Showing posts with label HALL OF FAME. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HALL OF FAME. Show all posts

Roy Ayers: The Vibesman Tribute (plus exclusive free edit for download)

Amongst all the incredible soul-jazz-funk US musicians of the 1970s Roy Ayers was a one-of-a-kind legend, producing some of the most perfect, wouldn't-change-a-note music the world has ever seen. I think what I love about his attitude to music is that despite being a jazzman who can solo and play as complex as the next cat he chose to go down the path of making effortless grooves, choosing minimalist perfection over overly busy workouts. I think this is much harder to do than many people realise... Some jazz heads at the time were upset by this turn...they were of course wrong...the most profound truths have a simplicity to them and his music at its best rings with truth.

Roy was originally from California and even though he was based in New York in the 70s I think it makes sense to think of his music next to that of fellow Californian's George Clinton and Sly Stone, who all in their unique ways share that LSD-enlightened kicked-back sunshine conscious grooving mentality. I love this state of mind and the music that captures it....I've done tributes to both George and Sly on the blog (click on names to go to those). What a time.

On to the mix: kicking things off with my own exclusive edit which brings together two early Roy Ayers classics, Life Is A Moment and We Live In Brooklyn Baby. I think the messages of both these tunes fit together neatly. If you like this one I'm offering this as a free download: click here to grab it. 

Next the Ubiquity classic Searching, the first RA tune I fell in love with, sentiment and music coming together in perfect sweet-melancholy harmony, followed by two back to back tunes from the seminal RAMP (Roy Ayers Music Project), Come Into Knowledge…so gentle and sublime this one, slays me, psychedelic spiritual soul at its best followed by the incredible and somehow only recently released Paint Me Any Color - colours! colours! colours! haha yes!! I wish there was more acid-soul out there...we need reminders how beautiful reality is despite all the horrors.

From there slipping into the first synth groover of the mix,  Roy's restrained use of synths was one of his trademarks...It's Your Love is a Roy Ayers production fronted by vocalist Ethel Beatty... chord progression on this one is nailed on, love the slightly tense mood. Sticking with the tense-love theme for a minute, One Sweet Love is some great off-beat funk, brilliant drums on this and love the vocal attitude. 

Next smoothing things out with the instrumental Lifeline, showing off some of Roy's beautiful vibraphone playing skills, then on to a possible contender for my all time RA favourite, Together, a p-funk groover in a 6/8 time signature (count 6 not 4), and the killer lyrics have that unity message which will never get old. Sticking with straight grooving dancefloor boogie for the next few, the pure sunshine and togetherness of Everybody followed by the groundbreaking proto-house genius of Chicago - look for the full length mix on the UK-only Silver Vibrations LP for this one, the versions elsewhere are a shortened edit...though I also had to fade a little early for the mix...could listen to that groove all day.

Sticking on the dancefloor with Happy Music, another RA production/arrangement, deceptively innocent and simple but you cant change a thing about it, which came out on Roy's Uno Melodic label where a lot of his classic productions can be found, including planet-conquering tunes like Eighties Ladies' Turned On To You and Sylvia Striplin's You Can't Turn Me Away. There's a good comp called The Best of Uno Melodic that came out in 2018 worth checking. Last in this section the blistering jazz-funk dancefloor bomb Time Is Coming - possibly the most rip-roaring Roy Ayers tune of all time.

As the 70s turned into the early 80s Roy recorded and toured with Fela Kuti which inspired some classic afro-centric black-consciousness tunes, a couple of which here - first up the clearly Fela-inspired Black Family - serious - credit to Roy Ayers for taking on the pidgin-English style of Fela and making it work so powerfully - followed by the much earlier record 2000 Black, a tune reworked with Roy Ayers by 4Hero in 2001 and which gave its name to their broken beat label 2000 Black. Got to shout Marc Mac and Dego here, in the days before the internet it was Marc Mac who first introduced me to some deeper Roy Ayers tunes like Love From The Sun from playing them on the radio. Really wanted to include that in the mix but ran out of space and I've played that on the blog before on a previous Spring Sun Soul mix here. There's an amazing Dee Dee Bridgewater version of Love From The Sun thats well worth seeking out too.

Finishing with what seemed a fitting message Thank You Thank You for the music Roy and for making life much better! An antidote to the insanity of the world. 

As spring is here I'm including this mix as part of the annual Sun Spring Soul series - beautiful soul-inspired music that suits the season - check out all the previous editions of that here.


Roy Ayers: The Vibesman Tribute
(A Spring Sun Soul Mix)

Roy Ayers - Life Is A Moment, Mikus's Brooklyn Baby Edit [1972-75/2025]
Roy Ayers Ubiquity - Searching [1976]
RAMP - Come Into Knowledge [1977]
RAMP - Paint Me Any Color [1977]
Ethel Beatty - It's Your Love [1981]
Roy Ayers Ubiquity - One Sweet Love To Remember [1976]
Roy Ayers Ubiquity - Lifeline [1977]
Roy Ayers Ubiquity - Together [1977]
Roy Ayers - Everybody [1983]
Roy Ayers - Chicago (Silver Vibrations Mix) [1983]
Jaymz Beford - Happy Music [1981]
Roy Ayers - Our Time Is Coming [1982]
< Roy Ayers - Africa, Center Of The World> [1981]
Roy Ayers -Black Family [1983]
Roy Ayers - 2000 Black [1975]
Roy Ayers & Wayne Henderson - Thank You Thank You [1980]


Ashanti Selah Vibes Up!

Some sanity for these crazy times: this one is a showcase of the heavyweight production talents Ashanti Selah, son of London's roots soundsystem master Aba Shanti-I. Alongside the likes of Joe Ariwa (son of Mad Professor), Young Warrior (son of Jah Shaka) and Alpha Stepper (son and nephew of Alpha & Omega) Selah is one of a generation of producers carrying on and developing in their own ways the tradition of their families, keeping dubwise roots soundsystem music vital into the 21st century....living proof this music is no fashion but a living breathing growing culture that carries on regardless of the commercial pressures and latest trends.

Listen for yourself but I think he couldn't be more worthy of carrying on his fathers works - real humble lion style, in personal attitude and in the tone of his music. I wonder if one day we'll see him taking on the soundsystem itself...  Ashanti Selah Music on bandcamp here.  All tunes here from the last few years, produced by Ashanti Selah with vocalists, instrumentalists and co-producers listed. Turn it up.

Ashanti Selah Vibes Up!

No Matter Wah featuring Ras Teo 
Moving High featuring El Gran Latido + Elkin Robinson
 A' Tabhann Do Africa featuring Tom Spirals
Rise Again featuring Kenny Knots
 Dub Again Part 4
I&I Livity featuring Donovan Kingjay
Nazarene Horns featuring Eloi Calame + Rootsman Sax
Ancestral Beat - Spiritual Harmony alongside Kibir La Amlak 
Ancestral Beat - Raw Genetics alongside Kibir La Amlak 
Love and Overstanding (Jubilant Horns Mix) alongside Dubkasm
Advance featuring Iqulah Rastafari
Seal of Empress Menen featuring Jah 93
Vibes Up (Vocal Mix) featuring Dan-I-Locks
Vibes Up (Legacy Mix) featuring Vale
Vibes Up - (Raw Mix) featuring Vale
Tribute Calling featuring Uprising Sounds + Sabolious
Stay Humble Dubwise alongside Vibronics
Hustle Riddim alongside Vibronics
Hustle Dub alongside Vibronics
36 Chambers Of Dubplates alongside Chazbo
36 Chambers Of Dubplates (Dub Plate Special Mix) alongside Chazbo

Daz Ellis - The Jungle Pioneer - Tribute Mix

It's very sad news that Daz Ellis has recently died at just 54 years old. For 90s junglists Daz has a very special place in the pantheon of the greats. In 1995 he put out a bunch of amazing records, but two 12s in particular have a strong claim to be the best jungle records of that seminal year, and up there at the top of any all-time greatest jungle records lists.

The back-to-back releases of Oh Gosh and Babylon were lightening in a bottle, Oh Gosh about the most uplifting rootsy amen tear out going, and Babylon surely the most militant smash-the-system hardstep jungle record ever made. Both are marked by incredible drum programming, killer basslines, and the arrangements not just copy and paste jobs, they develop and travel from the top to the last drop. Masterpieces both. 

And the B sides of both records are personal favourites too, The Instrumental has got some utterly unique drum programming on it, and Heaven is one I played to death at the time, deep and dubwise, a beautiful heavyweight mystic piece of music.

What I think all Daz's tunes have in common is dub soundsytstem logic...these are tunes that really come to life played on a set with the bass allowed to pump. If you don't play them at volume you miss half the point.  I really do think he was a pioneer of that dub-logic jungle sound - he certainly played an important part in it. And with rocksteady legend Alton Ellis as his uncle and his dad also involved in JA music perhaps that's not such a surprise.

Something I never knew until his passing was the he was the man behind setting up Essex pirate radio station Cyndicut FM. This was the station in the far east of London Essex borders and also reached over the Thames estuary to north Kent. It turns out the reason for this wide broadcast zone was that they had the transmitter up on the biggest pylon you've ever seen! Cyndicut is still broadcasting online to this day and remains one of the best pirates in the country
https://cyndicut.net <check them out. 

All in all the man is a legend, one of those figures that may not be a household name but has done so much for the culture. A life well lived, and the music lives on. Mix here includes my favourite of his productions, across some of his different aliases. Play it loud.


M.T.S. - Inspiration (1995)
Undercover Agent - Barracuda (1994)
Undercover Agent - Dub Plate Circles (1996)
Daz - Identity (1995)
M.T.S. - Revolution (1996)
Undercover Agent - Dangerous (1996)
Undercover Agent - Jah Works (1995)
Undercover Agent - The Instrumental (1995)
Undercover Agent - Incredible (1997)
Splash - Heaven (1995)
Undercover Agent - Rubadub (2003)
Undercover Agent - Oh Gosh (1995)
Splash - Bablyon (1995)

Download High Quality MP3 Link

Jah Shaka Music - Tribute To The Zulu Warrior

Jah Shaka has died and I find it hard to not feel resentment to the way that his life and legacy has barely warranted a mention in the UK mainstream media. Maybe I shouldn't be surprised, but what with there being a current mood of recognising the importance of black history and culture amongst institutions who previously didn't, at least on that level I'd expect more interest. For Shaka is a huge figure in not just roots reggae, not just soundsystem culture, not just British music, but music and culture globally. The extent of his influence is perhaps not fully recognised. 

1980s Jamaica gradually saw a shift in the dominant musical message, moving on from a sacred Rasta driven message to the more profane dancehall sound. But here in the grey and politically tense London streets of the 1980s Shaka not only kept alive that message but reinvented it into a more militant sound, creating a template which would lead to a wave of new UK dub producers in the 1990s, and in turn inspire producers around the world from 2000s onwards.

There were many other soundsystems in the UK at the time but through his works I would say Shaka more than any other solidified a pure, forward stepping, uncorruptible musical attitude, a bedrock of so much music that followed. Shaka elevated soundsystem culture to the highest of heights. He is a shining example of how a great DJ isn't just blankly playing other peoples records but can make those tunes their own, and can make the playing of records equal to playing an instrument.

He schooled and inspired a generation. He united a multi-ethnic audience under an uncompromising universal Rasta message. He walked the narrow path without ever faltering, with no commercial compromise, guided purely by an unshakeable spiritual sense of justice and righteousness.

Shaka's selection is a genre of its own, many an obscure tune can be filed as a 'Shaka Killer'. But Shaka was also a producer, and his label Jah Shaka Music a crucial home for his unique UK roots sound. For this tribute mix I'm playing some favourites released on the Jah Shaka Music label, 80s, 90s, and 00s. The majority feature Shaka as producer and sometimes vocalist, though there are also some tunes here produced by Shaka's son Young Warrior, Mad Professor, and others. Am playing these tunes live here in a soundsystem style... Love to all Shakaites.... Jah Shaka never to be forgotten, message will live forever...Journey on...


Jah Shaka Music - Tribute To The Zulu Warrior

Jah Shaka - Conquering Lion
Jah Shaka with Addis Ababa Crew - Chains Broken
 Pepper - I've Got a Joy
Rasheda - Psalm 61 (Hear My Cry)
Jah Shaka & Mad Professor - Verse 1
Norman Grant - Jungle
Jah Shaka - Jungle Dub
Jah Shaka - Lion Youth
Jah Shaka & Mad Professor - Beyond The Realm 
Still Cool - To Be Poor Is A Crime
Jah Shaka - My God Version
Jah Shaka - Revelation 18 (LP Vocal)
Jah Shaka - Revelation 18 (12inch Horns Section)
Jah Shaka - Rasta Dah Yah (Version)
Sharon Little - Don't Mash Up Creation
Vivian Jones - Roots Rock Vibes
Johnny Clarke - Blood Dunza
Dread & Fred - Warriors Stance
Dread & Fred - Warriors Advance
Sister Beloved - Freedom Of The Land
Lexxy - Lead Me To The Rock
Young Warrior - Lead Me To The Dub
Max Romeo - Rich People
Jah Shaka, Soljie & Paul Music Works - Rich People Dub
Roger Robin - Journey On
Jah Shaka & Gussie P - Journey On Dub

Click here to download



Robert Owens: A Tribute to The Voice of House Music

Paying tribute to vocalist Robert Owens - for me The Voice of house music. He's been doing it since day one, setting the mood and message to so many foundational records, and blessing productions of different styles to this day. 

From the start House music has always been euphoric but it is also the sound of struggle...the pain of the black, and gay,  US experience is often right there in many of those early Chicago house records, and Robert Owens voice and lyrics capture it like no one else....hurt, love, liberation, pain, ecstasy. 

In this mix I've concentrated more on the modern productions that he sings on. The classic records with Larry Heard are well known, but if you are new to him and don't know them then do get hold of the 1988 album Another Side < an all time classic. Kicking off this mix with the first Fingers Inc release from 1986.

His legacy runs deep and it seemed right to run out the mix with a few of the great UK Drum & Bass records he's vocalled on. Also look out for a little dubplate special in there, a cover of Larry Heard's Can U Feel It from my man Fez, with additional production touches from me. 

Last summer me and the Shack crew had the best of times DJing down at Mucky Weekender...a top festival with some fantastic acts on the bill. Closing the weekend out was Robert, djing and singing live. Such a moving experience being in his presence - his wonderful voice still reaching those spots others don't. Total legend. Big loving dedication on this to RMVT xx




Robert Owens: A Tribute to The Voice of House Music

~roots~
Fingers Inc. - Bring Down The Walls
David Morales - I'll Be Your Friend (Original Def Mix)
Fez - Can U Feel It (Mikus Rejig) 
Harry Romero - I Go Back
Felix Dickinson - A Day's Reality (Classic Mix)

~searching~
Hugo Barritt - You Are
Riva Starr - Searchin'
Gene Hunt - Twilite People (Kenny Dope Remix)
Queer On Acid - Take Me (MASC Mix)
Roy Davis Jr - Slide (Groovecreator Throwback Remix)
Paolo Rocco - Ever So

~switch~
Atjazz - I Know Now

~dnb connection~
London Elektricity - My Dream (Searching Dub)
Icicle - Redemption (Alix Perez Remix)
D* Minds x Bladerunner - Deep Inside
MISTiCAL - Believe

Download Link

Behold The Spear! Burning Spear Classics, Versions, Rarities and Dubplates

Winston Rodney aka Burning Spear is coming to play two dates in the UK this summer; the last time he played here was over twenty years ago, and having announced his retirement some years back its fair to say there's real excitement building ahead of these upcoming shows. In anticipation this seemed like the perfect time to put together this mix of some of my favourite Spear cuts, including a few version excursions, rarities and unreleased dubplate mixes.

Although I've long loved Burning Spear material it was only when I got a better understanding of Jamaican music in chronological order that I came to recognise just how original and groundbreaking his material was. My impression is that the early recordings that came out on Studio One perhaps more than anyone else at the time created a blueprint for the Rasta-driven, conscious roots reggae sound that was to come and take over the world. These cuts just seem on another spiritual level to other music that came out at that time. 

What came next was higher-level yet - the 1975 Marcus Garvey album produced by Jack Ruby, is a start-to-finish roots classic. This was snapped up and remixed by UK's Island Records, which with Island's distribution power allowed for the music to reach a wider audience and cement his legendary legacy on the global stage. Not many people outside of JA have heard that original Jack Ruby non-Island recording, as the vinyl is rare and no quality reissue (CD or otherwise) has been released - it is also stringently copyright-blocked online. Hopefully one day that will be reissued with the care it deserves.

For me perhaps more than any other singer Burning Spear captures in his voice, lyrics and writing that true humble lion power: strength, humbleness, love and Rasta consciousness in perfect combination. He had the grounding spirit of an elder even at a young age.The spear burns on and on...



1969-1974 Studio One Foundations
 Zion Higher
We Are Free
Ethiopians Live It Out
Get Ready
Journey
Foggy Road
Pablove Black - High Locks
Joe Frazier (He Prayed)
Righteous Flames - Solid Foundation
Swell Headed
Chronixx - World Under Siege
Pablove Black - Push Pull

1975-1978 Roots Heights
Spear Burning
Jomo
Tradition (Original JA Wolf Version)
Little Joe - Tradition Skank
Old Marcus Garvey JA Dubplate
Jordan River JA Dubplate
Throw Down Your Arms (Spear 7inch Mix)
Respect The Prophet
Big Joe - The Prophet

1978-1995 Forward On
Jah No Dead (Rockers Acapella)
Jah No Dead (12inch Mix)
Jah Is My Driver
Driver
Columbus
Iry Niya Keith
Come (Home)
Present
African Dub
Africa


Prince 17 Days Remixes

Prince's estate are planning to make a number of releases over the coming years from his infamous Vault. Who knows what wonders are in there. I'm hoping for another jazz album, a la Madhouse - 8.

The first release has just come out: Piano & A Microphone 1983. Here are three little remixes I've done of the title track from that, 17 Days, laying down some very Prince-in-the-80s drum machine beats by way of a backing track. Not a massive difference between them, the HEAD MIX is just a little sparser than the NEW POWER MIX and MY BABY's TAMBORINE MIX is an instrumental version. Just in case Prince Estate are reading, this is for strictly non-commercial, pure-love purposes! Please allow it :)


MY BABYS TAMBORINE MIX is currently getting blocked on Soundcloud but you can hopefully play it by clicking here.

After The Riot: Sly Stone Rarities, Productions and Admirers 1973-1982

There are two distinct but both golden ages in Sly Stone's career. First came the straight outa Haight, racism-busting, genre-defying, multi-octave harmony singing, high on hope, Family-Stone-with-the-emphasis-on-Family era of the 1960s. Then in 1970 everything changed: Sly hit the drugs harder, the Family started splitting, the mood became moodier, and the groove got heavier, both in music and in American society more generally. That trajectory through rnb to soul to funk to disco, from new innocence and hope to reality check and struggle wasn't unique.....that was the wider social trend and many artists who had the longevity rode that wave...but Sly didn't just ride it, he innovated it at every stage.

The landmark There's a Riot Going On dropped in 1971 after Sly took a two year break from releasing new music to retreat and reconfigure. In that time he cooked up a unique sound, one that has influenced generations of musicians, including the likes of no less than Prince, D'Angelo, Herbie Hancock, Miles Davis and Stevie Wonder.

I think there's a really interesting parallel and overlap with Lee Perry...I'm really curious if there was a conscious influence either way between them...Lee was always a big soul and jazz fan so its not impossible. Both were creating new hazy soundscapes, running the beat box from their organs, blowing smoke at the reel to reel as it turned, and bringing the drum and bass up on the mixer. Worth remembering that Sly is not only a great vocalist, musician, songwriter, arranger, but also a real innovator in production too. Genius basically.

Riot was a commercial and critical success (though it caught a fair few people off guard), but with every subsequent release interest in Sly's music progressively diminished. And while later albums were patchier, there is still a treasure trove of incredible music after Riot - without a doubt some of the best he ever made. This mix picks out not just some favourite moments, but also tries to highlight some lesser known tracks and previously unreleased early versions, many of which only became available much later thanks to CD release bonus tracks and the like.

Demo releases are often best left in the vault but I think the versions here all have their own charm and character, even if they are occasionally a little rough round the edges.  For example the funky off-beat drums on this proto version of Babies Makin Babies gives it a very different feel to the one that made it to official release, but its definitely no weaker a tune. The lack of the iconic De La Soul sampled horns on the version of Crossword Puzzle bring out the violin parts and again give the track a different, almost country, flavour.

It is said that the reworked dubplate mix of Little Sister's You're The One - a track Sly produced and originally released on his own Stone Flower label - literally had one single pressing, originally cut for Tom Moulton, but thankfully it's recently made its way onto a CD release thanks to the perseverance of Danny Krivit to track down the original acetate and lock it down before it got lost to the ether. Its a big disco version for sure.

This selection is also interspersed with a couple of tracks from fellow Californian contemporaries D.J. Rogers and Shuggie Otis, who lovingly captured some of Sly's 70s sound to great effect, and made tunes which sit happily side by side with his own work. Finishing the mix off with a Funkadelic track that Sly sat in on playing keys and adding vocals.....there ended up being a fair bit of crossover between the Family Stone and Funkadelic, with singers from the Family Stone joining the Brides of Funkenstein and Sly often touring alongside George Clinton throughout the 70s.

Photo here comes from this great studio session gallery by Warren Harris.


After The Riot: Sly Stone Rarities, Productions and Admirers 1973-1982

Sly Stone - Say You Will [1974]
Sly Stone - Loose Booty (Alt Version) [1974]
Sly Stone - Remember Who You Are [1979]
DJ Rogers - Its Good To Be Alive [1975]
Sly Stone - Crossword Puzzle (Alt Version) [1976]
Sly Stone - The Same Thing (Original LP Mix)[1979]
Sly Stone - Frisky (Alt Version) [1973]
Shuggie Otis - Sparkle City [1974]
Sly Stone - Babies Makin Babies (Alt Version) [1973]
Sly Stone - We Can Do It [1982]
Sly Stone - I Get High On You  (John Luongo Disco Version) [1979]
Little Sister - You're The One (Dubplate Mix) [1976]
Sly Stone - One Way [1982]
Funkadelic - Funk Gets Stronger (Killer Millimeter Version) [1981]



Youtube Link
Download link

Dennis Brown Roots Crown 1977-1985

Serious selection of Dennis Brown in full roots mode, from the heaviest years of 1977 on to 85..incredibly he was only 20 years of age when the two sevens clashed. Arguably his greatest period... Although all the tracks are from 77-85, the Rainbow Country cover is actually from 95 but I really wanted to include it anyhow. If you want More Dennis after this check out this earlier mix I did, with  perhaps some of his better known material. 




Prophet Rides Again 
Jah Can Do It
So Jah Say
Breaking Down The Barriers
Little Village
To Be A Weakman
Fire Singer
Due Season 
Israel
Rainbow Country
Bubbling Fountain
Bubbling Fountain - Ray Symbolic Dub Special
Praise Without Raise
A True + Nu True
Why Fools
Amagideon
Blood City



Louie Vega Salute!

Paying respects with this little mix to one of the giants in dance music, someone who could easily claim the title of greatest soulful house producer at work today, Louie Vega. Can't think of anyone who has done as much to raise the standards of musicianship and quality in house music as he. From those massive early cuts with Kenny Dope to more recent collaborations and solo work, this little selection rubs together some of my favourites from across the years. Such a massive body of work to choose from, barely scraping the surface, but here I'm broadly going for more recent favourites first and then rolling out with some of those hugely influential garage dubs from the early 90s.

Special dedication on this one to Felix, celebrating his 9th birthday just now, and who has already got the Masters at Work bug. Big up Felix! Hope you enjoy this. Also big shout to all House FM crew...tip top London pirate station for years. For those who don't know you can catch Louie Vega in the mix every Friday night 9pm on there, amongst a whole host of other great DJs, including the likes of the mighty Josh Milan, who features on several tracks here also. www.housefm.net 

Louie Vega Salute! 

1. Elements of Life feat. Josh Milan -
 Children of the World (Roots Mix) [2013] 

2. Louie & Anane Vega - 
Heaven Knows (Louie Vega Heavenly Instrumental) [2016] 

3. Winans Brothers feat. The Clark Sisters - 
Dance (Louie Vega Dance Ritual Mix) [2015] 

4. Masters At Work  feat. Wunmi - 
Ekabo (Afro House Mix) [2000] 

5. Louie Vega & Josh Milan - 
The World Is A Family (Afrohouse Vamp Dub) [2017] 

6. E.O.L. Soulfrito - 
Upright Love (Louie Vega Lo-Rein Instrumental) [2017] 

7. Steal Vybe feat. Jon Pierce - 
Be Free (Louie Vega Dance Ritual Mix) [2015] 

8. Masters At Work feat. India - 
I Can't Get No Sleep (MK Dub) [1993] 

9. Masters At Work feat. Lonnie Gordon - 
Bad Mood (MK & Masters At Work's Bass Hit) [1993] 

10. Masters At Work  feat. Neneh Cherry - 
Buddy X (Masters At Work Dub No 1) [1992] 

11. Masters At Work  feat. India - 
When You Touch Me (MAW Touch Me Dub) [1993] 

12. River Ocean feat. India - 
Love & Happiness (Yemeya Y Ochun) (12" Club Mix) [1994]



Also good excuse to repost this, stunning extract of Barbara Tucker ad-libing a version of Beautiful People at Roots NYC in early 2015, alongside Louie Vega going in on three decks to create the backing track. Magical stuff.



Marcus Intalex – A Better Place – Tribute & Salute

DnB is a scene that draws on a lot of influences and has people coming at it from different angles. The dancefloor rules though, and it’s always been a case that more upfront tunes dominate. I love a good upfront tune as much as anyone, but DnB has always been deeper to me than just jump up. In the mid 90s the ‘Speed’ sound pushed especially by Fabio and Bukem got more of a platform, but by the late 90s it had been squeezed out again, and Upfront seemed to run everything. Yeah there were still good tunes, but too often the soul and depth was missing.

When Marcus and ST Files started putting tunes out as MIST it breathed new life into DnB for me, at a time when things could feel a little stale. Whether on a melodic soulful tip, or on a moodier techno tip, their tunes always had something to say, and drove the message home over a hypnotic groove that felt like it was drawing on Detroit.

I’m pretty sure I first heard a MIST tune (How You Make Me Feel) on Fabio’s radio show, but then not long after heard Grooverider play Dreamworld, and from then it was all over. And that’s the thing, Marcus has tunes which can sit in sets by any DnB DJ (with any taste!), whatever their style. As far as I'm concerned everything Marcus and St Files touch is gold. If a new Marcus record comes out it was buy on sight – no need to hear it first.

In my opinion no one has put the message into DnB as clearly as Marcus. Real electronic soul music. Like the tune goes: it’s a spiritual thing, a body thing, a soul thing. His music reaffirmed the family tree connection between DnB and acid house, techno, garage, soul….

I’ve been wanting to do a Marcus Intalex and ST Files mix for years now, and kept putting it off. And  this morning I woke up to hear Marcus has died. It’s a massive shock and a tragic loss. To his friends and family, of course, but to DnB and to music in general. Marcus was young and was still at the top of his game in the music he was making. He smashed it from the off with the early Da Intalex jungle material and outdid himself to the last with the killer flying-high DnB he was putting out today….and clearly there was still so much to come from him, including on his techno alias Trevino. But what he leaves behind is in my opinion the strongest discography in DnB. There isn’t a single 12” of his that isn’t worth having and hearing. Not sure anyone else can claim that. My favourite DnB producer hands down, no hyperbole.

When people talk about the great dance music heritage of Manchester they think of the Hacienda generation. To me Marcus is up there at the top with them.

Salute and rest in Peace – never to be forgotten.

This mix is a tribute of some of my favourite Marcus productions, very broadly in chronological order, and including a couple of rarer remixes from the earlier days, tunes made with ST Files, Calibre and also his solo work. So many other tunes could've gone into this mix – like I said his discography is a treasure chest filled to the brim…but a box now so sadly closed before its time. Normally I take time to plan a studio mix, but this was a throwdown off the top of my head, and when tunes like Celestial Navigation were on the deck, played with a tear in my eye...



Marcus Intalex – A Better Place – Tribute & Salute 

Better Place
Love and Happiness
Lose Control
Dreamworld
Neptune
Warp 1
Second Thoughts
Proof Rock
Red 7
Faceless
Make a Raise
Step Forward
Cabal
Temperance
Meltdown
Stark
Celestial Navigation
Bitter End
Airborne

Rainford Rules! Strictly Lee Perry Tribute

Of the all the producers out of Jamaica it's the mighty Rainford "Lee" Perry who holds the most special place in my heart. There's already so much been written about Lee Perry I don't want to repeat what's gone before but wanted to add a couple of personal thoughts as to why his music hits home for me the way it does.

There can be no argument that he innovated like no one else in JA, not to say the world - a genuine groundbreaker in an era of limited technology. His mixing style is sometimes sublime, sometimes raw, always switched on and conscious. Unlike other great masters of the mixing desk Lee had a very active influence on the music played and recorded  - a very hands on producer by all accounts.

Parts of his discography feels in a parallel dimension to the rest of what was happening in JA music. In fact, considering the esteem in which he is now held he supposedly had relatively few big hits in JA, and to some extent it was UK audiences that really clicked with his sound and helped cement his legacy.

I think the defining attitude that shapes his music is his unusually open, plural and active religious/spiritual outlook.... Lee was born and raised in the JA countryside and in those formative years visited Pukumina church services, which fuse Christian traditions with African practices of spirit possession, and allowed room for other more magical thinking. As the 70s wore on his connections with Rasta got stronger and stronger - yet he never grew locks himself, and in part blamed certain Rasta hangers-on as to why he felt compelled to burn his studio down.

My impression is that he never committed totally to Rasta but certainly related to many elements of it, whilst refusing to be limited by it. He clearly connected with the mystic side of things, but maintained his own unique cosmology. In a post-modern way he wasn't averse to taking in influences from all religions and other ideas he came across, and mixing them together as he saw fit.

So if you look through his lyrics you'll find songs about obeah and voodoo alongside Rasta doctrine, as well as the odd taboo-busting sexual lyric, as well as several songs not in English or with the vocal manipulated to make in incoherent. Whats in common here is a transcendentalism - transcending social norms, going beyond mundane understanding of reality, a faith in the mysterious and magical. Lee Perry definitely approached music like a shaman.

And thats where the dubs and instrumentals really come in. Lee doesn't use sound arbitrarily - even in the wildest moments its not there to sound wacky - there is always a higher purpose to what he does at the desk, each sound and action designed to resonate with his non-orthodox spiritual outlook. Its arguable over who invented dub - Lee has as good a shout to that as any - but to me he was certainly the first to explore its mystic potential so fully. Few have come close since.

All of which I, and clearly music lovers all over the world, really relate to - his world view is not a dogmatic religious position, more a freewheeling, mystic, high!, ever changing, personal love affair with life.... Rainford Rules....

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ 

The following five mixes (here in reverse order) were put together over several years, and concentrate mainly on the era where has was at home with his own studio, the Black Ark, with the occasional dip before and after. The first mix breezes through some of the tracks that I first fell for, with each subsequent mix digging deeper and deeper into the vaults of his discography. The most recent mix, Chapter 5, looks solely at some possibly lesser-known tracks from the first two years of the Black Ark, 1973 and 1974 - a magical time with its own distinct sound..

Have to give a massive Thank You to knowledge-providers David KatzMick Sleeper and Black Ark Nuggets without whom these mixes couldn't have happened. 



Rainford Rules! Strictly Lee Perry Selection Pt.5 - Ark Sets Sail 73-74

The Originals - Got To Be Iry
Ken McKay- Nobody Knows
Kinge Oney - Jah Jah Know
Chenley Duffus - Standing On The Hill
Annette Clarke - I Wanna Be There
Upsetters - Dub Power
 Roman Scotland - Arab And Israelite
Annette Clarke - Sinner Man/Dub
Cynty & The Monkees - Lady Lady/Dub
 Ital Winston - Princess Street Skank/Ride On
Al Rock - True Believer In Jah
The Upsetters - Soul Train
Leo & The Upsetters - Doctor Demand / Black Bat / Bad Lamp
The Ethiopians - Prophesy
Ron Wilson - Rat Poison
Max Romeo - The Question
Smokey Brown - Version/My Baby
Time Unlimited - Reaction/Version
Soul Syndicate - 8 Round To Foreman
Click here to download

~~~~~


Rainford Rules! Strictly Lee Perry Selection Pt.4 - More Power
The Meditations - Houses Of Parliament
The Congos - Don't Blame On I
Leroy Sibbles - Rasta Far-I
The Stingers - Give Me Power
Roy Lee & King Iwah The 1st - Give Me Power No 2
The Upsetters - Tipper Special
Upsetters - Black Ipa
Upsetters - Ipa Skank
Upsetters - Key Hole
Upsetters - Freak Out Skank
The Gatherers - Start Over
Robert Palmer - River Stone
Lloyd & Devon -Wolf Out Deh
The Upsetter - Shepherd Rod
Juks Dread & Big Youth - 23rd Psalm
Zap Pow - River
Augustus Pablo - Vibrate On
The Upsetters - Vibrator
The Bluebells - Come Along
The Upsetters - Dub Along
right click it here to download


~~~~~


Rainford Rules! Strictly Lee Perry Selection Pt3 - All Glory
Lee - on the Wire [intro]
Junior Byles and the Versatiles - Cutting Razor
Ralph Haughton & The Ebony Sisters - Take Warning
Derrick Harriott - Walk The Streets
Watty Burnett - Rainy Night Dub
The Upsetters - So Many Shanks
Shenley Duffus - Sincerely
Jolly Brothers - Conscious Man
Lee Perry - Conscious Dub
Twin Roots - Know Love
The Heptones - Crying Over You
Alton Ellis - The Children Are Crying
The Congos - Children Crying
Debra Keese - Travelling
Lee Perry - Noah Sugar Pan Dub
Lee Perry - Rejoice in Skank
The Silvertones - Financial Crisis
The UPsetters - Financial Dub
The Heptones - Babylon Falling
The UPsetters - Babylon Dub
The Heptones - Three in One
Lee Perry - Lee in the Heartbeat
Lee & Omar Perry - Do the Lion DUB
click here for download


~~~~~

Rainford Rules! Strictly Lee Perry Selection Pt2 - Forward With Love
Time Unlimited - Africa We Are Going Home
Mystic Eyes - Forward With Love
Leroy Sibbles - Garden of Life
The Congos - Fisherman Dub
Upsetters ft Full Experience - Dyon Anasawa
Lee Perry - Evol Yenoh
Seke Molenga and Kalo Kawongolo - Mengieb
Lee Perry & THe Upsetters - Hold Them King Fu
Lee Perry & THe Upsetters - Black Vest
Lord Creator - Such is Life
Lee Perry - Such is Dub
Earl Sixteen - Freedom
Lee Perry - Freedom Dub
Unknown VOcalist - Nuh Fe Run Down
Lee Perry - City Too Hot
Brad Osbourne & The Towerchanters - Little Flute Chant
Eric Donaldson - Stand Up!
The Upsetters - Dub Fa Yah Rights!
Bree Daniels - Oh Me, Oh My
The Upsetters - Oh Me, Oh Dub
Lee Perry & The Upsetters - Crab Years
Lee Perry & The Upsetters - Black Belt


~~~~~


Rainford Rules! Strictly Lee Perry Selection Pt.1 - Train is Coming
Junior Murvin - Roots Train
Bunny and Ricky - Freedom Fighter
Junior Byles - Place Called Africa
Lee Perry - Mother Land Dub
Brent Dowe - Down Here in Babylon
George Faith - To Be a Lover
The Upsetters - All the Way
Danny Hensworth - Mr Money Man
The Heptones - Sufferers Time
Devon Irons - Ketch Vampire
The Upsetters - Vamp a Dub
The Upsetters - Party Time
Lee Perry - Man to Man
Lee Perry - Freedom Street
Horace Smart - Ruffer Ruff
Lee Perry - Original Jungle Dub
Lee Perry - Rubba Dub
Lee Perry - Cross Over
Lee Perry - Cross Over Dub
Lee Perry - Bird in Hand
Max Romeo - One Step Forward
The Diamonds - Talk About it
The Children - Yama-Ky
U-Roy and the Children - Yama-Ky
The uPsetters - Pop Goes the Dub
Lee Perry - Chicken Scratch (the tune that gave him his nickname)

click here for download

Fabio on Kiss 100 Tape Cache

From the years 1994-1997 the jungle sound split in several directions and different clubs and nights catered to the different sounds. The unity from the days before was still there in spirit, but things definitely did fragment - only natural i think - people wanted to push the sound and take it in different directions and express themselves as they saw fit. It would've been nice if there was more crossover, both in djs sets and in club line-ups, but on the whole it didn't happen so much.

I kept up on what was going on across the board but my heart was definitely in the Speed camp - Speed being a club night with resident DJs Fabio, Bukem, Kemistry & Storm, Doc Scott and Lee, which played tunes that if you had to describe them could be said to be deeper and more musically involved than what was going on on the upfront jump-up side of things. Really exciting times musically. Should also add I've got a little Speed Connection Facebook group here which you'd be more than welcome to join and post endlessly on.

1994 was the year that jungle blew up in the media and also the year that London's Kiss 100 FM - once a pirate station which got a legal license in 1990 - a little belatedly picked up on our UK breakbeat rave scene. The likes of Fabio, Rider, Bukem, JJ Frost, Randall, Hype, Kenny Ken and others played the slot on rotation - was the first time jungle got played on legal radio - and it was a great chance to hear tunes that wouldn't normally get played out in a dance, all kinds of (jumpy) dubplates, tunes that wouldn't come out for another year, and tunes that never came out at all. The whole scene was always pushing forward so fast that these shows were like a glimpse into the future...essential listening. Started at 9-11pm on a Wednesday if i remember rightly, but got pushed into a post midnight slot after a couple of years....

My flat mate used to particularly record Hype and Bukem's Cosmic Jam sessions, but I tended to go for the Fabio shows above all else - or at least those are the tapes that have lived to see the day 20 years on. Many didn't make it, including some early Giving it Up Slot Fabio & Grooverider sessions. Particularly gutted to have lost one which ended with Fabio playing some house tunes. Still not found that uploaded anywhere. Anyhow, we move on!

So here are the ones that made it. Thanks so much to RolldaBeats family for help with the tracklists (posted in the comments). Rolldabeats also has the best catalogue of all the Kiss Jungle Shows - check that here. Great hive-mind resource for those who care.

Before we get into it just got to pay respects to Fabio for all his hard work and almost single-handed commitment to pushing the sounds he does - hugely appreciated by a certain section of jungle music lovers. On the whole this was music that was sidelined at the time, and sadly even in an age of 24/7 jungle pirates and plenty old skool nights still remains sidelined... Interesting listening back to these tapes now and hearing Fabio talking about the splits and trying to keep the unity. So much good music and so many good memories attached to these sounds - a serious part of my life played out over these tapes.... Salute Fabio, and a big shout to all the original jungle soul boys and girls and all the Speed/Tempo/Swerve faithful.

     

Fabio on Kiss 100 Tape Cache

All tapes ripped at 320kbps. Hover over titles and right click and save as to download. Tracklists in the comments.

Fabio - Science - First Show - 1994
  Fabio's first solo show
"taking you through the spectrum...a little show, Im calling it: Science"

Fabio - Travelling - Science Pt2 - 1994 - Side B
Fabio's second solo show... "music for the open minded"
Fabio - FreezeFire - Dec 94 - Side B
End of 94...turning the corner into 95

Fabio - Summer Bees Wax - 1995 - Side B
Getting into 1995 - by now Fabio really was carving out a distinct sound
"look ahead every single time" 
Fabio - Mutant Jazz - 1995 - Side B
After a quiet start Speed was blowing up by this point


Fabio - Moving - Summer 95 Side X
The soundtrack to the summer of 95...we had a proper heatwave that year 

More gold from 1995



Fabio and Grooverider - End of Year Spesh - 1995
F&G's xmas shows always great fun and filled with interesting chat

Fabio - New Days - Sept 1996 - Sides A+B
By 1996 the jazz elements were really coming to the fore

Fabio - Jazz Stepping - 1997 - Side A
The jazzstep becomes official

Fabio - RIP 1997- Side B
Deeper and deeper into jazz and fusion sounds

A little bonus one - recorded from R1 and some great crowd vibes on this:
Fabio - Live at Sonar Festival Barcelona 2003 - Side A

...also have some Rider tapes to rip - they'll go up later in the year i expect
and dont forget, tracklists in the comments