Studio One: Black Man's Pride (2LP)


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Format: 2LP 
Label: Soul Jazz Records 
Year: 2018 
Condition: New 

A1 Alton Ellis: Black Man's Pride
A2 Horace Andy: Child Of The Ghetto
A3 Dennis Brown: Created By The Father
A4 The Gladiators: Roots Natty

B1 The Classics: Got To Be Cool
B2 The Nightingales: Rasta Is Calling
B3 Glen Miller: Love And Understanding
B4 Sugar Minott: Woman Shadow

C1 Lloyd Jones And The Super Natural Six: Red In Babylon
C2 Dudley Sibley And The Soul Gang: Love In Our Nation
C3 The Heptones: Equal Rights
C4 Glen Miller: You Must Be Love
C5 Winston Jarrett: Up Park No Mans Land

D1 Cedric "Im" Brooks: Why Can't I
D2 Larry Marshall: Let's Make It Up
D3 Freddie McGregor: Children Listen To Wise Words
D4 John Holt: Build Our Dreams
D5 Johnny Osbourne: Forgive Them

Deep righteous reggae, featuring Horace Andy, Alton Ellis, The Gladiators, Sugar Minott, The Heptones, Freddie McGregor, Cedric Brooks & more.

While the righteousness of blackness is at the heart of the Rastafarian faith, this collection illustrates how black pride remained a central theme, if not the defining essence, at the very core of all the music created at Studio One Records under the direction of Clement 'Sir Coxsone' Dodd. In order to understand the centrality of black identity in the music created at Studio One, we need look no further than Clement 'Sir Coxsone' Dodd who created the first black-owned record company in Jamaica.

In similar fashion Alton Ellis's defining 'Black Man's Pride' brings up emotions that are at the heart of many of these uplifting songs. Alton Ellis' birthplace was the Trench Town ghetto of Kingston, also the birthplace of The Wailers, Ken Boothe and many other Studio One luminaries. Clement Dodd established a musical empire firmly rooted by the core musicians working at Studio One, many of whom came out of the Alpha School for Wayward Boys, essentially an orphanage run by Roman Catholic nuns, whose luminaries include Don Drummond, Johnny Moore, Leroy 'Horsemouth' Wallace, Cedric Brooks, Vin Gordon, Tommy McCook & more.

Many of the songs featured here come from the transitory phase in reggae at the start of the 1970s, after the exhilaration of Ska and following the cooling down of Rocksteady. While reggae awaited the arrival of roots, Studio One's vocalists were already producing some of the moodiest music imaginable.

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