Dancehall recomendations
yuichi
Urban sprawl 11,332 Posts
My juices are flowing after listening to some dancehall on late-night indie station. Modern or old, what yall recommend?
Comments
now dub and roots reggae are my forte
um, well, that is new dancehall...
tho all of those guys have songs that sound like 80's dancehall... the Tears Riddim from last year had a very rootsy feel to it and Spragga Benz and Vybz Kartel did some really nice stuff on it...
Then maybe you don't like dancehall!?
New shit...
VP Records has put out a good number of compilations also...
I have the one from '03 or '04 and
it's worth the $12 that I spent on it.
As a bonus, the cover artwork on these comps...
stalag 17,18,19
premiere explosion
sleng teng in all its many forms & styles
(boops to a lesser degree)
king kong ("babylon") & others on Firehouse / Waterhouse
Sunset's Computer Rule series
i heart 1986-89 dancehall
also wittys & jah life (time) from that era
&
a big shout out to my ol pal Fatis & his Vena /Exterminator output
super power collections from that era floss mucho jammys & techniques productions
a great primer for the new-jack, you get all
the major hits from the start of the digital era.
also check
I also been diggin the new track by Elephant Man - Five O
And this man, his voice is amazing:
Baby Cham:
Great album!
this one
check for smaller labels like photographer, parrish, mr doo, wittys
FLEXXXXA TIME TO HAVE SEXXXXA!
I just dropped a dancehall mix-cd that is available direct for $8 (paypal [email]djmeistro2510@yahoo.com)[/email] or from Turntable Lab. It starts of with some new roots and then goes into late 80s early 90s bidness.
http://www.labcabin.com/cds/0/0/23009.html
Here is what Labcabin said:
Get your airhorns ready. Mister Meistro, associate of Lab homeys Dave Nada and Tittsworth (and therefore posessing immaculate party-rocking credentials) is back with the followup to his first roots/dancehall/classics mix. Loved the first one, (and a lot of you did too) but this one may be even better. The blends are still on point and the transitions come at the right time in the track (people please take note: do not mix out in the middle of a verse!). Even more importantly, the song selection hits the correct balance between new, known and classics so everybody's happy. Things kick off in high gear with the criminally underplayed Rocking Time riddim (Chezidek's "Who I Am") and continue on a smooth modern roots tip with a succession of quality conscious dancehall interspersed with big tunes from Alborosie ("Slam Bam"), Buju ("Don & Dupes"), Pinchers ("Bandelero") and Super Cat ("Come Down"). The expert lacing of new versions with their precedents (big up for throwing in "Don Is Don") shows you're in the hands of a veteran. There's no way I can start to go thru even half of the 41 (!) tracks on here, but suffice to say Meistro has added a few to my wants list, and reminded me of a couple others I need to dig out of the box and get back in rotation. Nicely done sir.
Reviewed by Monk
Baby Wayne
His early 90's material is
Didn't realize until just now that he passed away in 2005.
better bring that stuff to the top of my ebay rotation
people want that ?
You hoarding all the copies T?
Shabba ran dancehall through the late 80's & early 90's.
I preferred Cutty, but you can't have a serious dancehall thread and not talk about Shabba somewhere in there.
not by intent, but i do have a thick section of a crate that is multiples of different edits & presses of that, mostly us promo radio/club stuff
never my fave & since it is major label i never seem to get around to slinging
but the things that have been blowing up for me never cease to amaze
(gong sounds, jahmalla, flynn&flynn ??wtf??)
While he has better tracks on other things. (Tracks like Wicked Inna Bed, Dem Bow, Golden Touch, Caan Dun, etc) & some really great parts on songs with other artists.
I've always though that Rappin' With The Ladies is one of the best dancehall LPs.
If you're gonna start off with comp's, this is your best bet for the older material... VP Dancehall 101 Vol's 1-4 and Shabba Ranks "Caan Dun (The Best of Shabba)"
Early B's "Ghostbuster"
Supercat's "Sandokan"
Lady G's "Ghetto Rock"