Honest Jon's
278 Portobello Road
London
W10 5TE
England

Monday-Saturday 10 till 6; Sunday 11 till 5

Honest Jon's
Unit 115
Lower Stable Street
Coal Drops Yard
London
N1C 4DR

Monday-Saturday 11 till 6; Sunday 11 till 5

+44(0)208 969 9822 mail@honestjons.com

Established 1974.

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Shed

Applications II

Ilian Tape

Wayne Jarrett

African Woman

Wackies / Digikiller

The Heptones

Get Up & Chant

Park Heights / Digikiller

The Vision

Spectral Nomad

Metroplex

This is why Robert Hood is such a don.
‘A pinnacle of Detroit techno. Best-known for the lip-biting minimalism of One Circle, with its chant ‘Detroit’ and body-rocking riff-mongery, or maybe for the killer variation Explain The Style… but for us the EP’s shortest and freakiest number Modern And Ancient steals the show; a mad, half-stepping slice of Afro-futurist electro that still blows our mind today.’

Patti Jo

Make Me Believe In You, Ain't No Love Lost (Tom Moulton Mixes)

Celestial Echo

A High Frequency

Summertime

NIA

Theo Parrish

Lovely Edits Vol. 1

Lovely Edits

Cornell Campbell

Let The Music Play

Peckings

Terekke

2 The World

Plant Age Digital Sound

Ace dubwise techno.

Ronnie McNeir

Say You

Kent

‘Two tracks from early 70s Los Angeles, around the time of his eponymous first LP. Say You is a superb updating of the Monitors’ harmony hit from 1965, given the distinctively sensitive McNeir treatment. I’m Sorry is a self-penned slow-burner that builds a perfect dancefloor beat.’

Gregory Isaacs

Nobody Knows

Dug Out

Just like cream-of-the-crop digi Tubbys. From the New Dance album sessions in 1988, with the Firehouse Crew. Mixed by Leroy ‘Fatman’ Thompson — formerly apprenticed to the King, en route to Jammys — and produced by Bunny Gemini and Tristan Palma. Gregory is desolate and compelling… and the dub is murder.

Dukey McCalla

I've Got The Power

HAK

Roman Stewart

Casanova

Rockers

The Rulers

Got To Be Free

Skank And Groove

The Invaders

Spacing Out

Vampi Soul

Cheryl Glasgow

Glued To The Spot

Numero

‘It’s always summer somewhere, but especially so wherever Cheryl Glasgow’s carefree clubber Glued To The Spot gets a spin. An absolute ear-worm from the opening strums, Glasgow’s Sade-adjacent, jazz vocalese sweeps into a warm up-tempo groove, never breaking sweat. Issued on Ross Anderson’s short-lived, London-based Live label, Glued To The Spot swept through the club scene briefly in 1987, embarking for warmer shores when the season changed.’

Hux Brown

Drugs Man

Power Pack / Dub Store

Danny Hemsworth

Mr Money Man

Upsetter

Dark, menacing and pained; wonderful Upsetters, always timely.

Jennifer Lara

Woman Of The Ghetto

Dub Store

Jen rides the dread Sidewalk Doctor rhythm, with Woman Of The Ghetto lyrics.
Jackie Mittoo puts any survivors to the sword.

Young Roots

I Believe

Roots Record

Deadly, seventies, New York roots. Rugged, a little wired.
The basic rhythm-track is Wackies-style. The flamboyant brass chart is jazzier. Moody organ, too. Young Roots himself goes on a bit.
The band backed The Aksumites on their first 12” (Afrika Fe De Afrikan) and gigged around the City.

I Believe this reissue is not properly licensed.

Frankie Paul

That Love

Channel 1 / Digikiller

Great early-eighties Channel 1 excursion on the same version of DEB’s Revolution rhythm as Barrington Levy’s Black Rose.

Alton Ellis

My Time Is The Right Time

Ellis

Courtesy of Rock A Shacka.

Anthony Creary

Land Call Africa

Classic / Digikiller

The drummer of the Gladiators Band and the Upsetters, recording with his own Solid Foundation Band at the Black Ark in the down-time of a Junior Byles’ session. A rework of The Animals’ version of an English folk song, with a leg-up from Byles’ own A Place Called Africa. Originally released on Sight’N'Sound, by Studio One.
Lovely, mystical roots, with an ace dub, touched with unmistakable Perry genius.

Noel Robinson

It's Like Yesterday

Aires

Vivian Jackson & Dickie Burton

God Is Watching You

Prophets

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