Review: Flexing the full spectrum of roots music and featuring vocals from an epic range of singers from Omar to Liam Bailey, Nia Chennai to Tills; Green Lanes is the debut album from Jamie Rodigan and Aaron Horn's impressive Crate Classics project and it sounds every bit as fresh as it did when it landed digitally last year. Here on long-awaited wax it's been given a new coat of arms by way of some exceptional remixes from three artists who have spectrum flexing tenures themselves. Originator Congo Natty brings the teachings, pioneer Potential Badboy goes old testament on 'More Time', 'Missing' keeps it dreamy and soulful while Tyke get ruff on 'Westside'. An essential accompaniment to the full narrative.
Review: Some rare dancehall history is brought to light with this new reissue from Acid Jazz. Originally released only as a white label promo via Jah Thomas's Midnight Rock, Early B Meets Super Cat compiles early Channel One sessions powered by the iconic Roots Radics and features two standout artists: Early B and a then rising Super Cat, whose energetic side-stepping vocals allowed Thomas's production prowess to shine. Though only promo copies were pressed initially, this release allows a new generation of fans to deep dive into formative dancehall grooves full of crisp rhythms, vintage dub tones and real vocal energy.
Review: This remarkable collection of mid-70s reggae captures legendary deejay U Roy at his most intimate and authentic, toasting exclusively for the King Attorney Hi-Fi sound system. Originally crafted as dubplates rather than commercial releases, these tracks are a time capsule from the golden age of Jamaican dancehalls. U Roy's charismatic flow, filled with shout-outs and jive, rides effortlessly over heavyweight rhythms recorded by The Revolutionaries at Channel One. With rich dubs from the Mighty Diamonds' Right Time and updated classics like 'Ali Baba' and 'Swell Headed', this is a joyous, immersive listen and an essential document of reggae's deep cultural roots.
Barrington Levy & Beenie Man - "Under Mi Sensi" (X Project remix) (5:22)
The Ragga Twins - "Ragga Trip" (4:36)
Ninjaman, Bounty Killer, Beenie Man & Ninja Ford - "Bad Boy Lick A New Shot (Jungle Bullet)" (5:56)
The Source - "Rude Boy State Of Mind" (4:53)
Shut Up & Dance - "No Doubt" (4:43)
DJ Massive - "Final Conflict" (5:12)
Asher Senator - "One Bible" (5:04)
Poison Chang - "Press The Trigger" (Half Breed remix) (5:31)
Ragga Twins - "Illegal Gunshot" (4:00)
Ben Intellect - "Oh Jungle" (with Ragga G) (4:58)
Cutty Ranks - "Limb By Limb" (DJ SS remix) (5:00)
Ragga Twins - "Tan So Back" (3:54)
Review: Soul Jazz Records marks the 18th anniversary of this seminal album with a stunning limited-edition red vinyl reissue for Record Store Day 2025. Fully remastered and expanded with new tracks, the compilation dives deep into the early '90s roots of jungle, ragga and drum & bass and coms on strong from the off with enre-defining anthems like General Levy's 'Incredible,' Cutty Ranks' 'Limb By Limb' and Congo Natty's take on 'Under Me Sensi'. They all make it a high-energy trip through a revolutionary moment in UK music and this version comes with extensive liner notes, interviews and rare photos making it both a crucial historical document and an essential listen.
Bad Sound/DJ Marfox - "Both Twanche Riddim Refix" (1:41)
Veaygel - "Dirty Lows Riddim" (2:21)
Krome Productions - "Tic Tac Toe Riddim" (part 2) (1:55)
LMT Mafia - "DAF Riddim" (1:57)
P6 - "Heat Wave Riddim" (3:07)
Veaygel - "Fire Ball Riddim" (2:46)
Slaughter Arts Media - "Bad Weather Riddim" (part 2) (3:22)
Ransum - "Walk It Riddim" (2:38)
ScarnX - "Midnight Fever Riddim" (2:37)
Review: The intriguing Road Fever delivers a hurricane of high-octane, body-shaking rhythms from St. Lucia, Dominica and Guadeloupe, all of which capture the zeitgeist of Caribbean music in 2025. This compilation showcases raw, instrumental Dennery Segment and Bouyon riddims that were originally crafted for vocalists and are now presented as standalone tracks. With turbo-charged 150+ bpm beats, minimal percussion, DJ and vocal samples all woven in with synth riffs, these tunes mash up carnival sounds with elements of trap, drill, Haitian konpa and Angolan kuduro for a truly global listen. They have all been compiled by Rozaly and highlight the electrifying energy of the Caribbean's current scene.
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