- Back to Home »
- Freeskafoundation , PodCast »
- F.S.F Please Don't Break My Heart -Rocksteady Beat Episode 31
Posted by :
Freeskafoundation
domingo, 19 de septiembre de 2010
En efecto estamos de vuelta con otro episodio mas llamado
(por favor no rompas mi corazon)
Tenemos para ustedes la segunda entrega de nuestro podcast Totalmente de Rocksteady
contando con temas maravillosos que no pueden ser olvidados ni mucho menos
menospreciados
Disfrutenlo !!!!!!!!!!!
1.John Dizzy Moore - Hypocrites -Remix
2.Eric Monty Morris - Last Laugh
3.Roy Shirley - Touch Them
4.Larry Marshall -Suspicion
5.Kingston Pete & Busters All Stars -I am A Lover
6.Ken Bothee -Thinking
7.Austin Faithful - Cry No More For Me
8.Prince Buster & Busters Allstars -Let it Happen
9.The Viceroys - Wrap Up Now
10.Phill Pratt -Reach Out
11.Lee Perry & The Sensations -Something You've got
12.Alton Ellis - Breaking Up
13.The Caribbeans -Butterflies
14.Derrick Harriot -Reach Out I'll Be There
15.Roy Panton - Beware Rudie
16.Mr Foundation -See Them a come
17.The Sensations - Baby I Love You
18. Kingtons Sweethearts & Busters Allstars - Sit Down & Cry
19. Ewan Mc Dermott -Rocksteady Good Bye
DOWNLOAD
HIS BOOK IS A MUST!!! It not only features Lee Scratch Perry but Augustus Pablo and Junior Delgado.
ResponderEliminarA book of photographs by Pogus Caesar celebrating Britain's iconic black musicians is to be published next month.
The book features evocative, nostalgic and largely unpublished images of musical legends like Stevie Wonder, Grace Jones and Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry.
“These images record a unique period in what would come to be called black British life,” remarks author and historian Paul Gilroy.
“Pogus Caesar’s emphatically analog art is rough and full of insight. He conveys the transition between generations, mentalities and economies.”
Legendary reggae artists figures prominently, and appropriately, in the Caesar image canon - Burning Spear, The Wailers, Augustus Pablo, Rita Marley, Mighty Diamonds, Black Uhuru, Sly Dunbar, Steel Pulse etc. The photographer cites reggae itself is a significant influence, reflecting his own St Kitts background in the Eastern Caribbean.
The launch of Muzika Kinda Sweet follows an exhibition of the work at the Oom Gallery in Birmingham earlier this year.
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/art/features/pogus-caesars-muzika-kinda-sweet-2080071.html?action=Gallery&ino=3