Sly & Robbie - Make 'Em Move / Taxi Style - An Introduction To (2003)

  • 06 Oct, 19:40
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Artist:
Title: Make 'Em Move / Taxi Style - An Introduction To
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: UMC (Universal Music Catalogue)
Genre: Reggae, Dub
Quality: FLAC (tracks) | Mp3 / 320kbps
Total Time: 01:05:36
Total Size: 406 MB | 150 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist
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01. Black Uhuru - Whole World Is Africa
02. Dennis Brown - Hold On To What You Got
03. Sly Dunbar - Hot You're Hot
04. Gregory Isaacs - Oh What A Feeling
05. Junior Delgado - Merry Go Round
06. Mighty Diamonds - Pass The Kouchie (12" Version)
07. Sugar Minott - Rub-A-Dub Sound (Rub A Dub)
08. Jimmy Riley - My Woman's Love
09. The Rolands - Johnny Dollar
10. Sly & Robbie - Make 'Em Move (Album Version)
11. Sly & Robbie - Boops (Here To Go) (feat. Shinehead)
12. Sly & Robbie - Fire
13. The Tamlins - Smiling Faces Sometimes
14. Wailing Souls - Sweet Sugar Plum

Like all of the Island releases in the "an introduction to" series covering artists that actually did some-to-much non-Island recording, this isn't a complete career survey, but an extraction of highlights from the artist's Island catalog. In Sly & Robbie's case, that means 14 tracks from the late '70s to the mid-'80s, only three of which are actually billed to Sly & Robbie (though another is billed to Sly Dunbar as a soloist). For this rhythm section were and are more known as session musicians and a production team, and this also features ten Sly & Robbie productions of other artists, including tracks by reggae stars Black Uhuru, Dennis Brown, Gregory Isaacs, Junior Delgado, the Mighty Diamonds, and Sugar Minott, as well as lesser-known reggae singers Jimmy Riley, the Rolands, the Tamlins, and the Wailing Souls. As a consequence, this doesn't really have the kind of unified sound expected of single-artist compilations, though roughly speaking a solid, thick bass sound, crunching percussion, and percolating electronics are constant. Because a bunch of big names are here and because Sly & Robbie were top-notch producers, this does serve as a reasonable sampler of reggae in general in the first half of the 1980s, particularly on the best material, like Dennis Brown's "Hold on to What You Got" and the Wailing Souls' "Sweet Sugar Plum Plum." Less kindly, it also charts the beginning of reggae's move from its roots sound of the 1970s into a slicker, more programmed vibe, and the three Sly & Robbie tracks veer closer to disco and urban contemporary dance-pop than to the reggae that gave them their foundation.~Make Em Move/Taxi Style: An Introduction to Sly & Robbie Review by Richie Unterberger


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