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LEE PERRY
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| DUBROOM
ARTIST REVIEW |
| Nobody
really knows just why he burned down his
Black Ark studio, but everybody knows the
sound he produced throughout the
1970's.
A whole host of Reggae Artists played and
voiced crucial material into his multitrack
recorder, creating classics like "Heart
of the Congo's" and "Police and
Thieves".
Righteous Rasta Reggae!
Some albums released under his own name,
though, would contain phrases that revealed
Perry's personal dislike for the themes
covered by the Dreadlocks that would provide
him with music for his studio.
Maybe that's an indication why he
actually burned down the Ark and now speaks
in interviews how he hates dreads.
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| LINKS
TO SINGLE TRACK DOWNLOAD PAGES |
| The
following track(s) can be downloaded from
another website. Just click on
"GO", and follow the instructions.
You might need to register (sorry about
that) |
| Cloak
And Dagger |
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| The
title track of the 1972 album features the
legendary Reggae Hornsman Tommy Mc Cook,
among other stars.
Widely considered to be a pre-cursor to
the more heavy forms of DUB, this classic
instrumental doesn't yet have the Black Ark
sound that made Perry his name.
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| MORE
ON THIS ARTIST |
| When
you like this artist, you might like to
check out the following links. |
| MORE
DUBROOM REVIEWS OF THIS ARTIST |
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| ALBUM
REVIEWS
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| SEE
ALSO: |
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| Lee
Perry
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| Ossie
Hibbert and the Revolutionaries
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| Scientist
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