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Post by Visionz on May 19, 2009 22:46:44 GMT 1
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Post by Lidj I on May 20, 2009 12:09:44 GMT 1
Knowledge - What's Yours
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Post by jah_uppsala on May 31, 2009 10:28:17 GMT 1
aaah wa tom zei,, totally agree blesses antwerp mAssive
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Post by Visionz on Jun 1, 2009 13:00:19 GMT 1
Typhoon - Zo niet mijIk ga terug naar mijn oorsprong, Moeder Natuur is waaruit ik voortkom. Vader Tijd kent me niet, hoewel ik met hem worstel. Bomen vertellen niets tenzij je je richt tot de wortels.
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Post by Lidj I on Jun 1, 2009 17:07:49 GMT 1
Courtney Melody - Ninja Me Ninja
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Post by Selector Waxx on Jun 2, 2009 11:18:09 GMT 1
Prince Zimboo & Major Lazer - Hold the line
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Post by firebration on Jun 2, 2009 19:04:16 GMT 1
I - Wayne, Fire Star & Buzhrock - Hot in da Streets
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Post by Jah Mike on Jun 3, 2009 21:25:32 GMT 1
Weed them out 12inch repress During the late eighties this kind of digital roots reggae was food and drink to a small but enthusiastic set of fans centred around veteran sound system Jah Shaka. Whilst dancehall raged around them, this enclave sought out the right type of tunes for their musical refreshment. Underground it may have been, but the roots scene of those times spawned the revitalisation of roots as a style, and indeed a lifestyle, that continues up to now. Records like this did not sell in huige quantities back then, and were largely ignored by the wider reggae crowd, but have since become hugely desirable with phenomenal amounts being asked and paid for original copies. Yes, Shaka used to run this one hard in those days, and it's not hard to see why. Kirk, then a mere teenager, brother of dancehall sensation Beenie Man, declares his intention to weed out those whose lyrics and image damage the conscious reggae music that Bob Marley and others worked so hard to popularise, set to a slow, rolling bassline guaranteed to shake the foundations. It is one of the heaviest records from those times and is the very epitome of the kind of thing that Shaka and his crowd found acceptable. also agree with brethren Lidj I on what's yours, 12inch on stars Knowledge & Tappa zukie killer steppers also repress on kulumi 7inch Dandy lion tune called vives on a 10 inch Prince Alla with See me yah love the tune Blow down babylon, far east on digital rockers 12inch and the 10 inch on jah give us the power riddim label is Sugar beat Manasseh did a nice rework on this all time shaka dubplate dubplate still, but will soon come: Danny Red with Your choice and King general with Got to be conscious repress7inch: gate of zion, Mighty Diamonds and Albert Malawi with Children of the emperor 10inch disciples riddim, Johnny Clarke with Intruder on the Black redemption from ras Kush Vibronics them Critical situation on dub flash 10 inch Coz we are youth by fu-steps on orcast 10 inch more repress 7 inches, I love jah jah by Don Carlos and Up town rebel by Desi roots seen
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Post by samwise on Jun 3, 2009 21:57:51 GMT 1
Prince Zimboo & Major Lazer - Hold the line Prince Zimboo is zwaar de maks Zwaar over de top ma echt wel funny lyrics met momenten. Rakkalicious eeftr ne leuke dub van ak mij nie vergis
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Post by Nicodemuz on Jun 4, 2009 16:19:25 GMT 1
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Post by Benji!! on Jun 4, 2009 16:26:16 GMT 1
yes boss!! supertune! den buru vind ik ook best lekker, allee zijn nummer toch ;-) zitten trouwens allebei in de laatsten JB mix...bij de flea market...
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Post by Visionz on Jun 4, 2009 23:04:06 GMT 1
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Post by LadyMiki aka Warrior Queen on Jun 5, 2009 8:39:27 GMT 1
da is idd een zaaalige plaat!!
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Post by Visionz on Jun 7, 2009 10:06:29 GMT 1
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