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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Danny Barker

Tootie Ma Is A Big Fine Thing

Sinking City

Rudy Thomas

Grand Father Bogle

Pressure Sounds

This rare roots outing by the lovers specialist is a sweet, heartfelt tribute to the great JA revolutionary. A Lloyd Parks production, with a proper dub.

Don D. Junior

Black Thursday

Tramp / Rock A Shacka

A fine trombone instrumental — fruity, old-school, wistful — backed with a lovely detournement of Rosemary Clooney’s massive country smash, Beautiful Brown Eyes. Lloyd Charmers business.

Cultural Roots

No Fish Head

Firehouse / Dub Store

Ace early Tubbys digi — stripped and moody — with fine, amusing vocals.

Lilly Melody

What Your Sound Can Do

Firehouse / Dub Store

Tough, dismissive, soundboy digi. A King Tubby dubplate from 1986.

Brent Dowe

Reggay Masooka

Gay Feet / Dub Store

Irresistible reggaeficatory bazookaings of Manu Dibango’s Soul Makossa, upping the old-school funk, and garbling extra mamas.

Charlo

Locks Lion

Pablo International

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

The Viceroys

This World

Taxi / Digikiller

Riveting roots harmony reasoning over a spare, brooding dub, produced by Sly & Robbie at Channel One in the early 80s, and previously only released on dubplate.
A must.

The Termites

Breaking Up

Treasure Isle / Far East

No less than an alternate take of the almighty rocksteady classic from 1968. Backed with a Tommy McCook instrumental featuring organist Winston Wright.

Keith Hudson

Like I'm Dying

Hudford / Dub Store

Tremendous, tormented, abject vocal to Melody Maker, with a heavy dub — for the label Hudson co-ran with Gleaner journalist Balford Henry.
Via the safe hands of Dub Store in Tokyo.

Ken Boothe

Old Fashioned Way

INBIDIMTS / Dub Store

Killer.
Typically masterful, ultra-soulful singing, over a sparkling rhythm. It’s the last gasp of the swinging sixties; geezer is hurt but randy. His missus has scarpered, so the coast is clear for some of this in-ting debauchery he’s been reading about in the papers.
With a trombone-led moonstomp on the flip.
This first hit for Keith Hudson’s new label is a stone-cold re-wind in perpetuity. So play it back, Jack. Hook back on the track with a double attack.

Generation Gap

Journey Within

Tangent / Dub Store

Two fine sides of expert, Curtis-inflected soul-reggae.

Sharon Forrester

Silly Wasn't I

Edge / Dub Store

This classy lovers was Sharon’s breakthrough, fronting the Now Generation band for Geoffrey Chung in 1973, in an achingly regretful Armstead / Ashford / Simpson song about female disillusionment (laid waste by Cilla Black the previous year).

Bob Livingston

Reggae Music

Firehouse / Dub Store

Two excellent, righteous vocal cuts to a tough, downtempo, rootical rhythm, in a brief respite from dancehall at Tubby’s HQ.
Latest in Dub Store’s lip-smacking series of Firehouse dub plates.

Twin Roots

Know Love

Black Art

Danny Red

Don Gorgon

Partial

Sonny Wong

You Can't Hold On

Pyramid / Dub Store

Classy, proto-lovers, full-scale do-over of the Robert John 45 still big in Northern Soul circles.
The original arranger, none other than Gene Page gets a run for his money in the typically sophisticated instrumental version by Geoffrey Chung and the In Crowd.

Earl Flute

The Betrayer

Mafia / Dub Store

Gripping, up-in-your-face account of the story of Judas. Full-on Keith Hudson roots.
And an unmissable nugget of flute-led JA funk, by the Soul Syndicate, on the flip.

Cornell Campbell

Hey Mr. Cop

Firehouse / Dub Store

Typically fine singing, over crisp, bare Tubbys digi, with strong backing vocals on both sides.
Hey Mr. Cop is a draft of the song he recorded for Bunny Lee, over Rumours; the flip does over his Jammys smash.
Dubplate action.

Junior Soul

Miss Cushie

Gay Feet / Dub Store

Hard to resist Junior Murvin in this teasing, saucy mood, on a lovely nyabinghi rocksteady rhythm.
With an alternate take.

The Victors

Easy Squeeze

Gay Feet / Dub Store

Agony aunts Clifford Morrison and Dada Smith from The Bassies, with George Blake replacing Leroy Fischer, in 1969. Cornerstone moonstompers, both sides.

Frank Wilson

Do I Love You (Indeed I Do)

Soul Essentials

Legendary Northern — the last record played at the Wigan Casino — this archetypal heart-on-sleeve stomper was originally pressed in 1965 by Motown as a handful of promotional copies on its imprint SOUL. Most of these were destroyed soon afterwards, though people say Berry Gordy has a copy, and another was sold in 2009 for just over twenty-five grand.

Sharon Revoal

Reaching For Our Star

Numero

Piezo ft. Sunun

Water Chamber

No Corner

The Browne Bunch

We've Got A Good Thing Going

Superstar / Dub Store

Young bros Glen, Dalton, Noel, Cleveland and Danny, irresistibly doing over MJ for Geoffrey Chung. ‘She makes my motor purr.’

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