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10 Deadly Shots, Vol. II

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Download links and information about 10 Deadly Shots, Vol. II by 10 Foot Ganja Plant. This album was released in 2012 and it belongs to Rock, Reggae, World Music genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 34:02 minutes.

Artist: 10 Foot Ganja Plant
Release date: 2012
Genre: Rock, Reggae, World Music
Tracks: 10
Duration: 34:02
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Rooftop Duel 3:35
2. The Challenge 3:03
3. Asking Hand 3:51
4. Invincible Butcher 4:36
5. Fist of Yuen Kay-San 2:32
6. Death Waiver 3:39
7. Funeral of the Master 3:41
8. Red Boat Opera 3:36
9. One Inch Punch 2:51
10. Return of the Prodigal Son 2:38

Details

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As anyone who has come to love the band will know, ever since its debut in 2000, 10 Ft. Ganja Plant's stock in trade has been the kind of slow, loping, and marijuana-steeped roots reggae that came into full, resinous flower in the early to mid-'70s. Their previous seven albums have been almost entirely interchangeable, most of them strictly instrumental and all of them constituting a skillful and heartfelt homage to an art form that is now nearly lost in the gruff shouting of post-ragga dancehall music and the monster-truck rumble of dubstep. The second title in the band's 10 Deadly Shots series, however, finds the group moving out of its usual groove — though not, as one might expect, forward into the realm of early dancehall or digital styles. Instead, they're now moving backward in time toward the rubber-band grooves of late-'60s rocksteady. On this album they are aided by guest keyboardist Roger Rivas of the brilliant Los Angeleno rocksteady revivalists the Aggrolites (in keeping with 10'GP tradition, he is uncredited on the packaging), and his organ stylings evoke wonderfully the sounds of Jackie Mittoo and the early Upsetters. The 10 Ft. Ganja Plant crew slip without any apparent effort into these springy, elastic grooves, creating a mood on tracks like "The Challenge" and "Invincible Butcher" that recall the days when reggae was still in thrall to American R&B and the imagery of spaghetti westerns, when Lee "Scratch" Perry's Black Ark studio was churning out organ-centered instrumental tracks by the bushel and the sound system dances spun them all night long. It's something of a departure for this band, but one that its fans will likely find perfectly acceptable.