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BOB MARLEY – DON’T ROCK MY BOAT (VOCAL TRACK-ONLY VERSION). 1969

August 12th | Posted by: NMJ

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A vocal track-only version of ABON 0043. Made possible by Lee Perry releasing the track in basic 2-channel format, which means that you can (almost) isolate the vocals from the rhythm track by turning one speaker off.

Listening to Bob Marley singing his vocals in isolation is such a spine-chilling experience that I’ve posted the vocal-only version as well.

Recorded 1969.

The sessions are available on many compilations. However the only one I know for sure that exists in the original 2-channel format is the 2 CD set ‘Soul Revolution Volumes 1 and 2′ which I think is not currently available new: Amazon. And the version on this post only exists when you turn the left speaker off – a trick I was first introduced to by my Reggae-loving friend, Luc Basier.

ABON 0043. 1969. BOB MARLEY AND THE WAILERS – DON’T ROCK MY BOAT

August 12th | Posted by: NMJ

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There are two things that make this track special.

First of all, it was in the sessions that created ‘Don’t Rock My Boat’ that the Reggae Beat of the ’70′s was effectively created.
Although they had released many singles since their first in 1963, it wasn’t until 1969 that The Wailers first recorded with Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry behind the controls of the mixing desk. The Perry-produced sessions were a revelation and a landmark. Rougher and less polished than the Wailers’ or Bob Marley’s later recordings for Island Record, they also have none of the Rock leanings (such as the lead guitar figures) of the later work. What they do have however is the first fully developed Reggae Beat. It feels like all the various, often wonderful, musical styles and experiments of Jamaican music in the ’60′s finally get distilled into the way forward that everyone been looking for all along. Delivered in beautifully pure unadulterated form. No need for superfluous effects or solos because they had discovered the rhythm. And in the first glow of discovery The Wailers (and even Lee Perry who would warp it to within an inch of its life over the next 10 years) decided to leave it in all its naked new-born glory.

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ABON 0014. 1973. THE UPSETTERS – V/S PANTA ROCK

June 30th | Posted by: NMJ

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From the very late ’60′s to the very late ’70′s much of the most inventive and rhythmically exciting music came out of Jamaica. Dub was a vital part of this output. It had its origins in the Sound System – bass-heavy portable disco’s where in the late ’60′s DJ’s began to ‘toast’ live vocals over instrumental B-sides of 45′s. This in turn stimulated studio producers to start experimenting with these same instrumental B-sides to create a whole new genre called Dub.

By the time we get to 1973, the two most prominent Dub producers, Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry (leader/creator/producer of The Upsetters) and King Tubby, had turned it into a sublime art form capable of producing pieces of sound that contained equal measures of infectious drum and bass-heavy rhythm and unrestrained inventiveness. Even though many many Dubs would eventually emanate from literally the same original instrumental track, a master Dub mixer could produce a piece of music that was both unique and completely surprising through his or her use of echo, reverb, various other special effects (some usually of the herbal variety) and a dollop of unrestrained imagination.

Dub also introduced us to the concept of the producer/mixer/re-mixer/studio-technician as creative originator. Using the mixing desk as a musical instrument and existing instrumental tracks as musical elements to be bent, reshaped and remixed into completely new songs. Post-modernism before anyone this side of the Atlantic (except possibly in Germany – see ABON 0003) had even heard the phrase. And of course one of its greatest legacies is the cult of the remix in the music scene of today.

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August 4th | Posted by: NMJ

PINETOP SMITH’S ORIGINAL

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the vault

Tracks are usually filed in the Vault in the year they were released. There are exceptions:

a. very old tracks tend to be filed in the year they were recorded and

b. anything that has been released for the first time many years after it was recorded has been filed in the year of recording rather than release.

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