Prince Fatty Meets the Gorgon in Dub by Prince Fatty / Bunny Lee (Record, 2023)
Ear Candy Music (49383)
99.6% positive feedback
Price:
US $38.49
ApproximatelyAU $59.02
+ $45.38 postage
Est. delivery Mon, 18 Aug - Tue, 26 AugEstimated delivery Mon, 18 Aug - Tue, 26 Aug
Returns:
30-day returns. Buyer pays for return postage. If you use an eBay postage label, it will be deducted from your refund amount.
Condition:
NewNew
A1 Jah Jah Dub The Conqueror. A3 Press The Dub Along. A5 Dub Is Shining. B2 Garden Of Dub. B3 Prophetic Dub. B4 No Dub In Their Heart. Top Notch Service. A2 The Inversion.
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About this product
Product Identifiers
Record LabelVP, VP Records
UPC0054645424615
eBay Product ID (ePID)15071192736
Product Key Features
FormatRecord
Release Year2023
GenreReggae
ArtistPrince Fatty / Bunny Lee
Release TitlePrince Fatty Meets the Gorgon in Dub
Dimensions
Item Height0.19 in
Item Weight0.56 lb
Item Length12.27 in
Item Width12.23 in
Additional Product Features
Country/Region of ManufactureUnited States
Number of Discs1
NotesVinyl LP pressing. Producer Prince Fatty revisits the vintage Bunny Striker Lee reggae catalogue with new dub mixes and edits of 10 classic roots reggae tracks, from the 1970s. Originally voiced by Linval Thompson, Horace Andy, Cornel Campbell, Leroy Smart, Don Carlos and other luminaries from the golden era of reggae. These are all real-time mixes made in the analogue realm and recorded to 15 i.p.s reel-to-reel tape. The original Bunny Striker Lee riddim tracks include Linval Thompson's "Jah Jah A The Conqueror" edited with Tommy McCook's instrumental arrangement of the same; Jackie Edwards' "The Invasion," originally by Burning Spear; Cornel Campbell's "Press Along," Horace Andy's "Don't Try To Use Me," Ronnie Davis' "Sun Is Shining," originally by Bob Marley; Barry Brown's "Give Thanks & Praise," Rod Taylor's "Garden Of Eden," Neville Brown's "Prophesy," the instrumental track also known for Don Carlos' "Late Night Blues," Leroy Smart's "No Love," the instrumental also known for Horace Andy's "Zion Gate"; and Don Carlos's "Ababajoni," which derives from Jackie Mittoo and Vin Gordon's "Real Rock" instrumental.