Reggae Discomix Showcase, Vol. 2

Reggae Discomix Showcase, Vol. 2

by Joe Gibbs
Reggae Discomix Showcase, Vol. 2

Reggae Discomix Showcase, Vol. 2

by Joe Gibbs

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Overview

In the open-air sound system dances of Kingston in the 1960s and 1970s, the crowd wanted the music to go on as long as possible without interruption. To that end, labels began putting out singles on LP-sized 12" records, in extended versions (much the same thing was happening with disco records in the U.S.). Because frugal reggae producers had long since learned that they could make more money with less studio outlay by putting a remixed instrumental version (rather than a second song) on the B-side of a single, it was only natural to tack the remix directly onto the end of the vocal version and extend the mix that way. Add a rapper (a "DJ" or "toaster" in reggae parlance) on top of the dub mix, and chances are you'd have a hit. No one used this technique with more consistently fine results throughout the 1970s than the production team of Joe Gibbs and Errol Thompson, who soon became known as "the Mighty Two." The second volume in this three-disc series of discomix compilations from the Gibbs and Thompson vaults finds the pair working with Cornel Campbell (easily reggae's finest falsetto singer) on two excellent tracks, as well as with his fellow superstars Culture and Horace Andy, in addition to such lesser-known but worthy singers as Naggo Morris and Joe Tex. Campbell and DJ Lui Lepke team up for the brilliant "Rope In/Love in a Jamdown," Ruddy Thomas delivers some fine and soul-inflected lover's reggae on "When I Think of You" (whose extended mix features a dub version but no DJ), and a young J.C. Lodge reminds us how she became the queen of lovers rock with the brilliant "More Than I Can Say," which is paired with a top-notch DJ cut by Shorty the President. One or two clunkers mar the set a little bit -- "Friday Evening" is a so-so three-way DJ excursion featuring Joe Tex, U Black, and Welton Irie, none of them sounding at the top of his game, and Naggo Morris' "Jah Guide" is based on a rather tedious two-chord progression and suffers from half-baked (possibly improvised) lyrics as well. But overall, this set is more than worth the price. ~ Rick Anderson

Product Details

Release Date: 11/10/2009
Label: 17Th North Parade / Vp Records
UPC: 0054645416023
Rank: 132793

Tracks

  1. Tribal War/Jah Did It
  2. Friday Evening
  3. Joe Grine/Serve Mi Long
  4. Rope In/Love In A Jamdown
  5. Two Timer/Video Man
  6. When I Think Of You
  7. More Than I Can Say/Lover Man Style
  8. Jah Guide
  9. Praise Him/Babylon Happening
  10. Innocent Blood/Rock It Up
  11. Good To Be There/Jah A The Magician

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Joe Gibbs   Primary Artist
U-Brown   Primary Artist
Horace Andy   Primary Artist
Cornell Campbell   Primary Artist
Shorty the President   Primary Artist
J.C. Lodge   Primary Artist
Welton Irie   Primary Artist
George Nooks   Primary Artist
Prince Weedy   Primary Artist
Ruddy Thomas   Primary Artist,Percussion
Robbie Shakespeare   Bass
Bobby Ellis   Trumpet
Vin Gordon   Trombone
Errol "Tarzan" Nelson   Keyboards
Lloyd Parks   Bass
Lennox Gordon   Guitar
Tony Chin   Guitar
Harold Butler   Keyboards
Sly Dunbar   Drums
Sticky Thomas   Percussion
George Fullwood   Bass
Ossie Hibbert   Keyboards
Eric "Bingy Bunny" Lamont   Guitar
Leroy "Horsemouth" Wallace   Drums
Herman Marquis   Sax (Alto)

Technical Credits

Errol Thompson   Composer,Engineer,Producer,Mixing
George Morris   Composer
Joe Gibson   Producer
Huford Brown   Composer
Jerry Allison   Composer
Sonny Curtis   Composer
Cornell Campbell   Composer
Joseph Hill   Composer
Wayne Armond   Composer
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