07 March 2022

(r)Evolution of Dub Part 4



Our journey reaches its climax.

 

Various - Evolution of Dub Volume 7:Creationist Rebel,
Greensleeves Records VPGSCD5213,2012.


 

 

Volume 7 -  The seventh volume collects nearly all dub material from the acclaimed producer Winston Edwards (Joe Gibbs' cousin), who was born in Jamaica, but moved to the UK in the mid 70s. 

 

CD1: Winston Edwards - Natty Locks Dub
all decryption codes in comments

Natty Dub     
Big Daddy Amin    
Jah Shakin Dub     
Soul Fire Dub     
Macka Bee     
Herbmann Style from the Ghetto    
Jah Macka Dub     
Well Charge     
Gun Court in Red     
Lover Dub
 
 
 
 
 

Blood of Africa    
African Roots    
Raw Roots     
Wood Roots     
Luke Lane Rock - King Tubby
People from the Grass Roots    
Crime Wave     
No Justice for the Poor     
300 Years at the Grass Roots     
King Tubby & The Upsetter At Spanish Town - Lee Perry
 
 
 
 
 

I Am, I Am the King     
Most High in Dub     
Teacher of Dub     
King of Kings in Dub     
Coxson Down Beat (Down Fall)    
Unite Dub     
Black Harmony (Stop Play) - King Tubby
Come on Little Girl, Come On - Tony Brevett    
Second Cut - King Tubby
Ethiopia, Land of My Father - Prince Heron
Second Cut - King Tubby
I Will be Waiting - Carvin Bradford
Second Cut - King Tubby
 
 
 
 
 

Downing Street Rock     
Behind Closed Doors at the House of Commons     
Shake Buckingham Palace Down     
White Hall Scandal     
Ronald Biggs the Great Train Robber     
Kensington Palace Confusion     
Fleet Street Cover Up     
Airport Smuggling     
Hyde Park Corner Investigation     
Who Made the Prime Ministers Honour List of 1975
 
 
 
 
 
 
Various - Evolution of Dub Volume 8:The Search for New Life,
Greensleeves Records VPGSCD7012, 2014.


Volume 8 - This final set includes two previously unreleased albums: Two Friends Crew's Voyage into Dub & Shane Brown's Juke Boxx Dub. The former is a collection of late 80s/early 90s version sides from the Two Friends label, a label run by Mikey Bennett & Patrick Lindsay, two producers/engineers that at the time worked closely with Augustus 'Gussie' Clarke.

Shane Brown is a Jamaican producer/engineer probably best known for his recent work for Busy Signal & Etana.

The other two sets are Prince Jammy's Computerised Dub, a novelty effort that gives a Dubwise/instrumental treatment to some mid 80s early digital gems & Alborosie's Dub Clash, a set originally released in 2010 on which Puppa Albo Dubs some of his best.
 
 
 

Synchro Start
Interface
32 Bit Chip
Auto Rhythm
Peek & Poke
Megabyte
Wafer Scale Integration
Crosstalk
Modem
256K Ram
 
 
 
 

Roughneck Dub
Morning Blues Dub
Fooling Around Dub
Dub Licensed to Kill
This Dub Will Self Destruct in 3'53"
Dub You so Hot
Gun Thing Version
Your Dub Should You Choose to Accept It
Bubbling Sweet Tonight Version
Another One for the Road Version
Rough Dub
Mouth Almighty Dub
I'm Your Lover Man Version
Guilty Dub
No More Walls Version
 
 
 
 
 

Freedom Dub
Judge Dub
Politician Dub
Run Dem Dub
Straight Dub
The Oscillator
The Statement
Stylish Dub
Can't Sleep Dub
Forbidden Dub
Go Away Dub
Chaos
 
 
 
 
 

Tribute to the King
Marcus Dub
Dubbing Kingston
Cocaine & Dub
Minstrel of Dub
Augustus Legacy
Selassie I Son
Can't Stand Dub
Dub in Baltimore
Send Dem Dub
Loudness is My Drug
Global Dub
Real Dub Story
Space Echo Malfunction
Dubbing in Love
Double Bubble

Enjoy,

7 comments:

  1. Natty Locks Dub
    EwhGk40LDVZYZu2iFPmxchKCTEfhOPgcjjFNRYIr3ug
    At the Grass Roots of Dub
    a1w6qXcdmg3w8AO8nMYpL-AJQN90FpUT2K3Pa0Ens44
    Surrounded by the Dreads at the National Arena
    JN_vdSuS9XxOlo6ECfmeirenGcRxgIuJN-3ayy6ExAA
    Dub Conference (at 10 Downing Street
    vuTRVRe44JR8qDejFFDWST1wSwsCHKWJ6BnTGmd6PBE
    Computerized Dub
    TZ8qZkETPinxGBoiCp9vTHLbVKbCESr_Tn78StwHDdk
    Voyage into Dub
    1gJbwWG3cV3RSntR3fNYaVym9Vc56Ps75L3nGfUd_uY
    Juke Boxx Dub
    miKbbQyLElrsI57WgesUneQQ62XzFoHDBj2c3s1yGt8
    Dub Clash
    55veRF2QMmLwC4LC9fHe8-ePEM6HpnktkIp_rWwC9RU

    ReplyDelete
  2. Many thanks, NØ...you've given me the opportunity to upgrade the bitrate on some of my favorite dub reggae compilations prior to copying them to my cellphone!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Always post 320Kbps. Been asked for FLAC by many, but just don't have the storage space for such large files. Glad you could upgrade some things.

      Spoiler alert---Don't think anyone will notice this but perhaps you,BBB---this September is the return of Dub September. New Dub every day in Sept.

      Delete
  3. Thanks for the Spoiler alert...looking forward to it. And I prefer your 320kbps files - I convert FLAC files to 320kbps anyway because (1) I need all the disc space I can find, and (2) after all these years my ears can't tell the difference quality-wise. Hell, I'm so old now I should convert all my files to 192kbps!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. If you've read any of the tales of my stupid adventures in the 60s, you'll know I'm no spring chicken. I feel exactly the same about FLAC. I can't tell the difference & it's not worth the file size. I convert lossless to 320 quite a bit, figuring that if it started out with better sound, then it will be better. As far as 320 vs 192, I still believe the sound QUALITY is better with 320, even if my toasted earholes can't pick up all the nuances.

      Thanks again, & I think Dubtember is gonna be KOOL!!!

      Delete