Telerama Dub Festival – Paris France
24, 27 & 28 November 2009 Telerama Dub Festival Mad Professor and the Robotiks Band feat. Earl 16 & Faya Horms and many more.
24, 27 & 28 November 2009 Telerama Dub Festival Mad Professor and the Robotiks Band feat. Earl 16 & Faya Horms and many more.
“Greetings Music Lovers…” so starts every episode of On the Wire from BBC Radio Lancashire and they’ve an amazing 25th anniversary show with mixes from DJ Pinch, Kode 9, Mick Sleeper of Upsetter.net, TurnTableTerrorist aka Terry C. of WLUW ‘s “Echo Beach” Mix, and the regular crew of On the Wire presenting the mixes and four hours of their unique and eclectic selections. Congratulations to On the Wire and here’s to another 25 years!
Lee Perry talking to the British TV host & Musician Jools Holland at his Black Ark Studio. via KimObrist & VKMP3 VKMP3 also points to the amazing work of Jamaican photographer Peter Dean Rickards Afflicted Yard, who took some amazing shots of Perry back at what remains of the Ark in 2008.
Dub Specialist – Rub a String (Better dub from Studio One) (LP) Ragga Twins – 18″ Speakers (Reggae owes me money) (LP) Randys Allstars – Mission Impossible (10″) Pablo Gad – Hard Times (LP) Bunny Clarke – be thankful (LP) The Upsetters – dubbing in the back (LP) Prince Francis & the Sound Dimensions – mojo rock (LP) ų-ziq – Dauphine (2xLP) Stendek – bin (mp3) Kenny Larkin – Catatonic (second state) (12″) Hopeton Lindo – Rude Boy | Disrupt – Rude Dub – on Jahtari 7″ (dub.com opportunistic edit) (mp3 320) Tens raó – G.Zuritaa – from the Junglematic sound EP
dub post from wikidub “A track taken from Horace Andy’s 1983 album Dance Hall Style. The track itself is called “Cuss Cuss” and is in extended discomix format – tune into dub. This tune features the weird and fragmented – almost industrial – Wackie’s sound and at one point (just around the 3:15 mark) it sounds like the whole thing is going to disintegrate before your very ears. “
From Japan the awesome dubsiren dub it on your I & Iphone… from the website: “With Dub Siren, you can stream music from selection of some of the best Reggae, Dub and DubStep internet radio stations and mix interactively with Dub Siren’s top quality Reggae effects. Until now, these effects have been exclusive to the professional Reggae DJs and SELECTAs. Now with Dub Siren, you can be a Reggae DJ anytime, anywhere, with just the iPhone in your pocket. Dub Siren Has Two Modes Dub Mode, modeled after ’70s classic analog synth. Dancehall Mode, including the hottest, most popular sound effects used by Reggae DJs today. Dub Siren also offers Dub Mixer, a DJ mixer integrated with a delay unit and tap tempo. With Dub Mixer, you…
Those clever folk at Jahtari have come up with a very cool shirt – only available via the european outlet right now… hopefully in north america soon too. http://jahtari.spreadshirt.net/en/DE/Shop/Article/Index/article/Jahtari-Invaders-RED-GOLD-GREEN—Comfort-T-7318546
Another gem from Youtube, from a user called Dubwise4u, a Clip from Howard Johnson’s 1982 Channel Four UK six part documentary series “Deep Roots Music (Spread over 3 Discs)“. (parts of it also are available in the UK under another title “Reggae Nashville, Deep Roots”) “Here is the full version of the dub section with Bunny Lee, Prince Jammy & Scientist doing the “Jailhouse Rock” track. It has a small introduction about King Tubby, and his importance to dub. Right after that Prince Jammy is at the controls, Bunny Lee giving his input and dancing like a madman and Scientist is the dark skinned young man in white with the button hat on and smoking the huge pipe at the end too! :)”
John Brown’s Body, amplify, re-amplify, reamplify, dubmatix, the gold, remix The Gold (Dubmatix Runnin’ Remix) by johnbrownsbody
VIA: Niceup.org.nz - NiceUp & Radio Active 89FM presents: Dub Echoes Australasian Premier Screening Dub Echoes is a documentary directed by Bruno Natal (Brazil) that traces the origins of Jamaican dub music and its huge influence on the development of other musical forms including hip-hop and electronica. It chronicles the evolution of sound and bass and shows how the Jamaican invention called dub has influenced much of the music we hear today and transformed the studio into a musical instrument. The film was shot in Kingston (Jamaica), London (UK), New York, Washington, LA (US), Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo (Brazil).