well as a great album, I think it was kind of record breaking in that iirc it was recorded, mastered and pressed up to be in the shops the following day

This is another of the Toots MOV LP re issues I’ve been trialling, so far very pleased with them

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2LP set from the ever reliable Soul Jazz
Rocksteady Got Soul
The latest Soul Jazz round up of wonderful Studio 1 classics and obscurities
Brilliant!

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Brilliant 1974 album from the great JA vocalist Ken Boothe, produced by Lloyd Chalmers…
The cover of Breads (iirc) Everything I Own is of course probably his best known song but the whole album is pure soul, stax, reggae… quality!
R-671269-1227035735.jpeg
Ken Boothe - Everything I Own (Trojan 1974)
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2 absolutely essential Ijahman Levi albums
Hail I Hymn and Are We A Warrior from 76 & 77 originally on Island Records.
Ijahman has a beautiful voice and deep spiritual meditative songs
Are We A Warrior, Moulding, Jah Heavy Load and I’m A Levi are amongst the best Rastafari influenced songs ever recorded in the genre.

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Edit big up @ewemon for digging this up over on the WYLT2021 thread
The Youth (1966) one of the names he recorded under before later becoming Ijahman Levi
The Youth - As Long As There Is Love - Polydor

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Curtis Mayfield/The Impressions People Get Ready was of course partly the inspiration for Bob Marley’s One Love.
Here is the well known 1977 re recording (from the Exodus album) on an Island 12" that also includes So Much Trouble In The World and the brilliant Lee Perry produced Keep On Moving backed by members of Aswad and Third World.
Great Island 12" single/EP

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The late and truly very great Justin Hinds & The Dominoes - Jezebel - Island 1976
Spot on review below, he also later recorded with Keith Richard’s on Wingless Angel’s which I also highly recommend

AllMusic Review by Jo-Ann Greene

Justin Hinds & the Dominoes were one of the most popular vocal groups during the ska and rocksteady era, but Hinds was a country boy at heart, and with the rise of reggae he returned to his rural home. Thus the group disappeared from view for most of the first half of the '70s, but by 1975, producer L. “Jack Ruby” Lindo coaxed Hinds to Kingston, and the trio back into the studio. The musical scene had shifted dramatically during the interim, with the pusillanimous freneticism of early reggae slowing into the denser and more atmospheric sound of roots. And here, Hinds and company were right at home. The success of the sessions at Federal and Channel One studios can be gauged by the fact that over half the tracks on Jezebel were initially released as popular singles in Jamaica, while the recut of the trio’s 1964 smash “Carry Go Bring Come” mashed up sound systems in the UK. That remodel was worth the price of admission alone, taking a sizzling ska song with a Rastafarian message, and placing it where it belonged, within a deeply dubby roots context, while the brass section rang out overhead. The retread of “Save a Bread,” which appears under the title “What You Don’t Know” is very nearly as good.

The new material is easily the equal of these classic numbers. And in fact, the gorgeous “Fire” takes the trio straight back to those heady days of rocksteady, The Dominoes’ ethereal harmonies soar above Hinds’ adamant delivery, while the backing Black Disciples riff contentedly along. “Natty Take Over” resurrects the chugging train sound of this same era, and drives it straight into the roots age. “Spotlight,” in contrast, clip-clops along like a donkey with rural reggae that meets the old West, counterpointed by the jazzy brass.

It’s evident that Ruby spent much time and thought on the production, while the Disciples worked just as hard on the arrangements that are not only sympathetic to the songs’ themes, but inevitably showcase the singers and their lovely melodies to their very best. Be it a dance inspired number like “Dip and Fall Back” or the stern warning to “Babylon Children,” the trio deliver up a phenomenal performance and, with the Disciples as accompaniment, never fail to thrill.

One of the most inspired numbers is the deeply cultural “Prophesy,” which adapts its melody from “Blue Moon,” and juxtaposes smokey brass with an insistently upbeat reggae rhythm, then sprinkles it with cheesy late '60s organ. It may sound like a smorgasbord to avoid, but is actually one of the best songs on the album, and within a solo Hinds unleashes one of the greatest performances of his career.

Across this set, the trio constantly reminds us why we fell in love with them in the first place, and how much we’d missed them since they’d left. This album was a masterpiece, but Island was too busy working Bob Marley to give it the attention it deserved. Which perhaps explains why the album was titled after a popular single not included on the set, and how Hinds’ name came to be mis-spelled on the cover. That was sheer negligence, what was criminal was the label’s decision to delete this phenomenal record from their back catalogue. Perhaps a writing campaign is in order.

Ahh! Feel this!

Justin Hinds and the Dominoes Natty take over

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The late and truly very great Justin Hinds & The Dominoes - Jezebel - Island 1976
Spot on review below, he also later recorded with Keith Richard’s on Wingless Angel’s which I also highly recommend

AllMusic Review by Jo-Ann Greene

Justin Hinds & the Dominoes were one of the most popular vocal groups during the ska and rocksteady era, but Hinds was a country boy at heart, and with the rise of reggae he returned to his rural home. Thus the group disappeared from view for most of the first half of the '70s, but by 1975, producer L. “Jack Ruby” Lindo coaxed Hinds to Kingston, and the trio back into the studio. The musical scene had shifted dramatically during the interim, with the pusillanimous freneticism of early reggae slowing into the denser and more atmospheric sound of roots. And here, Hinds and company were right at home. The success of the sessions at Federal and Channel One studios can be gauged by the fact that over half the tracks on Jezebel were initially released as popular singles in Jamaica, while the recut of the trio’s 1964 smash “Carry Go Bring Come” mashed up sound systems in the UK. That remodel was worth the price of admission alone, taking a sizzling ska song with a Rastafarian message, and placing it where it belonged, within a deeply dubby roots context, while the brass section rang out overhead. The retread of “Save a Bread,” which appears under the title “What You Don’t Know” is very nearly as good.

The new material is easily the equal of these classic numbers. And in fact, the gorgeous “Fire” takes the trio straight back to those heady days of rocksteady, The Dominoes’ ethereal harmonies soar above Hinds’ adamant delivery, while the backing Black Disciples riff contentedly along. “Natty Take Over” resurrects the chugging train sound of this same era, and drives it straight into the roots age. “Spotlight,” in contrast, clip-clops along like a donkey with rural reggae that meets the old West, counterpointed by the jazzy brass.

It’s evident that Ruby spent much time and thought on the production, while the Disciples worked just as hard on the arrangements that are not only sympathetic to the songs’ themes, but inevitably showcase the singers and their lovely melodies to their very best. Be it a dance inspired number like “Dip and Fall Back” or the stern warning to “Babylon Children,” the trio deliver up a phenomenal performance and, with the Disciples as accompaniment, never fail to thrill.

One of the most inspired numbers is the deeply cultural “Prophesy,” which adapts its melody from “Blue Moon,” and juxtaposes smokey brass with an insistently upbeat reggae rhythm, then sprinkles it with cheesy late '60s organ. It may sound like a smorgasbord to avoid, but is actually one of the best songs on the album, and within a solo Hinds unleashes one of the greatest performances of his career.

Across this set, the trio constantly reminds us why we fell in love with them in the first place, and how much we’d missed them since they’d left. This album was a masterpiece, but Island was too busy working Bob Marley to give it the attention it deserved. Which perhaps explains why the album was titled after a popular single not included on the set, and how Hinds’ name came to be mis-spelled on the cover. That was sheer negligence, what was criminal was the label’s decision to delete this phenomenal record from their back catalogue. Perhaps a writing campaign is in order.

Ahh! Feel this!

Justin Hinds and the Dominoes Natty take over

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The aforementioned Wingless Angel’s album…

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After playing Jezebel earlier, got grabbed by a Justin Hinds vibe and have had the Island records follow up (two years later in 1978) Just In Time on repeat play in the cab.
Great songs, including traditional Rastafari themes like Let Jah Arise, Bad Minded People (where you gonna hide), helping the poor Help Your Falling Brother, some nice soulful covers On Broadway, Groovin Out On Life…backed by some fine musicality, underpinned by the propulsive one drop and rockers style drumming of Leroy Horsemouth Wallace that gets you moving (as with Jezebel produced by Jack Ruby with some of the cream of JA musicians which he named The Black Disciples)
Heartical and uplifting
20210506_175944
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Don plays an essential medley of foundation Studio One bass lines
Run the riddim selecta!

Brilliant!
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Desmond Dekker & The Aces - 007 Shanty Town (Trojan/Music On Vinyl 1967)
Another nicely pressed by MOV classic from the Rocksteady period, most will be familiar with the smash title track that brought Desmond International stardom, the rest is equally fine music from the period…
As the sleeve note says songs of Love, politics, nagging woman, JA Independance and gang warfare

Trojan Records

Desmond Dekker - Trojan Records

Throughout this pre-roots era, the name most people in the street would most readily identify with the rhythms of the Caribbean was Desmond Dekker.

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