Showing posts with label rocksteady. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rocksteady. Show all posts

Thursday, August 14, 2025

various artists - Duke Reid' Treasure Chest

I meant to post this last week, but the heat caused my brain to short circuit. Which is ironic, because some Duke Reid-produced rocksteady is pretty much the perfect antidote to a hot August night.

I've racked my brain for something interesting to write about this, but, like a lot of Heartbeat comps, I find this just washes over me.like a warm breeze. So I'll mostly let the music speak for itself. There are a bunch of bona-fide all-timers here; "The Tide Is High", "Lala Means I Love You", "Ranglin On Bond St.", and "My Best Girl". All in all, a hell of a good buy at $4.

Click here to download.

Thursday, August 22, 2024

various artists - Mojo Presents: The Dawning Of A New Era (15 Classic Punk & Ska Tracks!)

Summer slips away. The days here grow short. The sun stood tall in the sky past 9pm just a few weeks ago; now, things are evening out, dusk coming at a more normal hour of 8-ish. The pool will soon close; the hoodies will come out of the closet.

I will wear shorts for another four months.

I didn't pick this up in January/February 2008, when this hit the newsstands. So I couldn't say what the context of this was. I'm left to guess how one justifies mixing JA rocksteady & reggae, the Untouchables, the Ruts, Judge Dread, and the goddamn Belle Stars to represent the eIxplosion of 2 Tone in 1979 & 1980. It's as tenuous a compilation as I've encountered from Mojo.

But I'm not really complaining. I think I got this for a buck, and one could play the first five tracks, all Trojan classics, on repeat without it ever getting old. I'll do this at least a few times over the coming weeks, if only to extend summer just a bit longer.

Click here to download.

Thursday, June 6, 2024

various artists - All Aboard The C.N. Express: Rock Steady And Boss Reggae Sounds 1967-1968

The releases on Doctor Bird are so dope. As Cherry Red's reggae reissue label, Doctor Bird has been revisiting so many of the classic Trojan comps and long-play releases from their initial heyday AND, in many instances, expanding upon them. They've also been collecting and theming era-specific releases, bringing new context to every period of JA music, from the birth of ska up until the dawn of dancehall. And the cool thing is that they continue to uncover tracks that haven't been available for 50 years or more. They're keeping this work alive; a noble goal, and one that I want to support.

Now, the rub is that, as a UK label, and much like other Cherry Red releases (coughCaptain Oi!cough), it's pricy to import, and impossible to find on the shelves here in the States. Doubly so now that vinyl is all anyone can talk about. So when I do turn one up for a reasonable price, I make a point of grabbing it. No clue when I'll see it again for less than $25 shipped, know what I mean?

This one is the third of Doctor Bird's Clancy Eccles compilations, focusing on his production from 1967 & 1968. That's a period that I don't know a ton about; coming up, I bought a ton of reissues from the ska period, and the entire reggae period was well covered and easily available. But a lot of the rocksteady era wasn't super visible for me, especially that timeframe where the sound was simmering down. This collection, which has 17 tracks that had never been available digitally until this release, features names I knew already (Lee Perry, Alton Ellis, Monty Morris) and a ton I didn't. But most importantly, it helped connect some dots that were previously invisible to me.

Click here to download.

Tuesday, January 24, 2023

various artists - Young Gifted And Black: The Story Of Trojan Records


UPDATE 1/25/23: new Kraken link uploaded.

I stopped by the local Half Price Books over the weekend, my favorite ex-employer, on the hunt for some Criterion laserdiscs and other fun at (you guessed it) half price. Any day that ends with a double disc of "Glen and Glenda" and "Bride of the Monster", a copy of Samuel Fuller's "The Naked Kiss", and a few other classics on 30mm aluminum is a good day. However, I took a quick peek into the music book section and found a copy of "Young Gifted And Black: The Story Of Trojan Records", a 2003 book put out by Trojan owner (at the time) Sanctuary Publishing. While I wasn't necessarily feeling spending the money, I'd never seen a copy on the shelves before, and it came with the compilation I share now. Who am I to deny a sign from the reggae gods?

By now, it should be quite clear that I'm into reggae. I'm not into some Ras Trent/cultural appropriation/I like to get wicked stoned white boy reggae scene. I'm into the deepest south soul, six hours of Lee Perry dubs, a chanting down of Babylon and a celebration of skinheads. My first ever Trojan purchase was a two-fer: Symarip's "Skinhead Moonstomp" and the classic "Monkey Business" comp. It was the introduction to another bit of obsession, searching out not just more reissues and compilations, but always keeping an eye out for dub plates and white labels and the records I'd mostly just read about or heard on the random radio show.

I've yet to start reading the book, but this was am immediate "load it onto the phone" record. At 33 minutes long, it's almost just a sampler; barely scratching the surface of initial seven year heyday. But, fuck, if this doesn't pique your curiosity, get you dancing or crate digging, then I guess you're in the wrong place, baby.

Discogs


Click here to download.

Friday, December 2, 2022

various artists - Natty And Nice: A Reggae Christmas

UPDATE: new link for youse. Enjoy skanking under the mistletoe.

I just sold my copy of this one on Discogs, so I took the opportunity before shipping it to re-rip it and share with you cats and kittens on this, the first Friday of December.

Truly a most irie comp, and one of my favorite "novelty" Christmas records, this one leads off with a track from Lee "Scratch" Perry, and moves on, covering a wide swath of JA music history in one go, with December 25th the common theme. John Holt's cover of "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)" is an absolute knockout, and while I'm not much of an Inner Circle fan, Jacob Miller steps in with a "Wish You A Merry Christmas" that I've added to more than one holiday mix. There's a little something for every fan of reggae's evolution, from ska and rocksteady into Trojan's heyday and thru into dancehall and ragga.

If you're looking for something to play instead of that shit Wings track, give this one a spin.

Discogs


Click here to download.

Tuesday, May 3, 2022

Hepcat - Scientific

Spring has sprung, and an aging punk's fancy turns to the sounds of the Caribbean, no matter how bastardized or temporally removed they may be.

That's right, it's ska season. There's something about the temperature turning 60 that immediately leads me to load my 30 favorite third wave records onto my phone and make them my walking/driving soundtrack. Foremost amongst them is this, Hepcat's second of four LPs, 1996's "Scientific".

I played the ever-loving shit out of this and the promo single "Bobby & Joe b/w Dollar Dance" in the summer and fall of 1996. It slotted nicely alongside the Slackers' "Better Late Than Never" and the Stubborn All-Stars' "Open Season"; a trio of contemporary records from either coast that could have just as easily come out on Trojan in 1968. It was a very good summer to make friends and meet girls and stay up all night and raise the slightest bit of hell. There wasn't a need for anything much stronger than a Mickey's wide-mouth and a pack of Marlboros, and it was mighty easy to find a few bucks to pay for both.

Yeah, this evokes a fair amount of nostalgia for me. But it still feels lively and fresh and the sort of thing I want to play for my nieces this summer. This, of all the Hepcat records, appears to be out of print (sadly), so enjoy with a free conscience...at least until Jump Up puts in for a reissue.



Click here to download.

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