A set of four Jammys dub-plates, courtesy of Dub Store, Tokyo.
With Culture.
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.
A teenaged Montgomery and friends from school, trying out Wild Bill Davis and stuff from the radio, with a JA twist.
Celebrated late-eighties soundboy business — another of his very best, revived at last.
Highly recommended — previously unreleased digi fire from the same sessions and mould as He Was A Friend.
The fledgling Wailing Souls, rocking steady but broken-hearted in 1966; backed with the perfect ska antidote, a previously-unreleased Hopeton Lewis pick-me-up.
Triumphantly reviving all-time-classic Jammy’s. Proper dub, too.
Outstanding roots from 1979, produced by Prince Hammer. Tough dub. too.
Startling digi do-over of Yabby You’s great Jesus Dread rhythm, with a driving, tumping dub and sermonizing keys. Mis-credited to Phillip Fraser on the label.
Horatian worries on the wicked E20 rhythm.
Shades of Brown. Leroy B sounds like Dennis B, over Glen B’s immortal Wicked Can’t Run Away rhythm. Typically expert digi do-over by KJ, with an ace dub.
Creativeness pon the dance.
Stunning, high-octane, steppers do-over of Yabby You’s Jesus Dread.