Create account Log in

Global

[Edit]

Download links and information about Global by Bunji Garlin. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Rock, Reggae, World Music, Ska genres. It contains 15 tracks with total duration of 53:33 minutes.

Artist: Bunji Garlin
Release date: 2007
Genre: Rock, Reggae, World Music, Ska
Tracks: 15
Duration: 53:33
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $6.49
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. No Super Hero 3:21
2. Pan and Soca 3:56
3. Brrrt 4:12
4. Get Up Stand Up (Featuring T.O.K) (featuring T. O. K.) 3:46
5. Fire Fi Dem 3:29
6. Hardcore Living (Featuring Rita Jones) (featuring Rita Jones) 3:04
7. We Maniac 3:48
8. Globally 3:07
9. Raise Yuh Hand 3:30
10. Blaze It Up 3:22
11. Swing It (Featuring Chris Black) (featuring Chris Black) 4:57
12. One Family (Featuring Freddie McGregor) (featuring Freddie McGregor) 3:05
13. Put In the Thing 2:06
14. Turn Me On 4:10
15. Hands Up 3:40

Details

[Edit]

Hindsight is 20/20, but the dancehall-soca fusion now known as "ragga soca" really was inevitable — in part because dancehall culture has so completely overtaken the Caribbean music scene, and in part because soca's bouncy, three-against-two rhythm has been an important element of the ragga sound for years. In fact, unless you're paying very close attention, you might not even notice that this album is more soca than reggae until several tracks into the program. Garlin's vocal delivery is straight out of the dancehall — more rapid-fire declamation than melodic calypso crooning. And it's extremely effective: songs like "Pan and Soca" and "Brrrt" may be silly, but the rhythms are rock-solid and Garlin commits himself to them powerfully enough to make you forget how dumb they really are. When his material is strong enough to match his delivery — as it is on the uptempo lovers rock combination track "Hardcore Loving" (with Rita Jones) or the hip-hop-inflected "Swing It," the effect can be explosive. (Unfortunately, the latter track is marred by a strangely unbalanced mix, in which 80 percent of the sound is crammed into the left stereo channel.) Very nice overall.