Cooly

Freedom

Image of Cooly - Freedom
Record Label
333

About this item

Rare as hen's teeth digital dancehall from out of late 80s/early 90s NYC, via Cooly aka Koolindian aka Super Cat's cousin Andrew Maragh, originally released on his own Mad Indian Records - reissued here for Death Is Not The End sub-label 333.

Maragh sang in church choirs and on soundsystems in Jamaica before moving to New York in the 1980s where he quickly became involved on the underground music circuit, taking inspiration from his cousin the legendary Super Cat. "Freedom" was penned while he was incarcerated, and details the unfairness of the judicial system at that time, alongside the heartfelt need to "hustle everyday to make ends meet, whether that's picking up scrap metal or cutting lawns or voicing dubplates, whatever you do to make a dollar", says Maragh.

Having bought an Ampex tape in Manhattan, Maragh headed over to the legendary Philip Smart's HC&F studio on Long Island with the intention of laying down his lyrics on the version to Dennis Brown's "Children of Israel". After hearing the song however, Smart went ahead and built this one-away "Freedom" rhythm on the spot. The track was then carried to Count Shelly's Super Power Records where it was then pressed & distributed as the first and only release on the Mad Indian label around the turn of 1989/1990.

STAFF COMMENTS

Matt says: Absolutely blessed with digital reggae vibes at the moment with the ongoing Digi Killer campaign alongside this special release from Cooly. Amazing how many truly rare records are still yet to be excavated from the reggae and dub genre (surely in part due to all the wild west style, illicit pressing that has characterized the industry). Currently only one available 2nd hand - and it'll set you back three ton!

TRACK LISTING

1. Freedom
2. Freedom Version

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