Gussie Presenting I-Roy
Download links and information about Gussie Presenting I-Roy by I Roy. This album was released in 1973 and it belongs to Reggae genres. It contains 44 tracks with total duration of 02:20:37 minutes.
Artist: | I Roy |
---|---|
Release date: | 1973 |
Genre: | Reggae |
Tracks: | 44 |
Duration: | 02:20:37 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | Red Gold and Green | 3:07 |
2. | Pusher Man | 2:51 |
3. | Blackman Time | 3:40 |
4. | Smile Like an Angel | 3:38 |
5. | Peace | 3:25 |
6. | Coxsone Affairs | 3:32 |
7. | Screw Face | 2:47 |
8. | The First Cut Is the Deepest | 3:25 |
9. | Melinda | 3:49 |
10. | Tourism Is My Business | 2:51 |
11. | Tripe Girl | 3:28 |
12. | Cow Town Skank | 3:19 |
13. | Sudden Flight | 2:36 |
14. | Presenting I-Roy | 2:33 |
15. | Rival Warfare | 3:04 |
16. | Education for Free | 3:26 |
17. | Leggo Beast | 3:07 |
18. | Magnificent Seven | 3:58 |
19. | High Jacking | 3:25 |
20. | Burning Passion | 3:46 |
21. | King and the Pauper | 3:47 |
22. | Clappers Tail | 2:41 |
23. | Live and Learn | 2:37 |
24. | Black, Gold and Green (featuring Ken Boothe) | 3:07 |
25. | Slaving (Every Day) (featuring Lloyd Parks) | 2:59 |
26. | Slaving (Version) (featuring Lloyd Parks) | 3:00 |
27. | South East Rock (featuring Glen Brown) | 3:17 |
28. | No More Slavery (featuring Glen Brown) | 3:22 |
29. | In Their Own Way (featuring Dennis Brown) | 3:19 |
30. | In Their Own Way (Version) (featuring Dennis Brown) | 3:16 |
31. | Breaking Up (featuring Alton Ellis) | 2:52 |
32. | Dub Wise to Break Your Heart (featuring Alton Ellis) | 2:17 |
33. | Late At Night (AKA Satisfaction) (featuring Gregory Isaacs) | 2:39 |
34. | Tripe Girl (featuring The Heptones) | 2:42 |
35. | Fiat 125 (Cow Town Rock Version) (featuring Augustus Pablo) | 2:50 |
36. | Anywhere But Nowhere (featuring Simplicity People) | 3:08 |
37. | Try Me (featuring Roman Stewart) | 3:08 |
38. | Stardum (featuring Augustus Pablo, Simplicity People) | 3:10 |
39. | No No No (Version) (featuring Simplicity People) | 3:24 |
40. | KG's (Cross Roads) (featuring Simplicity People) | 3:20 |
41. | KG's (Cross Roads) (featuring Augustus Pablo, Simplicity People) | 3:21 |
42. | The Murderer (AKA High Jacking Version) (featuring Simplicity People) | 3:13 |
43. | I'm Alright (AKA Loving Pauper) (featuring Gregory Isaacs) | 3:43 |
44. | I'm Alright (Version) (featuring Old Boys Inc) | 3:38 |
Details
[Edit]In reality, by the time Gussie Presenting I-Roy arrived, the DJ needed no introduction — he was already one of the hottest toasters on the scene. This, his debut album, was virtually a hits collection, and any tracks that weren't hits would be soon enough. Initially seen as little more than copying his bigger brethren, I-Roy had swiftly developed into a mature and distinctive talent. His conversational style was far removed from his contemporaries, as his powerful toast on "Black Man's Time" perfectly illustrated. That song is the album's centerpiece, and was produced by Gussie Clarke. Built around the "Slaving" rhythm, it opened with a long spoken intro, unique at the time. "Red, Gold and Green" was equally cultural in nature, with "Peace" an exuberant demand for unity, while "Screw Face" takes a thoughtful look at solutions for Jamaica's endemic violence. However, I-Roy was just as effective chatting about less weighty matters, as on "Tripe Girl," while "Melinda" is just as charming, both excellently employing classic rocksteady rhythms, as does the wonderfully moody "Coxsonne Affair." On "Tourism Is My Business," meanwhile, the DJ exalts his island home, surely with tongue firmly in cheek. There are a dozen seminal cuts in all, and what better way to meet one of Jamaica's greatest DJs.