Review: This is one of a pair of new slabs of wax from Amsterdam's Sound System and label of the same name, King Shiloh. It features an array of modern dub and reggae talents and first up, Lavvosti & Black Omolo offer the modern sheen of 'Red Gold Green'. Kare's 'Better Days' rides the same rhythm but with more stylised and soulful vocal turns that empower with every bar. Jah Works dubs things out with a ton of effects and Tiger Simeon & Brada Jahziel layer in storytelling bars. Brasspect brings a fresh horn-led sound that is romantic and hypnotic and Roots Mechanic pairs things right back to an 80s sounding Jamaica dub vibe.
B-STOCK: Creasing to corner of outer sleeve but otherwise in excellent condition
Set Me Free (3:45)
It Grieve My Heart (3:49)
Jah Is The One (3:50)
Leaders Of Babylon (4:45)
Do Right (3:21)
Liberation (3:56)
I Love My Life (3:27)
Soddom & Gomorrah (3:53)
I've Been Around (4:06)
Pure Rankin (4:15)
Natural Mystic (3:38)
Totally Free (4:21)
Set Me Dub (3:55)
It Grieve My Dub (3:49)
Dub Is The One (3:53)
Leader Of Dub (5:21)
Dub Right (4:10)
Liberation Dub (4:00)
I Love My Dub (3:24)
Dub Gomorrah (3:36)
Dubbing Around (4:33)
Pure Dubbing (4:24)
Natural Mystic Dub (3:37)
Totally Dub (4:01)
Review: ***B-STOCK: Creasing to corner of outer sleeve but otherwise in excellent condition***
Du men don't come much more legendary or iconic than King Tubby and Horace Andy, so having them together on one album was always going to result in straight fire. And so it proves on The King Tubby Tapes, a double album of deeply affecting roots and lovers rock first issued on Jet Star Records' 'Charm' imprint. It showcases Dubby's audio skills and Andy's distinctive vocal style while including selections from his 1979 album Pure Ranking and a second album of dub remixes. Session men Robbie Shakespeare, Carlton "Santa" Davis, Tony Chin and Bernard "Touter" Harvey all feature this one.
Review: It's the record that defined it all: King Tubby Meets Rockers Uptown, the defining collaborative album by Augustus Pablo and King Tubby, released in 1976. Not only a seminal record in terms of spreading the missionary message of dub, KTMRU is also a favourite of even contemporary deejays for its outsized, mature sound, one marked by eccentrically high-feedbacked, pop-eye delay effects, not to mention a driven percussion section. Now released in Canada by Clocktower Records, Canucks (and citizens of all other beneficiary nations of international postage systems) can enjoy the multi-instrumental blitz of Earl Smith, Ashton Barrett, Carlton Barrett, Robbie Shakespeare in collaboration with Tubby, the protomartyr of dub himself, on one of the quintessentially best dub reggae albums of all time.
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