9/08/2025

Yabby You Meets Trinity At (King Tubbys) Dub Station (1979)


Excellent toasting from Trinity and of course everything Yabby touches turns to gold.

Sure I don't see myself playing this one much at all - but maybe that's because it makes such an impression after one listen! Three giants collaborate - Trinity, Yabby You and King Tubby and the results are obviously amazing. Just listen to "Di Gun Gun Fever" - it's only five minutes long but Trinity's transcendent toasting (how's that for alliteration?) is so captivating it seems to go on forever! Yabby You supplies the rootsy-as-fuck riddims, some of which are taken from the legendary Conquering Lion LP. "Black Starliner" is an incredibly interesting song because it shows Yabby doubting the black nationalist dream of repatriation - I guess this guy had a lot more depth than the competition!

Unfairly overlooked gem! Don't let the naff cover art, probably made in three minutes on Microsoft Word, fool you! -HorseMouth


Yabby You Meets Trinity At (King Tubbys) Dub Station

Approx. year : 1979
Genre : Roots Reggae 1970s
Vocals : Trinity
Produced by : Vivian Jackson
Mixing Engineer : King Tubby
Country : Jamaica
Catalog number : LP 5659


Playlist :
A1 Trinity - Di Gun Gun Fever 5:23
A2 Yabby You & Trinity - My Neighbour 6:22
A3 Trinity - I Know Where I'm Going 6:04
A4 Yabby You & Trinity - Natty Bongo 5:47
B1 Yabby You & Trinity - Warm Dem 5:07
B2 Yabby You & Trinity - I Just A Dread 7:13
B3 Yabby You - Stand Up And Fight 6:57
B4 Yabby You - Black Starliner 4:36

9/06/2025

Lancelot "Maxie" McKenzie, Scientist & Barnabas – Three The Hard Way


total classic

Reissue
First released in 1981 on the Silver Camel label, Three The Hard Way sees its first-ever vinyl reissue courtesy of Italian imprint Lantern Records. The Scientist cuts were mixed at the legendary King Tubby’s studio, while Barnabas and Maxie handled their dub sessions at Channel One. Produced by Al Campbell, the three Maxie tracks incorporate vocal fragments, unlike the purely instrumental dubs from Scientist and Barnabas. The source of the vocal version of each dub remains unclear. They may trace back to earlier productions by Al Campbell or collaborations with other artists. Given Campbell’s dual role as producer and singer, it’s quite possible that some of these dubs originated from his own vocal recordings.

Review
Fully licensed and remastered for this long overdue reissue of a rather obscure dub classic, this 1981 masterpiece by Al Campbell returns on vinyl for the first time and is considered one of the singer and producer's best work. Originally put out on the small Silver Camel label, the record features the legendary Barnabas and Maxie on the desk at Channel One, with iconic mixes by Scientist at King Tubby's legendary studio, all of which add depth and spaced out magic to the sound. It's packed with roomy dubs, lo-fi percussive patter, meandering low ends and a widescreen acoustic field that extends all around you which make it a true hidden gem finally getting the spotlight it deserves.


Lancelot "Maxie" McKenzie, Scientist & Barnabas – Three The Hard Way

Label: Dubmusic productions – 884385824815
Format: CDr
Country: US
Released: 2010
Genre: Reggae
Style: Dub
Source: Digital


1. Scientist - Feed Back (Dubstyle) 3:14
2. Barnabas - Prophecy In (Dub) 3:46
3. Maxie - Ganja Syrup 3:53
4. Scientist - Cultured (Dub) 3:59
5. Barnabas - Cool Rock 4:17
6. Barnabas - Murder 3:43
7. Maxie - Blood Light 3:49
8. Scientist - The Winner 3:08
9. Barnabas - Bionic Skank 3:38
10. Maxie - Master Piece 4:04

The Force Of Music – Freedom Fighters Dub (Tamoki-Wambesi-Dove – TWCD1051)


"I may not live but another 5 minutes but it will be 5 minutes definitely on my terms"
George Jackson, 23. 6. 67


Excellent 70s Dub Album
This is a solid dub recording from the 1970s, produced by Roy Cousins, engineered by Errol Thompson and mixed by Scientist and Ernest Hookim, hence it was probably recorded at Channel One Studios. All dubs are very good, my personal favorite is Black Prince and Princess Dub. -Kahey

By Devin Morrison on Aug 29, 2019
Rootfire’s “Rare Record Showcase” is a new bi-monthly series dedicated to sharing top-quality Jamaican and Jamaican-inspired records of the past, that have heretofore unjustly existed under the radar of all but the most deep-diving music lovers.

For this second edition of the Rootfire “Rare Record Showcase,” I’ve chosen one of my favorite Dub records, the late 70s scorcher entitled The Force Of Music – Freedom Fighters Dub.

I don’t know and could never find out much about this record. It was produced by Roy Cousins (of The Royals fame) and released on the Ballistic label out of the U.K. in 1978.

It is a near perfect example of Dub at it’s peak. Heavy un-recycled riddims recorded brilliantly, and expertly mixed and dubbed. I love every track, but my favorite is probably “Free Namibia Dub.”

If anyone knows more about this record, please send me some info! For everyone else, get ready for a half hour version excursion through Dub heaven.

Channel 1 Recording Studio with engineer Anthony 'Crucial Bunny Tom Tom' Graham at the controls and Roy Anthony Cousins on the right.

Although the Royals' lineup had shifted on a number of occasions, in the mid-'70s a more dramatic cleft occurred, forcing Roy Cousins to take stock. While he mulled his next move, the singer/producer kept his group's name alive with the release of Pick Up the Pieces, a stunning compilation of the Royals' best recent work, with a second set, Ten Years After, following in 1978. Thanks to DJ Lloyd Coxsone, who set the London scene shaking with dubs of Ten Years After's songs, Cousins struck a deal with United Artists. The label, via their Ballistic imprint, released both Pick Up the Pieces and Ten Years After, as well as Freedom Fighter Dub, whose ten versions were drawn evenly from both vocal albums. Freedom Fighter itself was credited to Force of Music, a moniker that encompassed just about every name musician then on the scene. the Royals never used one studio exclusively, and even the dub set was divvied up, with various tracks mixed down by Errol Thompson, Ernest Hoo Kim, and Scientist. The echoing-in-the-ether of "Smoke Pipe Dub," the militant sound of "Pagan Front Dub," and the melody laced "Free Nambia Dub" each highlight the diversity of the approaches within. "Tribute to Lloyd Coxsone in Dub" is just exuberant, a fitting homage to the man who helped make it all happen; Cousins gratefully dedicated the album to him. The bulk of the vocal tracks were stunning versions of classic riddims, most arranged in roots reggae style, with only a few falling into rockers territory. The dubs invariably toughened them up, although "Promised Land"'s cheery atmosphere still shines through on "Fresh Cow Milk Dub," while the sweet melody of "Freedom Fighters" bubbles to the surface of "Free Namibia Dub" The vocal sets cemented the Royals' vocal reputation in stone, this dub set did the same for Cousins' productions.

All of the corresponding vocal versions to The Force Of Music's Freedom Fighters Dub LP can be found on The Royals - Pick Up The Pieces anthology on Pressure Sounds and The Royals - Ten Years after CD reissue on Tamoki Wambesi.


The Force Of Music – Freedom Fighters Dub

PRODUCED BY: Roy Cousins
RECORDED AT: Randy's
MIXED BY: Ernest Hookim, Scientist
MIXED AT: Channel One
ENGINEERED BY: Errol Thompson

Label: Tamoki-Wambesi-Dove – TWCD1051
Format: CD, Album, Reissue
Country: UK
Released: 1978 / Reissue 2021
Genre: Reggae
Style: Dub
Source: Digital


1. Introduction (Vocals – Charlie Chaplin) / Blood For Freedom Dub 3:53
2. Namibia Dub 2:46
3. Black Prince And Princess Dub 3:07
4. Quake Heart Dub 2:57
5. Pieces Of Dub 3:04
6. Smoke Pipe Dub (Vocals – Baba Dread) 3:43
7. Zingini Dub 2:54
8. Narga Silasi Dub 3:42
9. Fresh Cow Milk Dub 3:45
10. Meet The People Dub 3:53
11. Kamforo Mix 3:41
12. Dib Kan Dub 4:09
13. Yerkundu Dub 3:20
14. Akako Dub 4:15
15. Widgeon Dub 4:01
16. Zawditu Mix 5:53

Companies, etc.
Marketed By – Cousins Cove
Distributed By – Cousins Cove
Recorded At – Randy's Studio
Recorded At – Channel One Recording Studio
Recorded At – Dynamic Sounds Studios
Mastered At – Glass Studios
Published By – Water Yard Music
Published By – Ben Music

Credits
Arranged By, Written-By, Producer – Roy Anthony Cousins
Bass – Aston "Family Man" Barrett, Berthram "Harry" Johnson, Earl "Bagga" Walker, George "Fully" Fullwood, Robert "Robbie" Shakespeare
Drums – Basil "Benbow" Carey, Carlton "Santa" Davis, Phil Callendar, Leroy "Horsemouth" Wallace
Engineer – Ernest Hookim, Errol Thompson, Karl Pitterson
Executive Producer – Jemima Antonia Cousins
Guitar – Albert Griffiths, Bertram "Ranchie" McLean, Earl "Chinna" Smith, Geoffrey Chung, Noel "Sewell Radic" Bailey, Tony Chin
Horns – Albie Donnelly, Bobby Ellis, John Adams, Simon O'Grady, Tommy McCook
Keyboards – Bernard "Touter" Harvey, Earl "Wire" Lindo, Gladstone "Gladdy" Anderson, Lloyd "Charmers" Tyrell, Paul "Pablove Black" Dixon, Robert "Robbie" Lyn, Winston "Brubeck" Wright
Percussion – Noel "Skully" Simms, Uziah "Sticky" Thompson

Notes
A Tamoki-Wambesi-Dove production. Made in England

This re-issue has 6 extra tracks not on the original release. The Discogs track listing matches the rear of the CD. Based on the liner notes compared to all prior 10-track issues, the actual running order is:

Track 1 - vocal intro followed by extra track, presumably what is listed on the rear as track 11
Tracks 2-11 - LP tracks in original order, or what is listed on the rear as tracks 1-10
Tracks 12-16 - extra tracks, presumably what is listed on the rear as tracks 12-16

The prior 10-track CD lists Channel One and Randy's as the recording studios. This CD also lists Karl Pitterson at Dynamic Sounds, so presumably this aspect of production is the extra tracks.

Ras Allah (or Prince Alla) – Heaven Is My Roof (Corn-Fed Productions)




Classic lp produced by Tapper Zukie. Solid authentic roots.

Would make a good introduction to roots reggae for the uninitiated looking for something a bit more cult than Island Records. Title track is a beauty. -HorseMouth

Ras Allah / Prince Alla
The legendary Prince Alla, born Keith Blake, 1950, Kingston Jamaica, began his recording career in the early seventies in Jamaica. A deeply spiritual artist with a highly individual style, he has worked with producers like Tappa Zukie, Bertram Brown, Joe Gibbs and others, recording classics like Cities, Stone, Rastafari, Bucket Bottom, Funeral and Bosrah. In recent years he has worked with several producers, but his outlet was far from prolific. Continuing interest in his work saw the release of two albums of material from the 1970s on Blood & Fire records, Only Love Can Conquer and I Can Hear The Children Singing, which brought his work to a new audience. In the last years, he’s still in demand for live gigs and occasional recordings.

zachpleasant
Ras Allah - Heaven is My Roof, 1978
Stars

This is Ras Allah’s (aka Prince Allah) first LP on the fantastic Stars label. I first learned about this record from the UK Blood and Fire repress series, but eventually won an auction for the original on EBay ten years ago or so. 

Side A is about as perfect as a roots reggae album gets for me. It starts off with “Funeral” (which I recently got on 45 at @coco_isle_shibuya this summer) which is an excellent disco steppers tune. It’s followed by “Bosrah” which is deep and heavy. The title track “Heaven is My Roof” has a sweet horn line and haunting lyrics. Side B has nice tunes, but the A side wins this one.

Tappa Zukie is the producer on this one and I’m a huge fan of his 70s LPs and production. 

And while my copy’s cover is a little banged up, I love that Ras Negus wrote his name in pen on it a few times.

Interview with Prince Alla by Peter I 
Sep 1, 2025
https://www.reggae-vibes.com/articles/2025/09/interview-with-prince-alla/

Reissued for the very first time on vinyl here's Prince Alla's (aka Keith Blake) debut album, under the Ras Allah pseudonym, originally released on Tappa Zukie's Stars Records in 1978. Featuring a who's who of the roots reggae community with top notch contributions from the likes of Sly & Robbie, Earl ‘Chinna’ Smith, Don Drummond Jr., Bingy Bunny (Roots Radics) and more. Recorded at the almighty Black Ark and mixed at Tubby's. Produced and Arranged by Tappa Zukie.


Ras Allah – Heaven Is My Roof

Label: Corn-Fed Productions – CF 333
Format: CDr, Reissue, Unofficial Release
Country: Netherlands
Released: 2018
Genre: Reggae
Style: Roots Reggae, Dub


1. Ras (Prince) Alla – Funeral 3:15
2. Musical Intimidator – Undertaker 3:30
3. Ras Allah & The Spears – Came From Buzrock 3:06
4. Ras Allah & The Spears – Came From Buzrock Version 3:10
5. Ras (Prince) Alla – Heaven Is My Roof 3:28
6. Musical Intimidator – Heaven Is My Roof Version 3:31
7. Ras (Prince) Alla – Slave Master (12” Extended) 4:18
8. Ras (Prince) Alla – Go Down In Silence 3:18
9. Ras (Prince) Alla – Gold Diver 3:22
10. Ras (Prince) Alla – Go To School 3:26
11. Ras (Prince) Alla – Daniel (LP) 3:34
12. Ras (Prince) Alla – Just One Way 3:11
13. Ras (Prince) Alla – Jah Jah Bird 3:29
14. Ras (Prince) Alla – Daniel (Discomix) 6:45
15. Tapper Zukie – Black Man 7:16

Corn-Fed Productions NL 2018 - CF 333 - A Labour Of Love Production

Originally released in 1978.

PERSONNEL:
Bass – Robbie Shakespeare
Drums – Sly Dunbar
Guitar Earl "Chinna" Smith, Bingy Bunny, Tony Chin
Horns – The Deadly Headly, Bobby Ellis, Vin Gordon
Organ – Ansel Collins
Percussion – Scully, Sky Juice
Piano – Glady Anderson
Producer – Tapper Zukie

9/05/2025

Junior Ross & The Spears - Babylon Fall


Junior Ross and The Spears are another great Jamaican roots group that have been nurtured under the guidance of fellow Jamaican, producer and singer Tapper Zukie. Zukie not only gave the singer and his band their name but recorded, produced and released their records on his own 'Stars' imprint label. Junior Ross (Clifford Palmer, 7 Sept 1953, Kingston, Jamaica) grew up alongside his brothers Frankie Jones and Roy "Soft" Palmer, who in turn had entered the music business alongside future roots singer Prince Alla. Alla had formed a group called The Nazarines with Palmer and Milton Henry, so music was all around Junior Ross and he would soon follow in their footsteps and start recording some of his songs.


Roots Record Showcase # 1: Junior Ross & The Spears – “Babylon Fall”
By Devin Morrison on Aug 08, 2019

Rootfire’s “Rare Record Showcase” is a new bi-monthly series dedicated to sharing top-quality Jamaican and Jamaican-inspired records of the past, that have heretofore unjustly existed under the radar of all but the most deep-diving music lovers.

For this first installment, we are focusing on the roots masterpiece Babylon Fall by Junior Ross & The Spear.

I want to let the music do most of the talking here. I think it will suffice to say that this is one of my Top 20 reggae albums, although technically it is not an album but rather a collection of singles. These tunes were all released as 7”s by producer/deejay Tappa Zukie between 1975 and 1977 (which happen to be my favorite 3 years in Jamaican music), and were compiled together to form the album Babylon Fall in 1992. They were re-re-released in 2002 by the excellent Blood & Fire label as part of a two-disc set called I Can Hear The Children Singing that also featured a classic but obscure album by the roots artist Prince Alla.

Militant lyrics, heavy heavy steppers riddims, and the murderous voices of Junior Ross and The Spears make these timeless roots killers some of the very best of the mid-1970s. This record never gets old to me. Favorite tracks are “Judgement Time,” “Hold Them Prophecy,” “Babylon Fall,” and the dub of “Liberty” entitled “African Border.” But these songs are all 10s. Pure killer, zero filler.

If the music speaks loud enough for you, read no further! For those seeking more in-depth info on Junior Ross, there are great liner notes included in the Blood And Fire release which cover both Prince Alla and Junior Ross; I have provided the section on Junior Ross in full below. 

Junior Ross was born Clifford Palmer on the 7th September 1953, in Jubilee Hospital, Kingston, as he informed this writer in April 2002:

“Junior Ross is my singin’ name – I have to give thanks to Tappa Zukie for givin’ me that name…..Start singin’ in the seventies – The first tune was ‘Babylon Fall”, [for] Tappa Zukie – again, I ‘ave fe give him credit. He’s the one who bring me into the faith. First of all, Tappa Zukie was a man who me an’ him grow together. A lickle secret weh I never really let out yet – Tappa Zukie use to take away his parents’ money to buy clothes for me an’ him, to go to dance, up an down, so I grateful for him. Then one day – you ‘ave to say is a beg-time, the first song I record. Next man I ‘ave to give thanks to, to be in the music phase, is John Holt, because the first try I get, I was failin’, ‘cause it was a short time, a beg-time. John Holt was the man who put me on the mike, set me up an’ say ‘Give the youth a nex’ try’. That was at King Tubby’s – mid-seventies, somewhere aroun’ there.”

The above-mentioned ‘Babylon Fall” also gave title to the album reissued here, the second disc of this set. Although most of its tracks had been released by Tappa on his ‘Stars’ imprint during 1975-1977, it wasn’t until 1992 that they were collected on a vinyl album. Junior Ross & the Spears were a vocal group with a changing lineup – at times, Prince Alla, Roy Palmer, Frankie Jones and Leroy King all contributed backup vocals behind Junior’s lead, like on “Bow Down Babylon”, as Alla remembered in the interview with Steve Mosco quoted earlier:

“Yes, that was harmonies, is one of the brothers dem lead it. His name is Challa who sing lead on that song. And sometimes you had Frankie Jones sing lead too. But most time I sing harmony with them you know, until I sing my song and them sing harmony with me.”

Another who sang backup harmony in the Spears for Tappa was Leroy King [born 25th December 1949, Jubilee Hospital, Kingston] who cut a few sides as a soloist during 1977-1982, including the brilliant “Mash Down Babylon” for Roy Francis’ Phase One label. in 1977:

“Well, we been singin’ for quite a long time now – nearly thirty years now – it could a more too. Well, I really am a solo singer now, but I use to be in a group before by the name of Saints, weh did “Brown Eyes” an lotta song like that, but after that we come an’ join Junior Ross as the Spear an’ do a few backup tracks like that……He had a brother, Roy Palmer, well, he died….. tragically. I did “Mash Down Babylon” at Joe Gibbs with We The People band, Lloyd Parkes, for Mixing Lab – Roy Francis. I also did “I’ve Tried” for him. I did “Johnnie Reggae“, “Pleasure Lady“, “Stop Bus Gun In Dancehall” [all] for High Times, Bertram Brown. I do a LP for Channel One – I don’t hear that LP so far, don’t know if release or what. I use to sing with Soul Syndicate, travel all around.”

King also sang with Junior’s brother Frankie Jones, on the 45s “Bygones” and “Marijuana” for Tappa. Not unsurprisingly, Frankie was a big influence on Junior Ross:

“My brother Frankie Jones – he’s a nex’ one who inspired me too, because he’s a good guitarist. He teach me how to play guitar, teach me the timin‘ [so that] I can play a few chords, lay my riddim an’ everything – respect to Frankie Jones. That is not to say I didn’t have some inspiration fe myself, beca’ Leroy King, Melodians – they used to rehearse in my house, an’ they put down the guitar at night , an’ I ketch my lickle one practice an’ one practice. That is how I get to play the guitar. But the real inspiration came from the seventies, when you know Rastafari consciousness was high. Until today it is the highest culture, to me”

That belief is evident from even a cursory listen to Junior’s songs; every word radiates a hard-won commitment to ‘roots and culture’:

“We see Babylon as a system that holdin’ the people today. It is sad how [some] cultural artists mek a shift after pursuing something positive…….I didn’t mek a shift – I stick with it until today, but I know good over evil, an’ it will still live on . All those songs written by me, yunno? Even ‘Youthman’ that Leroy Smart did, I was the co- writer fe it. Me an’ Frankie Jones wrote that song an’ “Ballistic Affair”, almost all of those songs, because we rehearse together, we put in words an’ words. Frankie sing with the Spears at times, so it was like a family – Leroy King, Frankie Jones, Prince Alla, even Tappa Zukie sing harmony sometimes. I only hope if we could a see some of those days come back today…… I use to wake up in the morning, 6 o’clock an rehearse till 10 o’clock – after eat a lickle ting an’ ketch up again – by 4 o’clock is rehearsal again, so a lot of inspiration would flow.”

The Palmer Brothers home must have been a busy place in those days – it was in their yard in Greenwich Farm that the Melodians wrote their epochal hit “Rivers of Babylon”. Junior learnt enough guitar to be able to devise rhythms in rehearsal and thus make the studio work flow more smoothly:

“You know the chords, an’ you tell the musicians dem: play from that to that, an’ that. I lay the riddims, most of them. Most of the arrangements was Tappa Zukie…”

Today, Junior Ross no longer lives in Greenwich Farm:

“I live at a lickle place called Breadnut Wall, Ipswich, in St Elizabeth….it’s natural, inspirational, peaceful, harmonious.”

For the future, he hopes to be touring in 2003, hopefully alongside his longtime brethren Prince Alla, like him an artist fully committed to sending out his messages of reality, strictly roots & culture, presented without apology. In the troubled world we live in, there is a need for such songs. After all, that was a major part of the late Bob Marley’s message as well, as Junior says:

“Bob Marley an’ other artists, I listen to them , feel the vibes, feel the inspiration, put the words together , an’ come up with “Baylon Fall”. Those times, Babylon was high on the list of downfall. It may mek a change since Bob gone, but it is still here, understand?”

This set is crucial roots music of the highest order, made for a definite purpose, as Prince Alla says:

“So we can sing a culture and teach people in a reggae music. It can’t die me bredren, nothing can kill it. The real reggae music, our music.”

All of us at Blood and Fire – along with Tappa Zukie, Prince Alla and Junior Ross – hope you agree.

-Steve Barrow / September 2002



Junior Ross & The Spears - Babylon Fall

Label: Stars – none
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album
Country: Jamaica
Released: 1992 / 2025 Digital Edition = BAFCD040
Genre: Reggae
Style: Roots Reggae
Source: Blood & Fire – BAFCD040

"Babylon Fall" by Junior Ross - a compilation from 1992 of 45's released in 1975-77.
Includes 3 additional Jr. Ross & The Spear tracks not on the original LP, as well as 2 DJ versions by Tappa Zukie.
Some tracks are extended versions.

Recording at Channel One Studio. Voiced and mixed at Tubby's.


1. Judgement Time (Extended) 5:33
2. Man From Zion (A.K.A. Rastaman Say) 2:51
3. Send Me Over There (12" Mix) 6:02
4. Bow Down Babylon (12" Mix) 4:08
5. You Can't Run (A.K.A. Run To The Rock) 2:25
6. Rough Way Ahead 2:55
7. Jah Love (Extended) 5:39
8. Liberty 2:46
9. Freedom Fe Natty (Featuring Tappa Zukie) 2:55
10. African Border 2:57
11. So Jah Jah (A.K.A. So Jah Jah Sey) (Extended) 5:20
12. Hold Them (A.K.A. Hold Them Prophecy) (Extended) 5:42
13. Babylon Fall (Extended) 6:04

Credits
Arranged By – Tappa Zukie
Bass – Robbie Shakespeare
Design, Artwork – Susan Anderson
Drums – Sly Dunbar
Edited By – Spider Man
Guitar – Earl "Chinna" Smith
Horns – Deadley Headley Bennett, Vin Gordon
Keyboards – Agustus Pablo, Keith Plerling
Mixed By – King Jammys
Producer – Tappa Zukie
Recorded By – Scientist

9/03/2025

Jack Ruby Hi-Fi -- Auralux Recordings ‎– LUXXCD014

 

Originally released on the Clappers label in 1980 in limited quantities, Jack Ruby Hifi showcase was and is a collection of deep roots produced by the late sound system operator and ace producer.

What we have here is a full showcase-style dyed in the wool stormer. Ruby is the infamous producer linked to the Ocho Rios – Sound of Saint Anns, best known perhaps for his production associations with Burning Spear around the start of their Island career, Justin Hinds of the Dominoes, as well as numerous high calibre artists, think The Gaylads, Big Youth, King Tubby, Errol Thompson and some of the artists featured here, Ken Boothe, Black Disciples and his long term studio associates.

Hi-Fi is an album originally appearing on Brooklyn’s little known but genre-breaking Clappers label, “a weapon without compromise” as their chairman once put it, a label which ushered the transition of reggae into early New York dancehall and beyond, spawning early crossover hip-hop classics from the likes of Brother D and Silver Fox.

Here Ruby focusses on four vocals segued into four full length dubs: Ken Boothe’s voice has to be one of the most divine instruments in all music if not reggae, “Peace Time” rides a delicious guitar line – Boothe is in fine form on a lyric for universal peace , and the whomping “Khomeini Skank” version establishes this somewhere at the turn of the seventies. Lennox Miller’s take on Delroy Wilson’s all time big one “Better Must Come” is a belter – lively drummatical version and a wicked Jah Coller deejay version, 12 minutes plus of sublime reggae. Usual high quality Auralux job, mastered from vinyl, but this has resulted in the fantastic warmth and intimacy of these timeless recordings. --Author: legendaryreggae

Jack Ruby (music producer) Lawrence Lindo (1943 - 7 April 1989)

Dan
5.0 out of 5 stars 
Essential Classic era Roots Reggae + Dubs produced by Jack Ruby from 1980/81
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 16 June 2017

Jack Ruby Hi-Fi -- Auralux Recordings ‎– LUXXCD014

Artwork included.

Raw edged, clean sound, driving rhythms and heavy (yet still upbeat) Roots Reggae lyrics (each followed by Dub versions (echo-o-o-o-es) in a Showcase style, with some well known and obscure singers, and top players, some with a similar sound to Burning Spear's 'Marcus Garvey' LP.
Similar to Alvin G.G. Ranglin + Sonia Pottinger productions in terms of sound.

Tracklist:
1A Ken Boothe - Peace Time
B The Iranian Students - Khomeni Skank 9:51
2A Earth Last Messenger - Hypocrites
B The Black Disciples - Brezinsky Dub 8:18
3A Lenox Miller - Better Must Come
B Jah Coller - Jah Coller Speaks His Mind 12:36 (cover version of the Delroy Wilson classic)
4A The Revealers - Jail House Free
B Crucial All Stars - Rikers Island Dub 7:58

Musicians include: The Black Disciples
Bass – Aston "Family Man" Barrett, Robbie Shakespeare
Drums – Leroy "Horsemouth" Wallace
Flute – Carlton Samuels
Guitar – Bertram "Ranchie" McLean, Earl "Chinna" Smith, Tony Chin
Keyboards – Bernard Harvey, Earl "Wire" Lindo, Tyrone Downie
Percussion – Uziah "Sticky" Thompson
Producer – Jack Ruby
Saxophone – Herman Marquis, Dirty Harry, Tommy McCook
Trombone – Don D Junior
Trumpet – Bobby Ellis

Notes
Recorded at Jack Ruby's Studios, Ocho Rios, JA. January 1, 1980. 
Mixed at King Tubby's Studios, Kingston, JA. 
Executive producer: Dub Organizer. 

Originally released on Clappers Records, 1980.

Sound mastering is excellent.

Liner notes by David Katz.

See also (among others):
Black Foundation In Dub - also on Heartbeat
Jack Ruby Presents - on Blue Moon Records
Black Slavery Days (The Sound Of St Ann's) - on Honest Jon's Records
Marcus Garvey/Garvey's Ghost by Burning Spear - on Island Records
Jezebel/Just In Time by Justin Hinds (2 LP on 1 CD) - on Island Records

Also worth seeking out other Aurulux Records releases.

9/02/2025

Jah Lloyd – Fiend Victim

Jah Lloyd, aka Jah Lion, The Black Lion of Judah (born Pat Francis, c.1950, Kingston, Jamaica, died 2 June, 1999) is a reggae singer, deejay and producer.

HorseMouth 4.00 stars
Jah Lloyd had during certain points in his career deals with Virgin Front Line and Island (as Jah Lion) but the albums he put out for them had no real commercial potential. Reggae Stick from a few years down the line was released on a small label and can be safely assumed to have sank without a trace given how little is known about it. But had he dropped this off at the Virgin or Island offices the powers that be would very much have liked what they were hearing.

The opening tracks showcase Lloyd's talent as a singer, on par with his popular "Guys Get a Blow" single. The title track on here is fucking essential - it could have been a hit! Scratchy disco guitar and hi-hat patterns but still quintessentially rootsy, not to mention incredibly catchy! One thing I like about the album is how much energy Lloyd is putting into his performances. Past the first few tracks he returns to deejay mode but lyrically he's certainly not falling into the same cliches mined by many other performers.

A lost gem? Definitely, and the kind of record that could have enjoyed more success had it been released on a bigger label. Not as unusual as Colombia Collie, but probably on par with it.

WhatCheer
Great Roots Reggae LP by Jah Lloyd akaPat Lloyd Francis a.k.a. Jah Lion)that was self-produced on the own His Majesty label. These tracks sound like they're Backed by the Roots Radics and Mixed by Scientist - but that might not be the case. Some of it also has the sound of older backing tracks here like "Soldier Round The Corner" and "Lego Natty Hand" which uses the riddim of Horace Andy's "Ain't No Sunshine" which was also used for the Heptones song "Drifting Away". "Flood Victim" is about the disastrous floods of June 1979 caused by months of heavy rains in Western Jamaica, which claimed 42 lives and affected an estimated 160,000 people at a cost calculated around $60 million USD. "Everything Crash" is one of those perennial laments about rising food prices and the marketplace practice of "marrying" items into forced "package deals" in order to increase sales: the vendors won't sell you rice unless you buy cornmeal with it.

Pat Francis, better known as Jah Lion or Jah Lloyd, died on 12th June 1999, after he’d been living on the streets of Kingston for years, no money for food nor his asthma medications. He was a fine singer and deejay, who – as a teenager – ended up in the Trench Town area of Kingston after he was brought up by his farming father in a district call Point Hill, St Catherine, since his mother had died when he was eight years old. There he formed the Meditators, a vocal group consisting of himself, Paul Ashley and Aston Jennings. Their first recording was Darling Here I Stand on the Coxsone label, which was followed by When You Go To A Party and Look How You Bust Style on Rupie Edwards’ Success label.

Under his own name, he then recorded King Of Kings on the Upsetter label, followed by some more tunes. He then started deejaying under his moniker Jah Lloyd and together with longtime friend Mike Brooks he launched the Teem label in 1974. His finest hour came in 1976 when he collaborated with Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry on the Colombia Colly LP, which was recorded at the Black Ark Studios and gained a worldwide release on Island Records. Because Pery insisted on his ditching the name Jah Lloyd in favour of Jah Lion, the album was credited to Jah Lion. As Jah Lloyd he released the critically acclaimed albums The Humble One and Black Moses. Jah Lloyd was also involved in producing dub albums. Starting with the great 1974 released Herb Dub (issued in the US as Kaya Dub in 1975 and in the UK as Herbs Of Dub), Dread Lion Dub followed up his first dub set before he produced the Revolutionaries’ Goldmine Dub album, which was mixed at King Tubby’s Studio by Prince Jammy.

AKA Jah Lloyd – Reggae Stick [His Majesty – HM1002] 1979  

Jah Lloyd – Fiend Victim

Label: Tamoki-Wambesi-Dove – DHV2
Format: CD, Album, Reissue
Country: UK
Released: 2009
Genre: Reggae
Style: Roots Reggae

1. Reggae Stick 4:11
2. Wipe The Weeping Eyes 3:49
3. Girl Like You 4:15
4. Learn Your Culture 3:31
5. Leggo Natty Hand 2:21
6. Fiend Victim 2:28
7. Natty Come Over 2:45
8. No Sky Larking 2:20
9. Consumer Goods Married 2:03
10. Soldier Round The Corner 2:13

The Roots Radics – Roots Dub Style (Expanded Edition Corn-Fed Productions)

This album serves as a dub companion release to The Roots Radics - Two Time Girl.

HEAVIEST DUB very special.....sing jay dub wize style in parts ...not the usual dub that get bored sometimes,,,,heavy rockers -sevendubwarrior

Noel 'Sowell Radics' Bailey was an easy man to play music with, according to all legend ..
a man of considerable talent in all fields of Jamaican reggae music ..

In a scene known for acknowledging rivalries Sowell knew no enemies, such was his incredible talent and likeability. The Roots Radics as we know them wouldn't really have existed without him. The domination of drum ‘n bass is well documented but here, we have a man who knew exactly how to complement the driving riddims with his guitar work and it made a difference. On a trip to Canada in '81 to hook up with the Heptones' Leroy Sibbles, they put this selection together, featuring Radics mixes that had yet to be released in their dub versions. The bonus tracks are 4 12"s that Sowell put out between '1980 and '1982. -Corn-Fed

Roots Dub Style (1984) 

The Roots Radics – Roots Dub Style

Label: Corn-Fed Productions – CF 343
Format: CDr, Album, Reissue, Unofficial Release
Country: Netherlands
Released: 2019
Genre: Reggae
Style: Dub, Roots Reggae

Roots Dub Style (1984)
1. The Roots Radics– Listen Dub 2:59
2. The Roots Radics– Singing Dub 2:53
3. The Roots Radics– Today Dub 4:57
4. The Roots Radics– Two Time Dub Dub 3:41
5. The Roots Radics– False Dub 3:49
6. The Roots Radics– Pice Dub 3:04
7. The Roots Radics– Falling Dub 3:30
8. The Roots Radics– Jacket Dub 3:47
9. The Roots Radics– Look Dub 2:54
10. The Roots Radics– Come Dub 3:40
Bonus Cuts
11. Sowell & Radics– Wheel O' Matilda - Rub This Ya One Ya (UK 12") 3:12
12. Sowell & Radics– Caution - Bali Hi Special (UK 12") 4:12
13. Sowell & Radics– Fight Fight Fight - Aces Rock (UK 12") 4:04
14. Sowell & Radics– All Nite Dubbin' (UK 12") 3:32
15. Sowell & Radics– Wheel O' Matilda (UK 12") 5:51
16. Sowell & Radics– Caution (UK 12") 4:09
17. Sowell & Radics– Fight Fight Fight (UK 12") 7:42
18. Sowell & Radics– All Nite Jammin' (UK 12") 6:49

Notes
Expanded Edition
Corn-Fed Productions UK/NL/FR 2019 - CF 343 - A Labour Of Love Production

Tracks 1-10 from Canada Scorpio LP 'Roots Dub Style' OK 1011 (1982)
Tracks 11,15 from UK S&G 12" SG15 (1982)
Tracks 12,16 from UK Attack 12" TACK 24 (1980)
Tracks 13,17 from UK Trojan 12" TACK 27 (1980)
Tracks 14,18 from UK DATC 12" DATC006 (1981)

9/01/2025

Jah Stone – The Messiah 1978

Jah Stone
b. Gladstone Fisher, c.1953, Jamaica, West Indies.
After working as a DJ on a variety of sound systems, Fisher recorded as Jah Stone with Bim Sherman. In 1977 Sherman inaugurated his own Scorpio label and due to financial restraints, was forced to employ Jah Stone to deliver two separate chants over the same rhythm track. The association with Sherman led to the dancehall favourites ‘Fat Ting’ and ‘Burning’. His notoriety led to work with producer Alvin ‘GG’ Ranglin, who featured the DJ in combination with Freddie McKay on his remake of ‘Picture On The Wall’ and the solo hit ‘Ten Ton Woman’. He was also employed on the Sonia Pottinger production of ‘Baby Love’ by the reactivated vocal group the Sensations. In 1978 Jah Stone recorded for Doctor Alimantado, the sessions producing the assertive ‘Militant Dread’. In 1979 Jah Stone recorded in session with Winston Jarrett of the Righteous Flames, resulting in the release of ‘War’ and ‘Kaya’, both of which were later featured on The Messiah. Notable album tracks included the admonishing ‘Sergeant Black’, the bizarre ‘Kung Fu Ballet’ and the chauvinistic ‘Irie Lickle Filly’. Sadly, the album signalled his swan song, and in spite of this and his work with a number of Jamaican producers, Jah Stone is usually only recalled as the DJ who recorded with Bim Sherman. The 1997 release of a Freddie McKay compilation featuring Jah Stone demonstrated the latter’s versatility and rekindled interest in the DJ’s work.

 

Jah Stone – The Messiah  

Label: Gorgon Records – none
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album
Country: Jamaica
Released: 1978
Genre: Reggae
Style: Roots Reggae, Dub, Toasting
Source: ttou JC2022


A1 War (Jah Stone & The Rightous Flames) 3:43
A2 Kaya (Jah Stone & The Rightous Flames) 3:48
A3 Messiah (Jah Stone & The Love Brothers) 3:32 
A4 Jungle Collie (Jah Stone & The Rightous Flames) 3:12
A5 Jeweller (Jah Stone & The Rightous Flames) 3:36
B1 Sergeant Black (Jah Stone & Tony Shabazz) 2:39
B2 Kung Fu Ballet (Jah Stone & The Rightous Flames) 3:03
B3 Protection Line (Jah Stone & The Love Brothers) 3:03
B4 Born To Be Loved (Jah Stone & The Rightous Flames) 3:29
B5 Irie Little Filly (Jah Stone & The Rightous Flames) 2:51


Bonus Track
Jah Stone & GG's All Stars
A Ten Ton Woman / B Ten Ton Woman (Version) [Riddim: Black Cinderella] 7:14

Credits
Bass – Robert Shakespeare 
Bass, Guitar [Lead] – Ranchie McLean 
Bongos – Scully 
Drums – Sly Dunbar
Executive-Producer – Neville Lee
Percussion – Barnabas, Sticky 
Piano – Gladstone Anderson (tracks: A4)
Piano, Organ – Ansel Collins, Touter Harvey 
Producer – Tony Shabazz, Winston Jarrett
Saxophone [Alto] – Marquis 
Saxophone [Tenor] – Tommy McCook
Trombone – Trammy 
Trumpet – Bobby Ellis

8/31/2025

Glen Brown Feat. Tommy McCook & Bobby Ellis – Horny Dub (Expanded Edition)

 

Rare 1975 LP ft horns legend Tommy Mccook/Glen Brown, only came out on the white label format, meant to be released on Grounation, was never officially released, title was Horny Dub.

In the early 1970's Glennmore Brown was one of the most prolific and talented of producers, and he could also play a  mean melodica. His productions were usually of the roots variety, and he favoured instrumentals more than others of his day. Constantly re-cutting, remixing and overdubbing his favourite rhythms… No one knows how many actual records he put out in this style; this selection just scratches the surface.

A feature of his productions was the use of the harmonic power of the horn section. Tommy McCook, Bobby Ellis, Rod Wilson and more were usually on hand to lend a fierce melodic layer to his tunes. Some of them might only have been pressed in numbers of 100 - 200 copies, who knows..?
Here's a flavour to savour. - Corn-Fed

Glen Brown Feat. Tommy McCook & Bobby Ellis - Horny Dub (1976)

Label: Corn-Fed Productions – CF 038
Format: CDr, Album, Reissue, Unofficial Release
Country: Netherlands
Released: 2004
Genre: Reggae
Style: Roots Reggae, Dub

1. Tommy McCook – More Music 2:33
2. Tommy McCook – Gold Street Skank 3:07
3. Tommy McCook – Dirty Harry 3:23
4. Tommy McCook – Way Down South 2:41
5. Tommy McCook – Tubby's Control 3:37
6. Tommy McCook – Determination Skank 3:50
7. Tommy McCook – Music From The Southside 3:00
8. Tommy McCook – South Side Feeling 3:02
9. Tommy McCook – When I Fall In Love 3:04
10. Tommy McCook – Far Over Yonder 3:13
Bonus Tracks (1974-1976)    
11. Glen Brown – Crisp Like A Bell (UK 7") 2:50
12. Bongo Herman – Drums Of Africa (UK 7") 2:50
13. God's Children Band – Scatter Light Rock (UK 7") 2:37
14. Glen Brown – This Is It (UK 7") 2:55
15. Glen Brown – East Christmas Song (UK 7") 2:34
16. Glen Brown – Every Forward (UK 7") 2:55
17. Glen Brown – Imsperation Instrumental (UK 7") 2:00
18. Glen Brown – Meditating Our Own Way Of Life (UK 7") 3:02
19. Glen Brown – Mitchville Rock (UK 7") 2:30
20. Glen Brown – No More Slavery (UK 7") 3:25
21. Glen Brown – No More Slavery (South East Rock) (UK 7") 3:24
22. God Sons – Merry Up 3:33
23. God Sons – Merry Up Version (UK 7") 3:24
24. Glen Brown – At The Crossroads (UK 7") 3:19
25. Bobby Aitken – Mr. Bald Head Aitken (UK 7") 3:18
26. Tommy McCook & Rad Wilson – More Music (UK 7") 2:28

8/27/2025

Daniel Bachman – When The Roses Come Again

On 'When the Roses Come Again' Daniel Bachman returns to the past and does a wonderful job in skilfully blending his electronic touches with traditional music. Of his whole quartet of recent work, starting with 2018's Morning Star, this is his strongest . . . -Glenn Kimpton

Bachman has a dedicated fan base who is tightly focused on his next steps. While he has always been restless with his art, his stylistic changes in 2020's "Axacan" demonstrated - and excited - many within that fan base as to how transformative his work and vision can be for "traditional" music in these modern times. This fresh work continued with 2022's "Almanac Behind". "When The Roses Come Again" is a perfect next step to this trendline, a synthesis of tradition and abstraction. In other words, it is yet another vivid reimagining of what a "traditional" album can be in modern times. On this LP Bachman takes acoustic guitar, banjo, fiddle and mouth harp alongside oscillators, drum apps and more to construct one-man string band compositions. Integrating technology as a tool for collage, as well as acoustic instruments that pre-date all of us, Bachman excitingly creates an album that has as much to do with Terry Riley, Laraaji, Eno’s late 70’s ambient albums, and 75 Dollar Bill, as it does the Carter Family, Stanley Brothers, and Hobart Smith. "When The Roses Come Again" is destined to thrill those who have been so enamored with Bachman's past exciting turns as well as pull new folks into the folks who are excited by new sounds.

Daniel Bachman (born 1989) is an American Primitive guitarist, drone musician, and independent scholar from Fredericksburg, Virginia, United States.

The guitarist Daniel Bachman has announced a new album, When The Roses Come Again — his follow-up to Almanac Behind will come out almost exactly a year since his last one. He self-recorded When The Roses Come Again in a cabin near Shenandoah National Park, as he worked as a carpenter’s assistant and used his woodworking abilities to modify instruments of his own. Today, he’s sharing “Summer’s Fingers Sweetly Linger (Everywhere On Every Side)” from it.

“Like much of the record, this track features a cut and paste music making style that I’ve really come to enjoy lately,” he said in a statement. “The banjo melody that is woven over top of the fiddle and drum machine drone was assembled using hundreds of individual pieces of fretless banjo improvisations, where I cut each note, or series of notes out, and then rearranged, augmented, etc. until I found a new piece that I liked.”

He continued:

    The banjo is a cheap aluminum pot “Hondo” banjo that I got off ebay and then pulled all the frets from, giving it that fluid feel that floats right on top of the rhythm track. The songs title, “Summer’s Fingers Sweetly Linger (Everywhere On Everyside)”, like all the tracks on the record, comes from a traditional tune titled “When the Roses Come again”, which was played by the Carter Family and many more. While this record doesn’t sound much like traditional music from the early part of the 20 century, I used all stringband instruments to assemble it, even if they were heavily processed at times, and I personally think of When The Roses Come Again as my attempt at making a stringband record, playing the cycles of the seasons, their birth, death, and rebirth, from sunrise to sunset each day, and through every year here on Earth. -James Rettig

The fingerstyle experimentalist’s new album bends guitar, mouth bow, field recordings, and electronic detritus into vast tapestries of pliant drone.

By Philip Sherburne

“Recording is something I’m not terribly excited about,” Daniel Bachman admitted in 2017. “Things never come out the way I’d like them to.” The Fredericksburg, Virginia, fingerstyle prodigy had been making records for eight years at that point, beginning when he was just 19. But he’d been touring for even longer, since shortly after having his head “split open” by discovering John Fahey and Jack Rose at the tender age of 16. The music that Bachman plays—folk, ragtime, and blues, much of it very old—is a conversation between past and present, writer and interpreter, performer and audience. It’s a living thing. It’s easy to see how he might feel that sealing it off in the studio was a surefire way to see it die on the vine. But in recent years, Bachman has found a new approach to recording, approaching the studio as an instrument in its own right. Old yarn, new loom: On albums like Axacan, The Morning Star, and Almanac Behind, he wove folk and bluegrass together with bells, field recordings, and staticky scraps of radio into vast tapestries of pliant drone.

Bachman continues that method on When the Roses Come Again, though to call its place of origin a “studio” might be a stretch. He recorded the album on his laptop during a week’s worth of improvisations, eight hours a day, in a cabin where he worked as a carpenter’s assistant. He built or modified many of the instruments he used. He fashioned an Appalachian mouth bow, a single-stringed instrument of African origin, and de-fretted a banjo; he also availed himself of sound-making apps on his phone. Yet the overall feel is less turbulent than on the sprawling Axacan or the apocalyptic Almanac Behind. The focus has returned to the sounds of his guitar and banjo, which weave, snakelike, through shimmering fields of harmonium and electronic squeal.

Like all of Bachman’s work, When the Roses Come Again is all instrumental. In contrast to the dazzling pickwork of his early albums, much of the playing is tentative and muted, warily teasing out halting melodies from the greater tangle. There are no real songs to speak of—just scenes, which flow together as seamlessly as fields glimpsed from the window of a moving train. The album is clearly meant to be experienced as a single piece of music, and the pacing is immaculate. Introductory passages of pentatonic riffs and electronic pedal tones give way to gravelly mouth bowing and cascading sheets of feedback; noisy peaks ease off into spidery banjo and guitar. The recording’s fidelity sounds like a tape that’s been rescued from a truck at the bottom of a lake; the mix of drone and noise suggests a lineage with Henry Flynt, Tony Conrad, Flying Saucer Attack, and Wolf Eyes. (The mouth bowing, meanwhile, had me thinking about Tuvan throat singing and Attila Csihar’s work with Sunn O))).) Halfway through, the album rises to a feverish climax of squeaking and rattling—could there be a jackhammer in the mix?—that sounds like someone playing banjo along to a beaten-up copy of Metal Machine Music.

When the Roses Come Again feels like a companion to The Morning Star and Almanac Behind, the third record in a loose trilogy. Both of those albums were preoccupied with cyclical movements: The Morning Star, informed by the chaos of the Trump presidency, took cues from the 24-hour news cycle; Almanac Behind, a response to the climate emergency, depicted natural cycles being thrown out of joint. (Almanac Behind was even designed to be playable in an unbroken loop.) When the Roses Come Again zooms out to consider the cosmic cycle of existence. In a note accompanying the release, Bachman writes of his interest in capturing “the spiritual machinery” of birth, death, and rebirth: the seasonal course of his garden, the “churning of centuries” within his own family.

As is often the case in Bachman’s music, the album’s deeper conceptual meaning is never made obvious, but the songs’ titles may be a hint. Each one—“Neath the Shadow, Down the Meadow”; “Leaves Lying on Each Side”; “By the River, Flowers Shiver (Fading Dying in Their Pride),” etc.—is taken from the lyrics of an old bluegrass song, “When the Roses Come Again,” which the Carter Family wrote and first recorded in 1933. The titles follow more or less the order of the lines in the original song, and, much like the album’s song breaks, their relationship to the music might appear arbitrary. But those dying flowers and budding blossoms suit the album’s cyclical give and take. The meaning of the Carter Family’s song is ambiguous; a tale of a sorrowful leavetaking, it could be interpreted as a love song, but it is also heavy with deathly foreboding. It contains traces of Christian allegory, but also fainter fragments of much older, wilder ways of marking time. The song’s lyrics offer something like a spiritual scaffolding for Bachman’s questing melodies and unruly drones—a way of making sense of squalling vacillations that even their creator may not completely understand.

Continuing the trajectory of his releases over the past few years, Daniel Bachman moves further into the world of musique concrete, this time around combining played, found, and manipulated sounds on a laptop. Named for a Carter Family song, the words of which provide the titles for the tracks, When the Roses Come Again is a densely layered and highly detailed recording. Snatches of often heavily treated fretless banjo (sometimes with slide-like effects, as on “Till the roses come again”) and guitar share space with other sounds apparently attributable to a mouth bow (a simple one-stringed instrument for which the mouth serves as a resonator), fiddle, and samples of bells and harmonium, though these are less obvious.

The tracks are generally concise (only two exceed four minutes), but they blend together into a kind of suite. There is a satisfying balance among those that are fairly noisy, bordering on industrial (though not aggressive), such as “As I wander, I will ponder,” those that are more melodic and less dense, such as “Happy hearts that feel no pain,” and those in which the emphasis alternates between texture and melody, such as “On a summer over yonder.” Nearly always, a drone of some sort either provides the background or dominates, and the electronics or treated sounds sometimes create a rhythm, as on the closing track. The resulting blend of sweeter, more bucolic tones with shimmering and percussive electronics is initially disconcerting but comes to feel organic, like a kind of palimpsest.

It’s been fascinating to observe Bachman developing his approach to Americana from Takoma school guitar excursions to the very modern sounds featured on his recent recordings. His increasing attention to the overt symbols of roots music exemplified by his use of Carter Family material has coincided with increasing incorporation of technology and its artifacts (such as the recurring buzzes, hums, and rattles heard here). Whereas last year’s Almanac Behind used a similar approach to address the weighty, almost suffocating issue of climate change, the focus here is personal, on the cycle of death and rebirth that defines existence. This is, in other words, still serious music, yet it is not necessarily somber. Probably not coincidentally, When the Roses Come Again provides the perfect soundtrack for a drive through a land of woods, farms, and small towns dotted with Dollar General stores and cell towers. -Jim Marks

***

by Jeff Terich
November 19, 2023

Since at least as far back as 2018’s The Morning Star, Virginia guitarist and soundscapist Daniel Bachman has been allowing more space between the music he actively makes and that which once defined his earlier works. From his early twenties, he made a name for himself as an American primitivist guitarist in the tradition of John Fahey or Robbie Basho, with an increasing tendency toward lengthier drones and raga-influenced hypnotic sustain. Over time, the pluck and sweep of steel strings has given way to heavier sheets of electronics and glitching effects, the sound of a corrupted nth generation recording of Americana offering only fleeting glimpses of the more direct and immediate folk that comprised his own early catalog.

On last year’s Almanac Behind, a distorted and abstract weather-focused quilt of field recordings and lo-fi instrumentals, Bachman pursued that idea to its farthest limits. When the Roses Come Again doesn’t feel as if it’s intended to pivot off that idea so much as it’s in conversation with that record and, more broadly, all of Bachman’s work to date. He composed and recorded each of its songs with traditional American folk instruments, like an aluminum pot banjo he bought on eBay, then put them through various layers of effects and processing after the fact, its seamless sequence of music like that of a patchwork of samples stitched together with hum and static.

At its simplest, When the Roses Come Again is a showcase for Bachman’s own beautifully meditative playing, moments like “Leaves lying on each side” a stark flutter of plucked strings that rush in like a soothing breeze. Yet such relatively straightforward moments are few and far between, Bachman sounding not like he’s playing these instruments so much as channeling them via seance, building a majestic and resonant series of drones on “By the river, flowers shiver (Fading dying in their pride)”, setting distressed guitar recordings against a thumping heartbeat pulse on “I must leave you someone’s saying,” and employing simple banjo arpeggios as a foundation upon which to build an ultimately grander and more cinematic piece with “On a summer over yonder (with joy to you and I)”. By the end of side two standout “Someone’s Roaming In the Gloaming,” the suggestion of inclement weather on the horizon becomes a full-blown storm, white noise turning to majestic walls of distortion.

Bachman has said that When the Roses Come Again was inspired by cycles of birth, death and renewal, his music not just in conversation with itself, but with more than a century of American roots music. It’s an album that speaks through the instruments of folk and bluegrass musicians before him, Bachman both resurrecting sounds of generations upon generations and filtering them through states of distortion and decay. It just as often channels the haunted frequencies of Tim Hecker’s ambient disintegration as it does traditional acoustic music. When the Roses Come Again is a breathtaking meditation on past, present and future, the terrestrial realm and the beyond, drawing beauty from that which has faded, wilted and returned to the earth.

***

An album of old timey-new timey one-man-string-and-glitch-band music proves a balm for Jon Buckland

Jon Buckland
Published 10:24am 7 December 2023

When The Roses Come Again feels like it was recorded by someone standing at the entrance to a barn, looking out across the plains as spring turns to summer and summer into autumn. And there’s a good reason for that – it was. Daniel Bachman holed up in a cabin in the Shenandoah National Park with little more than a laptop and a set of handmade instruments (including an Appalachian mouth bow) and, although this Virginia retreat is a good 11 hour drive from Chicago, the bucolic folk-fingering on display gives the sense that he was gazing out upon the same grand vistas as Pan American.

An idling engine here, the wriggle of a reclining rattlesnake there. The clank of cowbells signalling a disturbed herd tottering up a hill. On ‘By The River, Flowers Shiver (Fading dying in their pride)’ double-strummed strings cause glorious waves of silver to rise as Bachman veers away from traditional scales and, instead, appears to be attacking the instruments like a man chopping wood.

Pan American isn’t the only touch point. ‘Someone Straying, Long Delaying’ sounds akin to John Fahey covering the Sun City Girls. Or vice versa. And the finger-picked ambience of ‘Sunshine Over Clover Blossom On The Meadow Wide’ is pure Bad Timing-era Jim O’Rourke. This is more than mere imitation, however. Bachman is building on his forebears. And he certainly has forebears to build upon – he’s related, on his mother’s side, to the Hostetler Blind Family Band. A mid-19th century string band, all born blind (including some born without eyes). When The Roses Come Again is his own one-man-string-and-glitch-band.

Which brings us to another aspect of the record: how it entwines with (more) modern technology. There’s an oscillator-drawn drone coursing throughout the album, linking tracks together like an aural paste, and the finale is formed from a faltering loop of softly padding noise which Bachman picks his gently reverb-ed guitar lines over. Metallic scrapes and whirrs fill in for rusting birds announcing a new dawn on ‘As I wander, I will ponder (On a happy by and by)’, which, like the rising sun banishing the night, expels an air of despondence which had permeated the front half of the record.

Shackled to that late optimism is an interest in obsolete electronics. Particularly those used for communication. ’Someone’s Roaming In The Gloaming’, for example, features a treated voice skipping vowels and clashing consonants as if a distant answerphone has developed a stutter. The penultimate track burbles and gurgles like a sputtering fax machine whereas opener, ‘Neath The Shadow, Down The Meadow’, sounds like someone trying to mash a banjo through a dial-up modem.

Communicative loss seems to be at the heart of these archaic electronics struggling to transmit their messages. When juxtaposed with the permeating air of folk-y tranquility, it’s difficult to ignore Bachman’s implied yearning for a simpler age. And who can blame him? The world’s a lot right now. Maybe it always has been and always will be. Still, pulling up a chair and surveying a vast expanse, with little more than a six string and a crackling phone line, sure sounds lovely.

Daniel Bachman, “When The Roses Come Again”

Label: Three Lobed Recordings – TLR-149
Format: CD, Album
Country: US
Released: Nov 17, 2023
Style: Americana, Psych Folk, Country
Visit: https://danielbachman.bandcamp.com/


1. Neath The Shadows, Down The Meadow 0:37
2. Leaves Lying On Each Side 2:41
3. By The River, Flowers Shiver (Fading Dying In Their Pride) 2:57
4. Someone Straying, Long Delaying 3:45
5. Sad The Parting Down The Lane 1:24
6. I Must Leave You Someone's Saying 4:14
7. Till The Roses Come Again 3:15
8. As I Wander, I Will Ponder (On A Happy By And By) 2:48
9. On A Summer Over Yonder (With Joy To You And I) 3:25
10. Sunshine Over Clover Blossom On The Meadow Wide 2:43
11. Summer's Fingers Sweetly Linger (Everywhere On Every Side) 4:21
12. Someone's Roaming In The Gloaming 2:26
13. Happy Hearts That Feel No Pain 2:38
14. All Their Sadness Turned To Gladness 1:21
15. Now The Roses Come Again 4:08

Credits
Cover, Illustration – Sarah Bachman
Guitar, Banjo, Fiddle – Daniel Bachman
Harmonium, Handbell – Tyler Magill (tracks: 03, 05, 10)
Layout, Design – Darryl Norsen
Mastered By – Chuck Johnson
Photography – Daniel Bachman

Notes
All guitar, banjo, fiddle, mouthbow and other instruments performed by Daniel Bachman.
Harmonium and hand bells on tracks 3, 5 and 10 played by Tyler Magill.
Source materials recorded between March 4-10, 2023. Edited between April-July 2023. All recording and edited done in Weakley Hollow / Banco, Madison County, Virginia.
Photographs by Daniel Bachman.
Cover illustration by Sarah Bachman.
Layout/design by Darryl Norsen.
Mastering by Chuck Johnson.

8/26/2025

Anton Garcia Abril & Marcello Giombini – ...4..3..2..1... Morte (Original Soundtrack)



Prima edizione LP di sempre, esclusiva Record Store Day 2025

Soundtrack for the 1967 sci-fi cult movie '...4..3..2..1 Morte' based on the popular german novels about Perry Rhodan. Music composed, arranged and conducted by Antón García Abril and Marcello Giombini. Seli by Marcello Giombini.

"4.3.2.1. Morte" - Perry Rohodan (Aka Mission Stardust) Original soundtrack by Marcello Giombini. Movie directed by Primo Zeglio.
The original score was mainly composed by Marcello Giombini, with few themes created together with Maestro Anton Garcia Abril. The movie score is a pure Vintage cinematic experience of sounds and retro melodies.

A team of astronauts is sent to the moon to rescue an alien who is seeking help to save her dying race. They are attacked by a force of bandit robots and discover that enemy spies are out to kill the alien.

“...4..3..2..1…Morte” is a 1967 sci-fi movie directed by Primo Zeglio, based on the adventures of the astronaut Perry Rhodan, a character created by Walter Ernsting. All’epoca di questa colonna sonora non fu pubblicato nulla, neppure un 45 giri. Not a single note was released at the time, not even a 45rpm.

Starting from the original mono master tapes of the recording session, it has been possible to assemble an album that will delight fans of fantastic cinema and lounge music. 15 tracks have been selected, for an excellent sound experience that will take the listener into space-time dimensions with the sound colours of the late sixties. The crystal voice of Edda Dell’Orso, accompanied by the prestigious choir of Alessandro Alessandroni’s Cantori Moderni performs the wild danceable beat track “Seli”, written by Marcello Giombini, introduced in the opening (A1) and closing credits (B7), and reprised in three different instrumental versions (A5, B1, B3). To describe the perils of outer space, Antón García Abril and Marcello Giombini wrote musical themes that flirt with experimental music, thanks to organ effects and Cantori Moderni’s voices (A2, A6, A8, B2, B5), but also to tribal sounds (A4), exotic-espionage atmospheres (A7), chase music (A3), shake (B4) and a military march shading into noir sensations (B5).


Anton Garcia Abril & Marcello Giombini – ...4..3..2..1... Morte

Label: GDM – CD CLUB 7002
Format: CD, Album, Remastered
Country: Italy
Released: 2001
Genre: Electronic, Jazz
Style: Downtempo, Experimental, Easy Listening
Source: Digital


1. Seli - Main Title 2:37
2. 4 3 2 1 Morte (Sequence 1) 1:20
3. 4 3 2 1 Morte (Sequence 2) 1:57
4. Seli - Love Theme (Version 1) 2:34
5. 4 3 2 1 Morte (Sequence 3) 3:01
6. 4 3 2 1 Morte (Sequence 4) 1:55
7. 4 3 2 1 Morte (Sequence 5) 3:30
8. Seli (Instrumental) 4:39
9. 4 3 2 1 Morte (Sequence 6) 1:56
10. Seli - Love Theme (Version 2) 1:59
11. 4 3 2 1 Morte (Sequence 7) 3:53
12. 4 3 2 1 Morte (Sequence 8) 4:46
13. 4 3 2 1 Morte (Sequence 9) 2:45
14. 4 3 2 1 Morte (Sequence 10) 3:00
15. Seli (End Title) 2:20