Let's do it!
{Note: No compilations, no Soca}
Let's do it!
{Note: No compilations, no Soca}
'Who Are We' by Turbulence [Unemployment Records - 2025]
Gotta start off with something that's definitely put a a smile on my face over the last week or so and biggup Filomuzik and Unemployment Records from out of Italy for getting the best from one of Reggae's most enigmatic figures that I've heard recently. Turbulence MOST CERTAINLY has not been one of the most consistent of artists in Reggae music but I still maintain that he sits on a gold mine of talent which places him in very thin company. Alongside the aforementioned producer and label from Southern Italy, Turbulence turns up with 'Who Are We' which is, CLEARLY, the best song I have heard from him in 2025 and... probably the best in quite a few years (off the top of my head, I would probably say from since 2021 but it could very well be even longer than that).
"Who are we, who are we-
Without His Majesty?
Who am I, who am I-
Without The Most High?
Who are we, who are we-
Without His Majesty?
Who am I, who am I-
Without Rastafari?
I'm nothing but a drowning victim waiting to be saved
Jah hand me lifeguard inna this tidal wave
Lost and confused inna this deep, dark cave
Jah hand me lantern just to light my way HOME
Rastafari say: Who do I think I am to disobey?
According to your works, that is how you get your pay
Mi ask them this without delay"
'Who Are We' is a scorchingly clever praise, backed by a GORGEOUS riddim (and notice how it changes and electrifies as the song goes along) making it not only, as I said, Turbulence's best this year but likely one of the best from anyone. BOOM.
'The Days' by Busy Signal [Zion High Productions 2025]
I'm always looking forward to seeing just who one of my (if not my absolute) favourite production units, the vaunted Zion I Kings, will work with next and I have to say I was quite shocked when I saw that next in the offering was the ridiculously gifted Busy Signal and I was also damn excited. I'll temper my HOPES (You know what I want) and just deal with what's at hand. While the link maybe surprising, the results most certainly are not. The ZIK's record is what it is, they've been amongst the most consistently high quality outfits in all of Reggae music since their inception (INDIVIDUALLY AND TOGETHER) and, in case you haven't paid attention, Busy Signal is one of the most versatile stars the genre has ever produced. The man can literally rhyme about ANYTHING and shine whilst doing it. Their effort together, 'The Days', is a damn gem. It's a work of art... but you knew that already.
'Shout It Out' by Fikir Amlak [Saj Moor Dub - 2025]
Biggup our old friend, Saj Moor, who we told you about the last time we did one of these and is already back and this time, arguably, even stronger as the producer links up with the always active Fikir Amlak for 'Shout It Out'. I'll qualify this a bit: I haven't listened to Amlak's music a great deal over the years. Though I find myself crossing paths with his work every so often, I've never really focused much on him for one reason or another, but I have heard some of what he's done (he had a song a few years back that I REALLY liked called 'Royal Son'). So maybe you'll take that into consideration when I tell you that I'm quite confident in saying that 'Shout It Out' is the single best Fikir Amlak tune that I've heard thus far and maybe it becomes the impetus to get me to really tune him in (I'm pretty sure he has a new album now and even if he doesn't (or even if he does) the next one isn't too far away.... it NEVER is) Despite its title, 'Shout It Out' comes with this very cool and kind of building vibes to it (the riddim on this one is gold bar. Literally). It never fully ascends in terms of intensity but it remains with this gorgeous, almost mystical sound which Amlak puts to excellent usage in praise of The Almighty, while channeling the immortal Marcus Garvey.
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| 2005 |
I'm thinking it may just be time to add another pair of names to this list as, TECHNICALLY, we now have the third display of an extremely high level of proficiency. Literally twenty years ago, a label by the name of Lustre Kings Productions released an album by the name of "Time & Place" by an artist by the name of Lutan Fyah from a place by the name of Spanish Town. The album was fantastic. It was one of the best.... fifty or so that I've ever heard and has been declared a Modern Classic on these pages. Lutan Fyah had also worked with LKP from as far back as 2002 when he appeared on the oft-mentioned around these parts, "Culture Dem" compilation, and he would also be present on both the second and third installments of "Culture Dem" in 2007 and 2009, respectively. Want more?? In 2008, LKP released "Know The Road", a very nice album from Norris Man which contained 'Nah Pollute Your Faith', an excellent combination featuring Lutan Fyah ["All dem bad vibes - leave it alone. ONLY A CLEAN HEART TAKE YOU TO MOUNT ZION ZONE"]; and I could keep going but I have two more of these to do but, just in case you're interested, in 2015, the Fyah would also pop up on 'Cold War' a tune on the LKP released "Order Of Distinction" by Jahdan Blakkamoore (which I should probably do a vault review of sometime this year). Another label, Zion High Productions, was also involved in the production of "Time & Place" (I have the disc, it's sitting right next to me. Their logo is on the back cover) and, since then, Lutan Fyah has also worked on a considerable amount of their output as well. Including, but not limited to, "Jah Golden Throne", a WONDERFUL compilation from ZHP in 2012 and "Therapeutic", two years on, an overlooked but WICKED album from Ziggi Recado (his appearance there, 'Guide Ova', was MAMMOTH). So he's had a very long and distinguished history of recording with the "Zion" and the "Kings", has Lutan Fyah.
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| 2017 |
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| "Strength & Resilience" by Lutan Fyah [I Grade Records] |
1. 'Warning Dem'
2. 'Listen Mama'
3. 'Leader Before Me'
4. 'Just The Time' featuring Akae Beka
5. 'Strength & Resilience'
6. 'Pieces Of Broken Soul'
7. 'African Children'
8. 'Drain The Swamp'
9. 'Freedom Sound'
10. 'Secrets'
11. 'Protect Your Energy'
12. 'Days After Summer' featuring Queen Omega
13. 'Tomorrow Today'
PROBLEMS! Okay so, with 2025 (we made it!) well in progress, we look ahead at what and who might stop by to make for a suitable followup to a year in 2024 which may not have been brimming with greatness, but was quite solid in retrospect and... well apparently a pair of looooongtime favourites are providing us with what may just be the year's first TRULY great album release (it will be). Just about eight years ago now, the brilliant Lutan Fyah FINALLY officially linked up with the equally sagacious I Grade Records and the Zion I Kings to produce a long awaited by me album, "Music Never Dies". We reviewed it at a 5/5 [DUHHHHHH!]. It was fantastic and immediately became a favourite of mine from both catalogues of artist and label. Now, a few weeks shy of what will be its eight anniversary, a release is set for "Music Never Dies" as Lutan Fyah and IGR present "Strength & Resilience". I had NO CLUE that this album was in the offering and in the process of doing what I do every couple of weeks or so and just checking through a few sources, I came upon it and you can imagine just how DAMN HAPPY I was to see it. Though the Spanish Town chanter has steadily released singles and EP's over the years, the case could be well made that the "Music Never Dies" set was his last genuinely big album release and it is well overdue that the Fyah returns to scorch everything, everywhere.
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| 2017 |
I'm pretty sure the rest of the album is as well and you can join me in finding how just how high it does hit when "Strength & Resilience" releases on the 28th of February. TIME TO GET EXCITED.
Over again. It tends to be easier to remember certain things when there is a significant moment or occurrence tied to them. If I were to ask you what you remember about some random year that you lived through, perhaps you'd have something specific to say or perhaps not, but if I then reminded you that it was the same year that someone you knew died or that someone else was born, then maybe it might bring back waves and waves of specific instances that you could suddenly recall... because you now you have something in particular to give you a timeframe to attach them to. For example, do you remember 2002?? Musically speaking, in particular? No?? Okay. 2002 was the same year that Capleton and VP Records shipped "Still Blazin'" and had as all wondering if it were some kind of disrespectful to say the album was POSSIBLY as good as or even better than the album which preceded it, the all time great "More Fire" (over twenty years later, it wasn't disrespectful at all). Bring back any memories? No?? Okay, later that year Sizzla Kalonji would put to bed any rumours of his musical demise by giving us "Da Real Thing", providing a hint that the genius behind "Black Woman & Child" and "Praise Ye Jah" was alive and well and still burning. And just in case you needed anything more from the 2002, there was also an album released called "Dutty Rock", which would go to find its star, Sean Paul, and a few of his peers, taking over the entire world for a nice amount of time. There are periods like that which we live through and are fortunate for it but, even more interesting, there're also longer lasting stretches where.... things are just SO DAMN GOOD that it is important while you are in the moment to appreciate what it is that you have because you have enough life-experience to have lost things that you long for, that YOU KNOW are never coming back. Last year we reviewed an album which would go on to be one of the better of 2023 by the name of "Ah Mi Yard" by Achis Reggae favourite Perfect Giddimani. That set was excellent, although on the shorter side of things (had fourteen songs but really just seven with dubs for each one making the second seven) and, looking back to it now, it has aged quite well. A year on, there are two tunes in particular which stand out from "Ah Mi Yard", the title track (normally the case. Just like in the premise of this review, if I asked you what you recall about 'Ah Mi Yard", you're probably going to start singing 'Ah Mi Yard') and another one called 'Give Me My Flowers'. The latter of those two will likely always stick with me because I absolutely LOVE the sentiment behind it of giving someone their credit and their due WHILE THEY ARE AROUND TO APPRECIATE IT! That song and that album, and probably a dozen more or however many more and the one we're dealing with today have lead me to think that maybe it's time to give someone their flowers and not just for one sweet year that they gave us. It's been a really long time coming.
"Ah Mi Yard", like pretty much everything Perfect does these days, came partially via his own Giddimani Records label but this time it was in association with the actual producer of the set, I Grade Records and the Zion I Kings. I'm not going to attempt to run down the list (well I am, but I won't bother you by writing it out) (I'll do it in my head instead), but I have written SO MANY reviews, previews, re-reviews and other features on ZIK released material (and even about IGR prior to their linking with the Z and the K (more on them in a second) or at least prior to my knowing about it) (.... now that I think about it, I also wrote about the Z and the K before I knew about the collaboration as well) (you know what else came out in 2002??? "Culture Dem") over the years. Even with all the time we took off, between dealing with all of the various Akae Beka sets (still have one on my front page to finish, one of these days, for 'Mek A Menshun") and various other things, I don't know if there's anyone else on the planet who has written more about the ZIK than I have - especially given the way I usually write. I absolutely LOVE their work and it has been every bit as influential on what I write as the golden years of Xterminator which would birth the likes of Sizzla Kalonji which really got me interested in writing in the first place. CREDIT is due and I have no problem continuing to pay it.
In the midst of the Akae Beka albums and others from Perfect and a few other wonderful artists (some of whom we will be talking about today), the Zion I Kings have maintained a riddim album series which has been both plentiful and fruitful (both of those probably mean the same thing, I don't feel like looking it up to confirm, but what I'm trying to say is that the series has supplied both quantity and quality). With the very first installment arriving in the summer of 2013, eleven years later we're now at number ten! There have been some BEAUTIFUL drops along the way with that number one, the Songbird Riddim, being amongst the standouts. The Lifetime ["Put a fyah in deh!"], the Perfect Storm, the Mash Down, H.I.M. Teachings.... I could go on and there's ten (technically nine, because this is number ten), so I'd probably end up mentioning SOMETHING from them all and justly so. They have given us, fans of modern Roots Reggae plenty to be happy with in the series over the years. The most recent entrant of the series, the Mash Down from 2021 which I just told you about, came via the "Kings", Lustre Kings Productions, and they have been very successful in alternating the label behind the actual releases (which sounds like such a healthy way to do business between three different entities) and in 2024, next up is "Zion", Zion High Productions, who carries the bat for the brand new Full Bloom Riddim, volume ten of the Zion I Kings Riddim Series. I hadn't been aware that this set was even in the offering and it came as a very much welcomed surprise. Norris Man, Ras Shiloh, Etana, Ginjah and now the ZIK all do brand new albums within a week of one another (and I'm going to tell you about someone else, who appears on this one, also having a new studio album out on the very same day as the Full Bloom). This is a FINE time to be fan of modern Roots Reggae and it is only getting finer. Of course, as is the case with any compilation, one of the most interesting aspects of the Full Bloom Riddim is the artist selection. Here, we have a roster largely of artists who frequent the ZIK itinerary (probably a poor usage of that word, but I'm keeping it!) with one or two surprises along the way and some very unique blends of styles jumping from one name to another. They also, delightfully, cover the critique of mine which would have been - 'I wish they would have had this type of an artist'. They're all covered and what results is..... well, it's exactly what you expect. They've been doing this for a really long time. Let's get into it!
Just as important as the names voicing it is the riddim, itself. It's pretty damn difficult to have a good riddim album without a good riddim (you know I'm now going through my mind, trying to think of a riddim that I didn't particularly care for but, somehow, made for a good album) and that is not an issue here at all. The Full Bloom is typical, mellow and ultra easy brilliance from the Zion I Kings which makes for a more malleable and versatile backdrop for its vocalists to shine across (and we'll talk about that more, later). Surprisingly, I'm going to make the case that NO ONE shines brighter than Imeru Tafari, who opens matters on the Full Bloom riddim with the absolutely SHATTERING '1930'. TEARS! You may or may not know Tafari from his famous bloodline and he is living up to his heritage and more with a song like this. I use the phrase 'praising tune' to describe songs like this, generally and that is just what this is, but this is a PRAISE of the HIGHEST POSSIBLE CALIBER! Along with the historical facet it puts on brilliant display, '1930' also brings in present, modern-day application for what history has taught us and puts on a lyrical performance which is not to be missed!