Create account Log in

Voodooism

[Edit]

Download links and information about Voodooism by Lee Scratch Perry. This album was released in 1996 and it belongs to Reggae, Roots Reggae, Dub genres. It contains 20 tracks with total duration of 01:07:11 minutes.

Artist: Lee Scratch Perry
Release date: 1996
Genre: Reggae, Roots Reggae, Dub
Tracks: 20
Duration: 01:07:11
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $87.14

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Psalms 20 (featuring James Booms) 3:28
2. Proverbs of Dub (featuring The Upsetter) 3:28
3. Better Future (featuring Unknown) 3:30
4. Future Dub (featuring The Upsetter) 3:29
5. River (featuring Zap Pow) 3:30
6. River Stone (featuring Zap Pow) 3:23
7. Freedom (featuring Earl Sixteen) 2:43
8. Right You (featuring The Upsetter) 2:43
9. Mash Down (featuring The Roots) 3:47
10. Africa (featuring The Hombres) 3:33
11. Foundation Dub (featuring The Upsetter) 3:27
12. Voodooism (featuring Leo Graham) 3:28
13. Dubism (featuring The Upsetter) 3:33
14. African Style (featuring The Black Notes) 3:29
15. African Style (Version) (featuring The Upsetter) 3:35
16. Rasta Train (featuring Lee, Jimmy) 3:06
17. Yagga Yagga (featuring Lee, Jimmy) 3:02
18. Rise and Shine (featuring Watty) 2:51
19. Wolf Out Deh (featuring Lloyd & The Prophets, Devon) 3:31
20. Shepherd Rod (featuring The Upsetter) 3:35

Details

[Edit]

A compilation of super rarities from Lee "Scratch" Perry's Black Ark studio, Voodooism is mostly drawn from Jamaican pre-release 7" singles, the latest recorded in 1977, with the collection holding the distinction of being approved by Perry himself. James Booms kicks off the set with a cultural toast over a Super Ape session riddim, the sole DJ track on the set, and is twinned, as are most of the numbers here, with its dub version. "Better Future" was one of three numbers Errol "Bagga" Walker cut for Perry and is arguably the strongest, its positive message backed by a sizzling stepper's riddim. "Freedom" is equally upbeat, one of four numbers Earl Sixteen cut for the Upsetter, but the sole one to see release. Leo Graham had a better track record with Perry, and here on the album's title track, the former Bleecher revisited the obeah theme he first broached on "Black Candle," one of the earliest numbers to be recorded at Black Ark. Reggae fans should be familiar with most of those names. The Roots, in contrast, are virtual unknowns, but their sublime "Mash Down" is one of the best cuts here, and was even picked up by Greensleeves for release in Britain. The Hombres and The Black Notes are even more obscure, but they both offer up lovely cultural numbers, the latter on a riddim that dates back to Perry's work on Hugh Mundell's Africa Must Be Free by 1983 album. Under the alias Watty & Tony, Watty Burnett and Clinton Fearon wake up and give thanks on the gentle "Rise and Shine," popular duo Lloyd & Devon unleash the glorious, but totally uncommercial, "Wolf Out Deh," while Perry himself and Jimmy Riley board the "Rasta Train," a version of Ken Boothe's "The Train Is Coming." Which leaves Zap Pow's proggy, dreamy, psychedelic "River." Although recorded at Black Ark and engineered by Perry, who also added the phenomenal phasing that makes the number so special, the song was created and produced by the band itself. Pressure Sound was to pay for its error, an amicable agreement was obviously reached, though, and the song reappeared on the CD reissue. It is the most breathtaking number on the set, but Perry had plenty more tricks up his sleeve, which are evident on the many sensational, innovative, and awesome dubs found Voodooism. An absolutely stupendous compilation, and for all its collectors' cache, can be just as appreciated by the more casual reggae fan.