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Gorgeous singing by Carlton (from Carlton & The Shoes and The Abyssinians), with tasty nyabinghi drumming in the accompaniment.
“I was writing songs but I didn’t record until 1968. I did one song for Lee Scratch Perry. He gave me £5 and then I didn’t hear anything more about it. Then I went down to Mrs Pottinger, did one song for her named Live and Love on the Gay Feet label. It was played on the radio for a couple of days and it wasn’t going anywhere really because she had some good artists down there at the time and they did some songs that were doing well, so my song wasn’t getting much promotion and it wasn’t being played. I think I heard it twice on the radio and then I didn’t hear it anymore.”

Going on fifty Duke Reid ska and r&b sides.
Tommy McCook, Eric Morris, Bongo Man, Stranger Cole, Baba Brooks, Don Drummond…

Terrific roots plodder from 1982, with Bertram Brown and King Tubby at the controls.

Everton is compellingly beside himself, over a dazzling, bare-bones, digi do-over of the rocksteady classic Tonight.
Previously unreleased.
Fire.

Lloyd Forest, Tommy Thomas and Samuel Bramwell at Joe Gibbs.

Presumably Aston aka Charlie from The Ethiopians, over a stately, meditative rhythm, with bare-bones piano, insistent woodblock, and lovely, floating horns, including a jazzy saxophone solo. Masterfully mixed by King Tubby, like all these stone-classic Yabby You sevens.

Carlton Barrett at the Black Ark in 1975, on a spare Upsetters rhythm, with Pablo playing clavinet. Lovely stuff.

Ace, earnest cover of the Barry White killer. Tight backing by the Dragonaires, with horns in full effect.