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Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta JAH BATTA. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta JAH BATTA. Mostrar todas las entradas

miércoles, 25 de agosto de 2010

HORACE ANDY AND JAH BATTA - TRIBUTE TO BOB MARLEY

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HORACE ANDY AND JAH BATTA - TRIBUTE TO BOB MARLEY


TRACKLIST


01 - horace andy - tribute to bob marley
02 - jah batta - great superstar
03 - horace andy - lingering spirit
04 - horace andy - love hangover


DATE : 2006

Super 4 tracker from the immaculate Horace - this re-issue combines two twelves. Tribute To Bob Marley was originally released on the Top Ranking International label in 1981, soon after the Wailer's death in May, and provided an outstanding cut on Horace Andy's Exclusively album set issued the following year in London by Solid Groove. The flip side featured Jah Batta's DJ cut Great Super Star, uncredited on the original label. Lingering Spirit offers a completely different mix, first issued in England on the red Bullwackie's label in 1983 (its title more reticent now, after the hundreds of Marley tribute records). It was coupled with Horace's compelling interpretation of Love Hangover, which - though Lloyd Barnes himself has always been a soft touch for a bit of lovers - had been principally arranged and recorded by Prince Douglas, the year before. Enlisting Jah Batta on deejay duties for the version "Great super star" proves an astute move for anyone who loved his masterly "Argument" long player, but the indisputable highlight to these ears is "Love Hangover", in which Mr. Andy's sublime pipes treat the Diana Ross disco classic to a half speed makeover. Unmissable stuff.

martes, 24 de agosto de 2010

JAH BATTA - ARGUMENT

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ARGUMENT


TRACKLIST


1. No Meat
2. Ten to Seven
3. Argument
4. I Don't Want to Wait
5. Mi Black
6. Youthman School
7. Hold on Pon the Woman
8. Informa (Watch It)
9. Youthman Time
10. Out a Reach




BACKED BY: Roots Radics
BACKING VOCALS: Sugar Minott, Skattee
BASS: Robbie, Red Fox, Bagga
DRUMS: Sly, Fabian Cooke
GUITAR: Jerry Harris, Owen Stewart
KEYBOARDS: Owen Stewart, Jackie Mittoo
HORNS: Jerry Johnson
PERCUSSION: Ras Menilik


PRODUCED BY: Sugar Minott, Bullwackie
RECORDED AT: Wackies, Channel One
ENGINEERED BY: Bullwackie, Douglas Levy, Jr. Delahaye

Upon launching himself as a producer, Sugar Minott made a point of championing new artists, mentoring myriad youthmen to stardom. Among this coterie of talent was Tony "Jah Batta" O'Meally, whose debut album, Argument, Minott helped oversee. Much of the set was laid down at Channel One studio, backed by the likes of the Roots Radics, Sly & Robbie, Jackie Mittoo, and Earl "Bagga" Walker. The rest was recorded at Bullwackies in N.Y.C., where Lloyd Barnes now joined Minott in production duties and the final mixdown. Here the accompaniments were laid down by Barnes' stellar studio band, including guitarist Jerry Harris, saxophonist Jerry Johnson, and the multi-instrumentalist Red Fox. The riddims alone were worth the price of admission, whether Sly & Robbie's lethal rockers, the Wackies crew's own sumptuous take on the style, or the Roots Radics' more minimal but equally melody-fired sound. And whether the musicians were versioning Minott's own "Informer" or taking on Studio One classics -- "Real Rock" "Mi Black," "Throw Me Corn" ("I Don't Want to Wait"), and the Heptones' "Baby" ("Ten to Seven") among them, or even Bob Marley's "Too Much Trouble" ("Hold on Pon the Woman") -- the arrangements are absolutely inspired and the musicianship phenomenal. It is therefore all the more amazing that Batta not only holds his own, but shines throughout this set. The DJ's style was a bit eclectic at this point, shifting from singjaying à la Yellowman to an almost hypnotic toasting, as well as the new rapid-fire machine-gun delivery that would soon become all the rage. To further mix it up, Batta intersperses his toasting with exuberant exclamations à la U-Roy, whose "Wake the Town" hit Batta name-checks. Thematically, the DJ is just as diverse, and he covers a host of topics here -- a vegetarian anthem, an ode to the importance of education, a paean to black pride, a warning to informers, and even sweet romance. It may be "Youthman Time," but not, alas, for Batta, whose girl ends up running off with his singing producer on "Out a Reach." From the infectious "Ten to Seven" to the mesmerizing sway of the sensational title track, Batta's performances will hold listeners spellbound. Even from an established star, Argument would have impressed, but from a novice it's phenomenal. Jah Batta entered the dancehalls with a masterpiece, and more were yet to come.

SH