Comment from: dbuskirk [Member] Email
Whenever traveling through Southern truckstops in the 80's I always looked for the smutty 45s on the jukebox, from "The I-95 Song" to "Candy Licker" from Marvin Sease.
04/28/09 @ 09:43
Comment from: BigSteve [Member] Email
Max Romeo had a big hit around the same time with Wet Dream. But he did conscious reggae too. I have a great compilation of this early material called Open The Iron Gate ("Jah Jah open up the iron gate, and let you children repatriate!"). It's interesting that Jamaican artists could get away with doing both kinds of material.

Lord Shorty belongs in the Look Hall of Fame.
04/28/09 @ 10:43
Comment from: Mr. Moderator [Member]
Hrrundi, I'm in the middle of a busy day, so I just got my first peek at this provocative post. I'll get time to listen to these traxx and comment later. Meanwhile, I hope I've added that special touch that will be sure to draw traffic to this post!
04/28/09 @ 11:52
Comment from: dbuskirk [Member] Email
OPEN THE IRON GATE is really fine, they do a wonderful job with those Blood & Fire reissues. WAR IN BABYLON from '76 is one of Lee Perry's quintessential productions, and I always had a thing for Marcia Griffiths, on backing vocals.

I was a big fan of Randall Grass' WXPN show ROOTS ROCK REGGAE, perfectly programmed before the new wave and punk show Yesterday Now Music Today (or YMNT) by Lee Paris in the 70's and 80's. When I moved to San Fran in the 1990's I unsurprisingly rubbed up against some major reggae-heads. That Jeb Loy Nichols guy will talk about Jamaica till the cows come home.
04/28/09 @ 12:03
Comment from: BigSteve [Member] Email
Pince nez time. The famous Max Romeo album is titled War Ina Babylon, not War In Babylon. And it's Dance from Emotional Rescue that Romeo contributes backing vocals to.
04/28/09 @ 13:21
Comment from: dbuskirk [Member] Email
Big Steve: "The famous Max Romeo album is titled War Ina Babylon, not War In Babylon."

Who you going to believe, Big Steve or spellcheck?

Burning
-db
04/28/09 @ 15:17
Comment from: Mr. Moderator [Member]
It's getting HOT in here! Actually, I need to hear these songs better cranked up. It's hard to assess reggae music over computer speakers. The first song is the one that grabs me the most.

HVB, this is getting a pretty good number of hits but nowhere near as many as we got on the 50 songs/50 states thread from over the weekend. I'm wondering if the involvement of a "Lord Shorty" in search results is a turnoff for some of our more curious browsers. Good effort, though, and I encourage any newer visitors to the Halls of Rock to click on the "hot rocks" tag and revisit our brief-lived effort at spicing up this site to entice investors. Perhaps we'll want to revisit that approach.
04/28/09 @ 15:44
Comment from: 2000 Man [Member] Email
HVB, that's some weird stuff. When is the timing right to play that second song? BigSteve is dead on about Max Romeo and Dance. I think it was nice of them to credit him, since it's pretty hard to pick him out. I struggle with reggae in general, but I kind of like The Stones' bastardized version of it, and how they keep it in small doses. Keith produced a Max Romeo album after the Emotional Rescue sessions, but I never heard it.

Thanks for the weird tracks. That "one eye" song cracked me up!
04/29/09 @ 08:41
Comment from: hrrundivbakshi [Member] Email
2000Man asks:

When is the timing right to play that second song?

I respond:

Now THAT's a good question!
04/29/09 @ 13:08

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