Black Slate - "Sticks Man" (3:35)
Dee Sharp - "Rising To The Top" (4:42)
Asher Senator - "One Bible" (5:02)
Digital Mystikz - "Misty Winter" (4:53)
Winston Curtis - "Be Thankful For What You've Got" (5:35)
Trevor Hartley - "It Must Be Love" (3:24)
Shut Up & Dance - "Java Bass" (3:51)
Brown Sugar - "Black Pride" (3:25)
The Terrorist - "RK1" (6:26)
Black Harmony - "Don't Let It Go To Your Head" (7:18)
Pebbles - "Positive Vibrations" (3:46)
The Ragga Twins - "Ragga Trip" (4:36)
Funk Masters - "Love Money" (6:30)
Cosmic Idren - "Compelled" (3:36)
Harry Beckett - "No Time For Hello" (8:44)
Janet Kay & Alton Ellis - "Still In Love" (3:31)
Sandra Reid - "Ooh Boy" (3:47)
Tabby Cat Kelly - "Don't Call Us Immigrants" (5:46)
Brown Sugar - "I'm In Love With A Dreadlocks" (3:24)
Review: The latest collection from the mighty Soul Jazz draws together a myriad of different styles favoured by black British sound systems, not only reflecting the roots of different communities reaching these shores but also the UK twist that that music has received as result. Reggae forms the backbone of the collection, from the blissful consciousness of Pebbles' 'Positive Vibrations' to the more protest-orientated Brown Sugar's 'Black Pride' and Tabby Cat Kelly's 'Don't Call Us Immigrants'. But the presence of Shut Up & Dance, Ragga Twins, Ray Keith aka The Terrorist and Digital Mystikz helps show the uniquely British areas into which sound system culture evolved - rave, breakbeat, jungle and dubstep.
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