King Tubby
King Tubby's Classics: The Lost Midnight Rock Dubs Chapter 3
Radiation Records
/2022
LP
€20.99
RROO363
Incl. VAT plus shipping / Orders from outside the EU are exempt from VAT
Tracklist
1 | Highway Dub | |
2 | North Circular Dub | |
3 | Border Patrol Dub | |
4 | Motorway Dub | |
5 | South Circular Dub | |
6 | 95 North Dub | |
7 | 95 South Dub | |
8 | Cross Bronx Dub | |
9 | Turnpike Dub | |
10 | Parkway Dub | |
11 | Causeway Dub | |
12 | Mandellah Highway Dub | |
13 | Express Way Dub | |
14 | Toll Booth Dub |
When dubwise music really started to come into its own in the early to mid 70s, it made overnight stars of backroom boys who had hitherto worked behind a mixing desk to serve those who were beginning to hoist reggae to an international stardom that it had long deserved, but that it had only achieved on short and non-sustained bursts until Chris Blackwell decided to throw a lot of promotion and money at the work of Bob Marley and his fellow Wailers in 1972. Of those men, there was no bigger star than the late Osbourne Ruddock, the great King Tubby’s and the man who, from a tiny home-made studio in the Waterhouse district of Kingston, Jamaica, did more than most to reposition the boundaries that production and mixing of Jamaican recordings.