King Curtis scorcher.
First time out for this Paragon’s feeling excursion on the same Java re-lick as Roman Stewart’s Rain A Fall.
A contender for the heaviest dub of all time.
When the Rootical Dubber had a go at reissuing Trevor Byfield and co, many years ago, he omitted this, saying it was just too awesome to mess with.
Heavy roots; thumping dub. Turns out that Moses was being discreet.
Top-notch roots; and another great Vassell-Williams dub.
Excellent uptempo digi, with burning horns and a decent dub. No sitar and tablas, unfortunately.
Early, mostly unreleased, truly pioneering electronic work.
‘Through Pauline Oliveros and Deep Listening I now know what harmony is. It’s about the pleasure of making music’ (John Cage).
Zany, Alaskan, harmonica-led electro-pop, with a case of Krautrock-and-the-Moroders, originally released in 1980.
Groovy version of the Deodato-CTI Gershwin interpretation; with a Willie Lindo. The dub does the trick.
Soul jazz from the jazz pianist plus trio. The first half’s a bit soft, before Aquarius marks the dawning of the funky stuff — Evil Ways, Shaft, Booty Butt — ending with a cooking cover of The Meters’ Funky Miracle.
Tell them, Shabba.