Source: Back to albums and the Reggae Grammy | Entertainment | Jamaica Gleaner
Published:Saturday | September 2, 2017 | 9:00 AM | Mel Cooke
There was a time when the albums which I have used to mark the progression – and also progress – of the Jamaican popular music I am in tune with were woefully thin on the ground.
My tally began in the early 1990s with artistes who emerged when I was an adult (so persons from the 1980s like Shabba Ranks with his double Grammy winners, As Raw As Ever and X-Tra Naked, are nor factored in).
And we are talking structured, cohesive projects here, not a collection of singles which had been previously released.
Among the projects which struck me were Luciano’s Where There is Life and, of course, Buju Banton’s Untold Stories (both in 1995), Sizzla’s magnificent double of Praise Ye Jah and Black Womanand Child in 1997, Buju again with Inna Heights (1997), Tanya Stephens’ Gangsta Blues (2004) and, of course, Damian Marley’s Welcome to Jamrock in 2005.
The list is not exhaustive – among the many that have been left out due to word count constraints are Bushman’s Nyah Man Chant (1997), Capleton’s Prophecy (1995) and Morgan Heritage’s More Teachings (2001).
Then there was a dry period until well into the second half of this decade, a period which, happily, has been broken. For after the drippings of albums which have struck my fancy, there has been a veritable flood, which currently has Chronixx’s Chronology, Damian Marley’s Stony Hill and Samory I’s Black Gold leading the charge.
Then there is Kabaka Pyramid’s debut album to come. The sets which have been released before this include Agent Sasco’s Theory of Reggaetivity, Jah 9’s New Name (2013) and Protoje’s 7 Year Itch (2011) and 8 Year Affair (2013). Queen Ifrica’s Climb, earlier this year, struck a good note, too.
Be the first to comment