Sold Date:
May 26, 2016
Start Date:
May 1, 2016
Final Price:
£12.89
(GBP)
Seller Feedback:
67765
Buyer Feedback:
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General
Article name:
I Feel the Spirit
Genre:
Reggae
Product type:
LP (Vinyl)
Label:
DYNAMITE!
Number of tracks:
12
Tracklist LP - 1
Buster, Prince - Wash Your Troubles Away
Buster, Prince - Hold Them
Buster, Prince - Shaking Up Orange St.
Buster, Prince - We Shall Overcome
Buster, Prince - Last Train To London
Buster, Prince - Time Longer Than Rope
Buster, Prince - I Feel The Spirit
Buster, Prince - Madness
Buster, Prince - Closer Together
Buster, Prince - They Got To Come
Buster, Prince - All Alone
Buster, Prince - Soul Of Africa
Description
Description
Although Prince Buster's first U.K. single was released in 1961 by the Stateside label, it was the following year before his British career truly took flight, after the newly launched Bluebeat label (a subsidiary of the esoteric Melodisc combine) signed him to the first exclusive licensing arrangement ever launched between a Jamaican artist and a British label. They were rewarded with a solid stream of 45s that stretched through to the end of the decade, every one of them a major hit around the West Indian clubs that were springing up around the country. Still, it was an unusual step when they chose to combine a dozen Buster sides onto a single LP -- indeed, 1963's I Feel the Spirit is renowned today as the first ska album ever released outside of Jamaica, as well as standing as an excellent introduction into the fiery soul of Buster's earliest work. As much as any of his better-feted contemporaries (most notably Clement "Coxsone" Dodd and Duke Reid), Buster was crucial to the development of ska, his self-productions instigating both musical and cultural notions that remain current today, while also feeding countless generations of young admirers with the ammunition that would fire their own careers. Both the rollicking "Madness" and the self-laudatory "Shaking Up Orange Street" were staples in the early-'80s Two Tone movement, while the album's closer, "Soul of Africa," stands as one of the music's earliest declarations of cultural unity. "Time Longer Than Rope," meanwhile, is fondly recalled as one of Buster's earliest British successes, a harp-driven lope that catches the Prince in delightfully caustic mood. ~ Dave Thompson
Dave Thompson
Contributors Artist: Prince Buster Record Label: Dynamite