Jamaica Soul Shake, Vol. 1 Sound Dimension

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  • Release Date: 02/13/2006
  • Sales Rank: 198,510
  • Label: SOUL JAZZ
  • UPC: 5026328101279

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  • Overview
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Track List
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Jamaica Soul Shake, Vol. 1

1LISTENHeavy Beat 2:59
2LISTENFederated Backdrop 3:08
3LISTENBaby Face 2:55
4LISTENRathid 2:43
5LISTENBitter Blood 3:13
6LISTENLove Land 2:52
7LISTENFull Up 2:56
8LISTENUpsetters Dream 3:49
9LISTENSoul Shake 2:26
10LISTENThe Thing 2:22
11LISTENMy Heart in Rhythm 2:36
12LISTENMan Pon Spot 3:01
13LISTENHoly Moses 1:57
14LISTENDoctor Sappa Too 2:52
15LISTENHail Don D 2:50
16LISTENSolas 2:47

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Behind a very generic band name -- which saluted an echo box used often in their recordings -- lurks some of the best rocksteady-into-reggae music ever recorded. To understate the case, Sound Dimension was simply the band put together in 1967 to accompany some of Studio 1's most famous artists: John Holt, Alton Ellis, the Heptones, Ken Boothe, and others. That fact alone makes them important enough; the fact that the group included most of the great Jamaican musicians that had emerged around the time Don Drummond went to jail makes them even more important. Sound Dimension was a loose collective indeed, but it often included Jackie Mittoo, Leroy Sibbles, Eric Frater, Leroy "Horsemouth" Wallace, Ernest Ranglin, and Roland Alphonso, among the best at their respective instruments that reggae has ever seen. (Several had played with Drummond in the Skatalites before the group dissolved upon his imprisonment.) The Soul Jazz collection Jamaica Soul Shake, Vol. 1 collects 16 instrumentals (or near-instrumentals) that had previously ranged from rare to untraceable -- these are not the singles the band served on as session men, nor are they exactly the "versions" they recorded for the B-sides. These are loose studio jams of their own composition (Mittoo's name appears often as a composer), and they have the laid-back, summery feel of prime Jackie Mittoo. Also like Mittoo's "solo" recordings, these are dark and brooding, closer to the gritty roots sound that would soon flower in reggae than the sweeter sound of soul-influenced rocksteady. John Bush, All Music Guide

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