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Inicio  Back Catalogue  Reggae

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Back catalogue: Reggae

Juno's full catalogue of Reggae
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Artículos del 1 al 3 de 3 en la página 1 de 1
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Singles
Belly Dub
Cat: TB 017. Rel: 09 May 25
Belly (dub) (4:23)
OSOTB (4:27)
Review: South London's Slick n Bobby arrive in time for sound system season with a heavyweight debut that marries live dub chaos and hefty low-end sonics. Their double-sided single delivers two jolts of bass-driven, earth-shattering menace, both pressed loud and built for serious systems. The A-side, 'Belly Dub,' channels Boy In Da Corner-era sino-grime with eerie precision while 'OSOTB' dives into deeper dub territory-it has fluid, hypnotic and bass-loaded rhythms no one can ignore. Both tunes are nicely gritty, raw and finely tuned for chest-rattling impact so make for a bold and blistering entry into the UK dub underground.
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 in stock $17.53
Álbumes
Nuh Skin Up Dub
Nuh Skin Up Dub (LP + insert)
Cat: WE 14. Rel: 08 May 25
Even Those Dreadful Words (3:13)
Nuh Skin Up (4:50)
Mercy (4:10)
Bad Things (4:48)
Keeping Us Together (3:59)
Ire Ire (6:48)
Desiree (3:41)
Troubles (5:32)
No Commitment (6:21)
Review: 70s and early 80s Jamaican producer Keith Hudson's approach to dub was never about smooth edges or easy rhythms. His productions are dense, disorienting, heavy with delay, bass and drums that sound like they're ricocheting down a well. The Soul Syndicate, his long-time studio band, provide the backbone hereideeply locked-in grooves that Hudson warps into something ghostly. 'No Commitment' staggers forward with stabbing guitar chops that seem to dissolve mid-strike, while 'Ire Ire' loops through warped vocal fragments and echo chambers that stretch into infinity. 'Bad Things' and its dub counterpart pull apart the rhythm until it feels skeletal, each hit landing in the empty space between delay trails. Hudson's use of reverb and tape manipulation isn't just about atmosphere, but about control as well. He shifts and reshapes the mix to turn steady rhythms into something unsteady, always shifting just out of reach. 'Desiree' drifts through flickering hi-hats and cavernous low-end, while 'Keeping Us Together' seems to slow down and speed up in the same breath. There's something darker, more claustrophobic in the way he structures space and silence. Even the brighter moments, like 'Mercy' with its open, rolling groove, carry an unease, as if the music itself is bracing for collapse. Hudson was an architect of mood, twisting familiar elements into something deeply immersive and strangely hypnotic.
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 in stock $37.55
Dancehall: The Rise Of Jamaican Dancehall Culture by Beth Lesser & Soul Jazz Books (reissue) (B-STOCK)
Notes: ***B-STOCK: Item shows signs of age***


New edition of Dancehall, Beth Lesser's seminal photography and style book capturing the rise of Jamaican Dancehall Culture in the 1980s. The book also features a new introduction by the British fashion designer and art curator Duro Olowu.

Featuring 100s and 100s of amazing photographs - all with accompanying text, interviews and biographies,'Dancehall' is an essential reference book for anyone interested in Reggae and captures a previously unseen era of musical culture, fashion and lifestyle in stunning, vibrant colour.

Aside from the music, this book is as much about Jamaican fashion and style. Beth Lesser's Dancehall photographs in this book have directly influenced fashion brands including Aime Leon Dore ('Kingston 1983' collection), recent Levi's Vintage and Farah collections.

Dancehall is a culture that encompasses music, fashion, drugs, guns, art, community, technology, and more. Born in the 1950s out of the neighbourhood soundsystems of Kingston, Dancehall grew to its height in the 1980s before a massive influx of drugs and guns made the scene too dangerous for many. Today Dancehall remains at the centre of Jamaican musical and cultural life. From its roots in Kingston in the 1950s to its heyday in the 1980s, Dancehall conquered the globe spreading to the USA, UK, Canada, Japan, Europe and beyond.

In the early 1980s Jamaica was in the throws of political and gang violence - photographer Beth Lesser ventured where few other dared and this book is a never-before-seen record of the exciting, dangerous and vibrant world of Dancehall.

Living in Jamaica in the late 70s and early 80s she photographed and documented a cultural explosion as producers, singers, DJs and soundsystems who all made a living out of the slums of Kingston. With unprecedented access to the incredibly vibrant music scene during this period, Beth Lesser's photographs are a unique way into a previously hidden part of Jamaican culture.
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 1 in stock $39.05
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