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Автор
Сообщение
Polarnik
Freddie McGregor / Di Captain
Жанр: Reggae Страна: Jamaica Год издания: 2013 Аудиокодек: MP3 Тип рипа: tracks Битрейт аудио: 320 kbps Продолжительность: 1:16:57 Треклист: 01. Intro: Jenny Jenny 02. Move Up Jamaica 03. You Won''t See Me 04. Bag A Hype 05. Africa 06. More Love in the Ghetto 07. Love I Believe In 08. Rainbow Country 09. Standing Strong (Bobby Babylon) Feat. Gappy Ranks 10. Love Ballad 11. There You Go 12. My Story 13. Let It Be Me 14. Jah Love Di Whole A Wi 15. A House Is Not a Home 16. Equal Rights
On Di Captain''s "Intro," Jamaican radio/television host Jenny Jenny gives a quick overview of singer Freddie McGregor''s career, going back to his early-''60s rocksteady days and dropping a mention of "Big Ship," his pivotal hit. It was with that track that the rebel-saluting man who recorded "Bobby Bobylon" became a roots singer who also passionately delivered R&B, and later nailed lovers rock (1987''s "Just Don''t Want to Be Lonely" is a reggae standard) and bounced through the goofy ragga years like a pro (check 1994''s "This Carry Go Bring Come" for sheer joy). It''s why he''s more than earned every genre swerve that this 2012 "comeback" album offers, and while this is an excellent way for material-starved fans to feast (it''s his first full album in seven years, since he''s been mentoring his way hip dancehall kids Stephen and Chino), it''s a bit too stuffed and revue-minded to recommend to newcomers. McGregor regulars, on the other hand, get a wealth of grown folk''s reggae, beginning with the warm and positive "Move Up Jamaica," an anthem for celebrating 50 years of independence. Later, there''s a worthy redo of "Bobby Bobylon" dubbed "Standing Strong," with dancehall star Gappy Ranks supremely mashing it up, plus a slow, skanking take on "Rainbow Country" that''s pure pleasure. "There You Go," "Let It Be Me," with the elegant Etana as guest, and a beautiful take on "A House Is Not a Home" give the album a winning trifecta of ballads, and with "Bag a Hype," McGregor offers the youths a poetic metaphor for the hollow life of a street hood. Even if it could have been sorted better, this has the warmth and wisdom McGregor fans adore with plenty of highlights to place on the legend''s top shelf.
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