Formats and Editions
1. Tommy McCook - Tommy's Vibration
2. Johnny Clarke - No Babylon Shall Escape In This Time
3. Jah Smile - Ethiopian Rock
4. Lennox Brown ; Sheila Rickards - Jamaican Fruit Of African Roots
5. Ronnie Davis - Every Knee Shall Bow
6. Cornell Campbell - King Tubby's vs Arrows Dubplate
7. Al Campbell - One Room Shack
8. John Forbes - War Zone
9. Linval Thompson - Look How Long Nyabinghi Calling You
10. The Raver - Life Of My Own
11. The Aggrovators - Bell Road Rock
12. Cornell Campbell - Keep On Runnin
13. U Roy - The Right To Live
14. Al Campbell - Wicked A Go Feel It
15. Tommy McCook - Joe Frazier
16. Johnny Clarke ; Horace Andy - No Man Is An Island
17. Linval Thompson - Go Jah Jah Pickney
18. Johnny Clarke - Better Collie
19. Bobby Ellis ; Val Bennett - The Arabian Sound Of Reggae
20. Cornell Campbell - Bunny Lee ; King Tubby's Dubplate Special
More Info:
Bunny Lee recorded a massive volume of remarkably consistent music in the 70s. This compilation brings together rare and unreleased cuts that puts the listener at the center of a typical recording session, complete with false starts and studio banter. Linval Thompson is represented by two unreleased tunes, and is also heard in the runup to 'Tommy's Vibration'. 'Ethiopian Rock', a total scorcher, is the only recorded tune by the deejay Jah Smile before Bunny persuaded him to turn to singing and changed his name to Barry Brown. In a healthy spirit of competition, Bunny would often try out different singers on tunes that he thought would hit, hence Ronnie Davis's soulful take on Johnny Clarke's 'Every Knee Shall Bow', Johnny's version of Horace Andy's 'Better Collie', and Johnny and Horace sharing vocals on 'No Man Is An Island', all unreleased until now. 'No Babylon Shall Escape In This Time' has Johnny Clarke and 'Bongo' Herman Davis recorded over the original version side of Johnny's 'None Shall Escape The Judgement'. 'Life Of My Own' is a beautifully constructed lament by a singer who neither Bunny nor various expert ears have managed to identify: at Bunny's suggestion he is credited as 'The Raver'. 'War Zone' and 'Keep On Running' are examples of Tubby's mixes that have had further effects dubbed on elsewhere; sound systems and foreign record labels occasionally did this to manufacture their own specials from existing mixes. 'Jamaican Fruit Of African Roots' has recently been the subject of the fascinating documentary 'Shella Record: A Reggae Mystery'; the Lennox Brown cut here has only just been discovered. Also included are two stinging dubplates by Cornell Campbell: the first is aimed straight to the head of Arrows sound system, while the second, recorded in the early 80s, sums up the vital partnership of two of Jamaica's musical giants.