Dancehall reggae cds in Reggae Music

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"Dancehall Classics [Sequence]" (01/25/2005) Reggae Various Artists, SequenceThis is a continuous in-the-mix CD compiled and mixed by Max Glazer. Recording information: Mixing Lab, Kingston, Jamaica.

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"Irie Reggae Hits: Best of Dancehall" (05/23/2006) Reggae Various Artists, Time/Life Music

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"Urban Beat Reggae: Dancehall Massive Culture" (02/24/2004) Reggae Various Artists, HeartbeatThis is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Audio Mixer: Julio. Audio Remixer: Chris "Poet" Wilson. Photographers: Maverick; David Corio. Arrangers: Chris "Poet" Wilson; Dow Brain; Brad Young. An interesting thing has happened since the first Urban Beat Reggae collection was released in 1996: cutting-edge dancehall has stopped taking most of its cues from thug rap and started taking them from smooth R&B. There are some hard beats here, to be sure -- Richie Spice's "Galang Yah Gal" bounces and jitters atop a spare, grunting breakbeat and a wheezy organ sample, and Baby Wayne delivers a similar hardcore performance on "Low Mi Gwaan." But the smoothly soulful "Ladies Man," a combination track featuring Spanner Banner and Sean Paul, is much more typical, as are Richie Spice's swinging "My Love" and a fine new mix of Everton Blender's easy-skanking "Slick Me Slick." There are some weak tracks here -- listeners really didn't need yet another take on Dawn Penn's "You Don't Love Me (No No No)," and it's a little sad to see Everton Blender and Beenie Man issuing a heartfelt condemnation of dancehall vulgarity two tracks after Spanner Banner and Lady Saw finish teaching a master class in slackness -- but on balance this is a perfectly serviceable collection of modern dancehall reggae. Recommended. ~ Rick Anderson

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"Power 96 Presents: Dancehall Nice Again 2004 - Reggae & Reggaeton [PA]" (03/09/2004) Reggae Various Artists, SequenceThis is a continuous in-the-mix CD compiled and mixed by Eddie Mix. Compilation producers: Tony The Tiger, Eddie Mix. Composer: Troyton Rami. Audio Mixers: David Kelly ; Eddie Mix; Nathan Malki; Troyton Rami. Recording information: Big Yard Studios, Jamaica; The Boxx. Photographer: Sergio Kurhajec. Unknown Contributor Role: Lance O. Arranger: Eddie Mix. With too many highlights to believe, the title says it all on this exciting compilation. Bouncing back and forth between hip-hop-injected dancehall from Jamaica and the Puerto Rican-flavored version of dancehall, reggaeton, Power 96 Presents: Dancehall Nice Again pushes itself over the top with some excellent mixing from Miami radio's Eddie Mix. Mix blends the two dancehall styles with hedonistic Miami spirit, and his track selection offers highlight after highlight. Beenie Man's massive "Dude" slowly blends into a quirky and unheard mix of Sean Paul's "Like Glue" with a live break from a bootlegged concert right in the middle. "Pull Up" features some excellent phrasing from Mr. Vegas over a hallucinatory beat, Ms. Thing's Funkadelic-spirited "Get That Money" lays its quick and witty lyrics over electro, and Sugar Daddy's "Sweet Soca Music" slyly samples the Verve sampling the Rolling Stones. Host Lance O adds to the party with some shout-outs, making the collection come off as a first-rate bootleg mixtape. Perfect for cruising the downtown on a beautiful day; no convertible should be without it. ~ David Jeffries

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"This is Crucial Reggae: Dancehall" (07/13/2004) Reggae Various Artists, RAS RecordsLiner Note Author: Elena Oumano.

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"Dancehall Giant" (01/20/1997) Reggae Nicodemus (Reggae), Positive Sound Massive/Nu Gruv

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"Essential Dancehall Reggae [1998]" (10/20/1998) Reggae Various Artists, Music Club RecordsIncludes liner notes by Roberto Angotti. Beginning in the 1940s, a steady stream of Jamaicans emigrated to England and brought with them their musical culture. As a result, the U.K. has long been second only to Jamaica as a center of reggae production and consumption. Of the many fine record companies that have sprung up from the British reggae scene, few have produced such consistently fine material as the scrappy Fashion label, which specialized in the lovers rock and early dancehall styles, with a special focus on the work of local DJs. Essential Dancehall Reggae compiles 16 tracks spanning the label's first 15 years. Some of this material was previously anthologized on the RAS compilation A Fashion Statement, which has something of an edge over this one by virtue of its inclusion of Smiley Culture's "Cockney Translation" (this album offers his inferior "Police Officer") and especially Nerious Joseph's brilliant cover of "Rock With Me Baby." But there's plenty of top-quality material on this collection as well, including Nerious Joseph's "Sensi Crisis" and Sweetie Irie's rock-solid "Slim Body Girl." This album's midline price works in its favor as well. Recommended. ~ Rick Anderson

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"Dancehall '69: 40 Skinhead Reggae Rarities" (04/15/2003) Reggae Various Artists, Trojan (Cityhall)Disc one contains Jamaican reggae. Disc two contains British reggae. Producers include: Michael De Koningh (Compilation). Includes liner notes by Michael De Koningh.

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"Dancehall Reggae: Best of Saturday Night, Vol. 2" (07/16/1996) Reggae Various Artists, M.I.L. MultimediaRecording information: Wackies Studio; Youth Promotion Studio.

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"Dancehall Reggae: Best of Saturday Night, Vol. 3" (09/03/1996) Reggae Various Artists, M.I.L. MultimediaRecording information: Wachies Studio; Youth Promotion Studio.

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"Dancehall Reggae: Best of Saturday Night, Vol. 1" (09/03/1996) Reggae Various Artists, M.I.L. MultimediaRecording information: Wackies Studio; Youth Promotion Studio.

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"Dancehall '69: 40 Skinhead Reggae Rarities" (02/18/2003) Reggae Various Artists, Trojan (Cityhall)Disc one contains Jamaican reggae. Disc two contains British reggae. Producers include: Michael De Koningh (Compilation). Includes liner notes by Michael De Koningh.

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"Strictly the Best, Vol. 1" (05/23/2005) Reggae Various Artists, VP RecordsRecording information: V.P. Records.

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"Soca, Dancehall and Reggae Hits" (11/09/2004) Reggae Various Artists, Empire Music Group Inc.

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"African Rebel Music: Roots Reggae and Dancehall" (03/07/2006) Reggae Various Artists, Out Here RecordsA fascinating sampling of the blend of reggae, dancehall, and various regional ethnic music emerging from 21st-century Africa, this compilation features artists from countries like Gambia, Ethiopia, Kenya, and Nigeria in a kaleidoscopic representation of reggae's far-reaching influence.

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"Riddim Driven: Dancehall Rock [Limited]" (05/23/2005) Reggae Various Artists, VP RecordsAudio Mixers: Cordell "Scatta" Burrell; Everton "Eva" Burrell. Recording information: Kings Of Kings Studio, Kingston, Jamaica. Editor: Paul Shields. Dancehall Rock is the latest in VP Records' Riddim Driven series, and like the other entries, it features 15 contemporary Jamaican dancehall artists voicing over the same rhythm track, in this case, the so-called "dancehall rock" rhythm developed out of the King of Kings Studio in Kingston. This approach to assembling an album can be either fascinating, as toasters and singers exhibit intuitive creative choices in what they choose to place over the rhythm, or maddening, with the whole enterprise breaking down into a kind of busy-sounding boredom, since what is essentially the same song is played over and over and over again. Here, unfortunately, the dancehall rock rhythm doesn't have a whole lot going for it in the first place, so the sometimes trance-inducing power of this approach is muted, with only a handful of tracks rising above all the clamor. The lead version, "Ova Di Wall," by Elephant Man, benefits greatly by being first, because pointless repetition sets in fairly quickly, although the speed rap attack of Hollow Point on "Sen On" is exhilarating, at least by comparison to most of what is here, and Voicemail's "Higher" manages to wring some level of romantic emotion out of the rhythm with his smooth neo-soul crooning. By far the most successful version here, the eerie, sliding "Pop No Style" by Chico, is the penultimate track, and thus comes far too late to rescue the listener from what has preceded it. These kinds of compilations have their place, certainly, and go a long way toward illustrating why dancehall enjoys such tremendous popularity in Kingston and elsewhere, but the very basic rule in assembling an album like this should be to start with a solid -- if not spectacular -- rhythm track, and that simply isn't the case here. ~ Steve Leggett Dancehall Rock is the latest in VP Records' Riddim Driven series, and like the other entries, it features fifteen contemporary Jamaican dancehall artists voicing over the same rhythm track, in this case, the so-called "dancehall rock" rhythm developed out of the King of Kings Studio in Kingston. The lead version, "Ova Di Wall," by Elephant Man, benefits greatly by being first, although the speed rap attack of Hollow Point on "Sen On" is also pretty exhilarating, and Voicemail's "Higher" manages to wring romantic emotion out of the rhythm with his smooth neo-soul crooning. By far the most successful version here, the eerie, sliding "Pop No Style" by Chico, is the penultimate track, but a lot of these cuts fail to add much innovation to the rhythm, which will hardly matter once people hit the dance floor. ~ Steve Leggett

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Deals on Dancehall reggae cds in Reggae Music. Visit BizRate to find the best deals on Reggae Music. See which Music stores have the Dancehall reggae cds that you want. Read reviews on Music merchants and buy with confidence. Find savings on Dancehall Classics [1/25] - Irie Reggae Hits: Best of Dancehall by Various Artists (CD - 05/23/2006).