Wackie's first recording studio was a four-track facility, opened in a damp basement at 211th Street around 1974. Early Wackie's productions sometimes modified the creations of Lee “Scratch” Perry, using Perry’s original master tapes, but with overdubbing and remixing executed at Wackie's HQ. Tracks like deejay Jah Vill’s The Bump and The Heptones’ Revolution are noteworthy examples, and the inaugural Bullwackie's dub album, the sparse and eerie Free for All, also used some of Perry’s rhythms.
Despite patchy efforts such as Winston Dale’s wobbly Reggae Beat, a mark of distinction was made early on, with Johnny Osbourne’s Jah Children Ken Boothe’s Stop This World and John Clarke’s Recession all holding exquisite tension, heralding a Bronx slant on the roots reggae idiom, born from the harshness of its streets.
Read more at bullwackie.smokeyroom.net/
Shared 1 year ago
607 views
Shared 1 year ago
609 views
Shared 1 year ago
291 views
Shared 1 year ago
279 views
Shared 1 year ago
280 views
Shared 1 year ago
261 views
Shared 1 year ago
237 views
Shared 1 year ago
351 views
Shared 2 years ago
699 views
Shared 2 years ago
812 views
Shared 2 years ago
1K views
Shared 2 years ago
514 views
Shared 2 years ago
1.1K views
Shared 2 years ago
550 views
Shared 2 years ago
607 views
Shared 2 years ago
444 views
Shared 2 years ago
439 views