ALL GENRES

WEEK STARTING 17 May

The first in a series of mini compilations exploring instrumental dub versions of sought after and long out of print titles from the world of reggae, disco, boogie and house. Many of these versions still contain vocals, snippets here and there drenched in delay or reverb, a style you’ll recognise from many of the Jura Soundsystem edits on the label. The late Glen Adams & Finesse open proceedings with their Island disco cover of Marvin Gaye’s classic, followed on the A2 by a super rare UK boogie / Brit funk mix of Tippa Irie’s ‘Panic Panic’ (shouts to Tippa for personally helping to push through the license) and the A side closes with the 80’s leaning ‘Yes I Do’ from Belgium’s Special Occasion. The first half of the B side comes from Carol Williams with the Special Club Dub mix of ‘Can’t Get Away’, originally a one sided promo only 10” from 1983 complete with spoken word intro from Carol thanking New York’s Metro DJs for their support of the song. The LP closes with a Jura Soundsystem Dubby Edit of La Palace De Beaute’s ‘Sin’ pulling back on the vocal and going heavy on the delay.

STAFF COMMENTS

Matt says: Went criminally under-the-radar first time it was released in 2022. Strangely, volume 2 blew up! I think these five versions are just as hot as that material, so nice that Isle Of Jura have repressed for slow coaches like me who missed it first time round.

TRACK LISTING

Glen Adams & Finesse - Sexual Instrumental
Tippa Irie - Panic Panic (Express Mix)
Special Occasion - Yes I Do (12” Instrumental Mix)
Carol Williams - Can’t Get Away (From Your Love) (Special Club Dub Mix)
La Palace De Beaute - Sin (Jura Soundsystem Dub)

Various Artists

Jazz Dispensary: The Freedom Sound! The People Arise

    Let the sound of the night drums and the cry of the horns empower you! The crate diggers of Jazz Dispensary are proud to present a collection of jams propelled by the spirit of nature, protest, and freedom, featuring songs from pioneering musicians Joe Henderson, Gary Bartz, Ran Blake, Azar Lawrence, A.K. Salim, and The Dungills. 



    TRACK LISTING

    SIDE A:
    1. Afro-Centric – Joe Henderson
    2. Freedom One Day – Gary Bartz Quintet
    3. Theme For A New Day – Azar Lawrence
    SIDE B:
    4. Afrika – A.K. Salim
    5. Night Drums – The Dungills
    6. Three Seeds (A Suite): I) Regis Debray; II) Che Guevara; III) Malcolm – Ran Blake

    Various Artists

    Soft Summer Breezes

      Following in the wake of baroque chart toppers by the Zombies, Beatles, and the Left Banke, a dandier approach to garage rock flowered in the back half of the ’60s. Awash in majestic harpsichords, lilting guitars, melancholic organs, and middle school orchestras, Soft Summer Breezes captures the decade’s last gasps of optimism via 16 gentle moments of soft psychedelia.

      TRACK LISTING

      SIDE A
      1. Life - Life
      2. The Giant Crab - Soft Summer Breezes
      3. Attila & The Huns - Here’s Where I Get Off
      4. Lenny Roybal - Little Daisy
      5. Margo Guryan - Can You Tell
      6. J.C. Horton - Why Why Why
      7. Richard Holman - Gentle Flying Dove
      8. The Sound Control - When Will It End

      SIDE B
      1. The Goodthings - The Journey
      2. Jerry Benicaso - Wounds Heal And Birds Fly Free
      3. Bob Belche - Fall On Me Rain
      4. Pisces - A Flower For All Seasons
      5. Female Species - Baby Buggy
      6. The Morning Sun - Someday
      7. Larry Sands & The Sound Affair - You’ll Know The Words
      8. The New Colony Six - The Time Of The Year Is Sunset

      Various Artists

      That Ska Beat! 1962-1966

        Ska never stopped you know! From it’s Jamaican music if the piano’s not playing ska or the guitar… any music you have… reggae… even the computer music… the piano’s playing ‘ska, ska, ska…’ it leads the music so ska is still the backbone of Jamaican music. Right?” Bunny Lee

        The music of Jamaica has had a profound and lasting influence all around the world and reggae is the name by which it has become universally known. Although the term ska is often used to describe all Jamaican music before dub, deejays and dread in the mid seventies the real Jamaican ska was made in Kingston between 1961/1962 and 1966.

        In the early fifties the popularity of driving rhythm & blues from the USA reached fever pitch in Jamaica and mobile sound systems (the forerunners of today’s discos) were assembled and operated by men such as Tom ‘The Great Sebastian’ Wong to play this music to wildly appreciative audiences at levels that were felt physically rather than merely heard. Competition was fierce, both metaphorically and literally, and sound system operators including Arthur Reid, ‘Duke Reid The Trojan’, and Clement Dodd, ‘Sir Coxsone The Downbeat’, would travel to America on record buying expeditions. On their triumphant return to Kingston, laden with exclusive records, they would be met by their enthusiastic supporters. Only the followers of their sound systems could hear these records and the records’ real identity would be a closely guarded secret. The titles were often scratched off and the tunes renamed to confuse the opposition.

        As the decade drew to a close America turned to a softer more mellow sound and supplies of the music favoured in Jamaica began to dry up… so the sound system operators began to make their own rhythm & blues recordings. Initially intended for sound system play only on one-off acetates these tunes proved so popular that they were soon made commercially available. Many sound men now became record producers including ‘Sir Coxsone’, Duke Reid ‘The Trojan’ and Prince Buster ‘The Voice Of The People’ although the first ‘local’ recording to make the number one spot in Jamaica was Laurel Aitken’s ‘Boogie In My Bones’/‘Little Sheila’ on Chris Blackwell’s R & B label.

        The emphasis was placed firmly on the offbeat and these rhythm & blues shuffle and boogie recordings were unmistakably Jamaican in form and content and far, far more than straightforward copies of American rhythm & blues. A sound was gradually created that was not only completely new and original but that would also go on to outlive a large proportion of its influences. Powered by the musical collective known as The Skatalites together with solo singers including Derrick Morgan, Eric ‘Monty’ Morris, duos Higgs & Wilson, Keith & Enid and Stranger & Patsy and vocal groups The Maytals, The Wailers, Justin Hinds & The Dominoes the producers now began to drive the music one step beyond. Together they created an entirely new genre of music whose inventions and innovations would reach far beyond its parochial beginnings in Kingston sound system rivalry.


        TRACK LISTING

        1. Ska Boo Da Ba – The Skatalites
        2. Confucious – Don Drummond & The Skatalites
        3. Storm Warning – Lyn Taitt & The Boys
        4. Alley Cat Ska – Tommy McCook & His Ska-Talites
        5. Trench Town People – Theophilus Beckford
        6. Walking Down King Street – Theophilus Beckford
        7. South China Sea – Johnny ‘Dizzy’ Moore
        8. Ringo – The Skatalites
        9. Nuclear Weapon – Roland Alphonso & His Ska-Talites
        10. Magnificent Ska – Lyn Taitt & The Baba Brooks Band
        11. Come On My People – Daniel Johnson
        12. Hit You Let You Feel It – The Tenor Twins
        13. The Re-Burial – Don Drummond & The Skatalites
        14. Love Me Or Leave Me – Lloyd Clarke
        15. A Shot In The Dark – Roland Alphonso*
        16. Distant Drums – Baba Brooks & The Trenton Spence Orchestra*
        *CD Bonus Tracks

        Various Artists

        The Best Of Rare Mod

          The ’Rare Mod’ series has been one of the most enduring Acid Jazzcurated comps of recent years. This included the CD Volumes 1-3 and a 3CD Boxset, uncovering a host of lost classics that capture sound of the original Mod scene: Hard R’n’B, Beat & Soul, and archetypal Pop from the 1960s.

          For the first time, the Best Of… is available on vinyl, with choice selections from across the series, presented in a hip, evocative sleeve, with printed inner, and on orange transparent vinyl. The track-list contains a couple from the legendary Fleur De Lys, as well as a track from their brief billing as ‘Shyster’. Elsewhere, there are several productions from unsung hero and prolific session man Graham Dee, and even a turn from young David Bowie performing with The Riot Squad!

          An absolute must-have collection of the less-heard tracks from one of the most iconic periods of British music.

          TRACK LISTING

          1. Mud In My Eye – The Fleur De Lys
          2. It’s A Hard Way – Cathedral
          3. She’s Got The Time – The Afex
          4. Tick Tock – Shyster
          5. Big Bird – Dog Soul
          6. I’m A Man – The Top Six
          7. I’m Waiting For The Man – The Riot Squad
          8. We Can Make It Together – Tony & Tandy
          9. A Love I Believe In – Maxine
          10. Brick By Brick (Stone By Stone) – Fleur De Lys
          11. Soul Ride – Mike Berry
          12. Just A Little Misunderstanding – Richard Kent Style
          13. Sing A Simple Song – Ossie Lane Show
          14. Mr. Super Cool – Graham Dee

          Next up and with a label debut is one of the leading Female artists on the circuit, Tini Gessler! Tini dropped some straight-up club fire on our sister label Toolroom Trax earlier in the year alongside Juliet Sikora and digs deep into her clubby roots once again with 'Do What You Want'. After releases on the mighty Drumcode, Sola and Kittball in recent years, her 10 year career is going from strength to strength which is seeing her DJ all over the Globe on a weekly basis and her music production is making huge waves within the industry, and rightly so. Next up Italian born DJ and producer, CASSIMM is back on Toolroom with a straight up club weapon! After laying down the delicious disco number last year called 'Get On The Funk' with Kid Enigma, this follows suit perfectly and fuses chunky beats, disco licks and has Bruno Blanc sharing some sentimental lyrics about how important house music is to all of us. Last but not least, French artist Tony Romera is back on Toolroom with another slice of Tech House fire. Tony Romera first stepped onto the scene 10 years ago as a fresh-faced 20 year old looking to make waves and disrupt the electronic music world with his unique style and French-house inspired beats. Since then he's been busy releasing music and experimenting with different sounds and styles, putting out music on a range of powerhouse labels and gaining support from the likes of Diplo, Fisher, Chris Lake, Fatboy Slim, Deadmau5, Vintage Culture, Adam Beyer and more. House Y'all's distinct character is built upon a warped, creeping bassline and tough, relentless beats providing an irresistible pulsing backdrop as the familiar chanted vocal emerges. A sonic trip that transports you deep into the heart of the underground.

          TRACK LISTING

          A1. Piero Pirupa - Party (Extended Mix)
          A2. Tini Gessler - Do What You Want (Extended Mix)
          B1. CASSIMM, Bruno Blanc - House Affair (Extended Mix)
          B2. Tony Romera - House Y'all (Extended Mix)


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