Rock ‘n rolling Reid. With a Little John.
With a Nitty Gritty dubplate do-over of Trial And Crosses.
Good grief, it’s actually The Chi-Lites, on a John John update of Sleng Teng.
Rock Fort Rock and China Town excursions.
Stalag… and The Carpenters’ Top Of The World.
Celebrated dubplate version of DEB’s Promised Land; and Earl 16 on Trial And Crosses.
Triumphantly reviving all-time-classic Jammy’s. Proper dub, too.
Poignantly-reflective next version of Horace’s Jah Is The One rhythm (from the Pure Ranking set), with MR’s unmistakable moves, and dub.
First time out for this recent do-over of Yabby You’s mighty King Pharaoh’s Plague — with dub.
Nice, mid-tempo tune, Eek A Mouse style and fashion.
Rough! Same rhythm as Frankie Paul’s Leave It To Me. Moody, inimitable, brilliant Jammys, with inspirational singing by the great CC.
Tough, thumping Jammys from 1989, with expert falsetto singing from CT.
Tough Beres Simpson revive. With the Roots Radics, maybe.
‘Yes we nice, yes we nice… Hold them, music, hold them, yes, we control them… no we nah go let them stray.’ Dancehall manners — on the rhythm Delgado used for Rasta People — as clinically murderous as all-time EJ hits for Jammys like Rock Them One By One and Turn Up The Heat.
A hollowed-out, minor-chord rhythm… SB bubbling moodily about ‘if you’re having a problem and you don’t know to solve them, down the road there is a party’... a stripped, brilliant dub.
Classic Jammys from 1987.