I long ago reached that stage in my collecting where if it looks interesting, and it's cheap, I'm guaranteed to buy it, no matter the presumed quality. So it was that I turned up a dollar copy of this last year while I was digging through an otherwise-boring pile of 90s pop and alternative CDs. Of course Clancy Eccles' name is going to stand out to me. And if it ends up being a bunch of lo-fi live recordings from the dawn of reggae? All the better.
Not so fast, reggae fans. These actually seem to be a bunch of super-deep Eccles-produced cuts from 1967 to 1970, a number of which hadn't been collected in 2001. The first of four volumes that would emerge on the Dutch Jamaican Gold label in 2001, what's great about this is being able to listen to the mutation from rocksteady into reggae, and to hear someone like Lee "Scratch" Perry performing in front of a group of artists who you otherwise wouldn't associate him with. There are other names who I own a bunch of records by: Alton Ellis, Busty Brown, and Theophilus Beckford. And a few that I've never encountered before. It's all tied together with the backing of the Dynamites, augmented by folks like Jackie Mittoo, Lyn Taitt, and Ernest Ranglin. This was a welcome discovery in the dollar bin, and a perfect play when it's in the 30s outside, even on a cloudless day.

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