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CD
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KSCD 012CD
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2019 repress. The mighty Jah Stitch was a legend in Jamaica, making the move as so many ghetto youths have tried from "Bad Man" to "Music Man". Jah Stitch embraced the DJ culture that he himself was an integral part. He put not one but two musical stamps on the format. His initial big youth sounding chants grew from working alongside the man on the mic. The second almost spoken vibe came about after a well-documented incident that led to him being shot. He lived to tell the tale and cut some of the finest roots DJ cuts, with his new vocal style that many copied but few have surpassed. Kingston Sounds have selected some of his best-known tracks to show the knack of working a killer rhythm and dubbed vocal with an almost call-and-response story telling style. The opening and title track to this set "Dread Inna Jamdown" sees him working over John Holt's "In The Springtime". The second cut "Dem Seek Natty Everywhere" works another John Holt classic, "Forgot to Say I Love You". After some hits in the 1970s, the 1980s would see a short name change to Major Stitch. But his best loved moniker Jah Stitch serves the man well. So sit back and enjoy some fine DJ Cuts. No Dread Can't Dead... Jah Stitch R.I.P. CD version includes two bonus tracks.
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LP
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KSLP 012LP
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LP version. 2019 repress. The mighty Jah Stitch was a legend in Jamaica, making the move as so many ghetto youths have tried from "Bad Man" to "Music Man". Jah Stitch embraced the DJ culture that he himself was an integral part. He put not one but two musical stamps on the format. His initial big youth sounding chants grew from working alongside the man on the mic. The second almost spoken vibe came about after a well-documented incident that led to him being shot. He lived to tell the tale and cut some of the finest roots DJ cuts, with his new vocal style that many copied but few have surpassed. Kingston Sounds have selected some of his best-known tracks to show the knack of working a killer rhythm and dubbed vocal with an almost call-and-response story telling style. The opening and title track to this set "Dread Inna Jamdown" sees him working over John Holt's "In The Springtime". The second cut "Dem Seek Natty Everywhere" works another John Holt classic, "Forgot to Say I Love You". After some hits in the 1970s, the 1980s would see a short name change to Major Stitch. But his best loved moniker Jah Stitch serves the man well. So sit back and enjoy some fine DJ Cuts. No Dread Can't Dead... Jah Stitch R.I.P.
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CD
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RR 317CD
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Radiation Roots present a reissue of Jah Stitch's Watch Your Step Youthman, originally released in 1977. After a disjointed childhood that saw him raised largely by two aunts between eastern Kingston and rural St Mary, Melbourne James became the toaster Jah Stitch after running away from home and linking with the Spanglers street gang, whose Princess Street headquarters was also the base of the popular Tipper Tone sound system. After cutting his teeth on Tipper Tone alongside Big Youth and Dr Alimantado, friction over financial recompense saw him forming the rival Black Harmony set in 1975, but because the new sound was based in a district that was on the other side of the political divide, Stitch was shot in the face at point-blank range, his miraculous survival immortalized in the Bunny Lee-produced hit, "No Dread Can Dead", which became the title track of Stitch's debut album. Watch Your Step Youthman was the follow-up set released by Bunny in 1977, and again places Jah Stitch's understated Rasta-oriented chanting over a set of rock-hard Aggrovators rhythms, recorded with Johnny Clarke, John Holt, Derrick Morgan, and others.
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LP
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RR 317LP
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LP version. Radiation Roots present a reissue of Jah Stitch's Watch Your Step Youthman, originally released in 1977. After a disjointed childhood that saw him raised largely by two aunts between eastern Kingston and rural St Mary, Melbourne James became the toaster Jah Stitch after running away from home and linking with the Spanglers street gang, whose Princess Street headquarters was also the base of the popular Tipper Tone sound system. After cutting his teeth on Tipper Tone alongside Big Youth and Dr Alimantado, friction over financial recompense saw him forming the rival Black Harmony set in 1975, but because the new sound was based in a district that was on the other side of the political divide, Stitch was shot in the face at point-blank range, his miraculous survival immortalized in the Bunny Lee-produced hit, "No Dread Can Dead", which became the title track of Stitch's debut album. Watch Your Step Youthman was the follow-up set released by Bunny in 1977, and again places Jah Stitch's understated Rasta-oriented chanting over a set of rock-hard Aggrovators rhythms, recorded with Johnny Clarke, John Holt, Derrick Morgan, and others.
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