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Let's Catch the Beat: The Music That Launched the Legend

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Download links and information about Let's Catch the Beat: The Music That Launched the Legend by Dandy, Brother Dan All Stars. This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to Reggae genres. It contains 55 tracks with total duration of 02:28:59 minutes.

Artist: Dandy, Brother Dan All Stars
Release date: 2003
Genre: Reggae
Tracks: 55
Duration: 02:28:59
Buy on iTunes $29.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Follow That Donkey 2:48
2. Raver's Serenade 2:36
3. Tears In My Eyes 2:39
4. Donkey Returns 2:36
5. Please Stay 2:29
6. My Dreams 2:30
7. I Want to Rave 3:10
8. Farewell My Love 3:20
9. Show Me Baby (featuring Owen Gray) 2:48
10. Dark End 2:41
11. Darling (You Know I Love You) (featuring Owen Gray) 2:23
12. You Send Me (featuring Owen Gray) 3:01
13. Run Come Have Some Fun 2:04
14. Only a Fool Breaks His Own Heart 2:59
15. Put On Your Dancing Shoes 3:08
16. Tribute to the Prince 2:49
17. Yesterday 3:01
18. The Race Is On 3:08
19. You're Not the Same Girl 3:08
20. Your Daddy Is Home 2:54
21. Doctor Sure Shot 2:40
22. It's a Sad World 3:12
23. Musical Land 3:00
24. My Nights Are So Lonely 2:40
25. Tribute to Sir Kb 2:15
26. Our Love Will Last (featuring The Jivers) 2:29
27. Eastern Organ 2:54
28. Hold Pon Them 2:07
29. Answer Me, My Love (featuring Owen Gray) 2:52
30. Wear My Crown (featuring The Jivers) 2:53
31. Down on the Beach (featuring The Jivers) 2:06
32. Pony Ride (featuring Winston Groovy, Pat Rhoden) 2:24
33. Baby You Send Me (featuring Winston Groovy, Pat Rhoden) 2:44
34. Read Up 2:09
35. Gallop 1:40
36. Another Saturday Night 2:06
37. Bees Knees 2:06
38. Donkey Train (featuring Denzil Dennis) 3:06
39. Down By the Riverside (featuring Denzil Dennis) 2:30
40. Me Nah Worry (featuring Denzil Dennis) 3:06
41. Hush Don't You Cry (featuring Denzil Dennis) 2:48
42. The Toast 3:34
43. Mellow Music 2:35
44. One More Dance 2:43
45. All I Have to Do Is Dream (featuring Denzil Dennis) 3:24
46. Lee's Farewell 2:12
47. Life Can Be Beautiful 2:17
48. Sincerely (featuring Pat Rhoden) 3:11
49. Since I Met You Baby (featuring Denzil Dennis) 2:49
50. Freedom 3:13
51. Everynight 2:14
52. The Bunk 2:25
53. Everybody Feel Good 3:00
54. Don't You Know 2:31
55. Kicks Out 2:52

Details

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In on the ground floor, Robert "Dandy" Livingstone Thompson was instrumental to the spectacular growth and popularity of Trojan Records. Brought onboard as a stopgap, Dandy feverishly provided releases while the label heads busily head-hunted Jamaican producers. The singing producer was an astute choice by Trojan but the decision to sink money into full-priced, full-length albums was not; the reggae scene was singles-driven, and it wasn't until the second half of the '70s that a market for 33s came in. Thus, 1968's Follow That Donkey was a flop, as was its follow-up, Dandy Returns (in later years both were highly sought after by collectors). Trojan learned the lesson, and when Dandy's third 33, Let's Catch the Beat (credited to the Brother Dan All-Stars) was released in 1969, it was priced at a much more enticing 99p (less than the cost of two 45s), and swiftly turned into one of the label's biggest-selling records. The two-CD Let's Catch the Beat reissues all three albums in their entirety, while also rounding up all of Dandy's non-album A- and B-side 45s, including his productions, from 1968. Closely following the Jamaican scene, the artist immediately picked up on all the latest fashions emanating from the island, be it the rage for donkeys, ribaldry, or the new reggae rhythm. But even though all of Dandy's productions and arrangements were highly indebted to his homeland, he brought a distinctive British flavor to his records that set them apart from the originators. Dandy's first two albums may have remained in the shops, but the records themselves were a revelation, while his singles were sweeping through the British sound systems like blazing fire. Dandy would finally break out into the U.K. chart in the following decade, but long before that he was a superstar in the reggae community, Britain's own answer to Prince Buster, and just as influential. Kudos to Trojan for making these crucial records available to modern fans.