Cutty Ranks - Safe Travel [Necessary Mayhem 2014] by reggaeville http://ift.tt/MsmtzD http://ift.tt/1G1AUWA http://ift.tt/13SCh5e October 31, 2014 at 04:12AM

seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from New Zealand
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Syria

seen from United States
seen from New Zealand
seen from China
seen from New Zealand
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Singapore

seen from United States
seen from Israel

seen from Singapore

seen from Ukraine
Cutty Ranks - Safe Travel [Necessary Mayhem 2014] by reggaeville http://ift.tt/MsmtzD http://ift.tt/1G1AUWA http://ift.tt/13SCh5e October 31, 2014 at 04:12AM
Jamming with class
Irie Ites Records, France, is quite simply where it's at when it comes to tasteful, hype, upful modern reggae-dancehall.*
Listen to their releases from 2003 to present, and you'll realise there are a multitude of hits: Only Solution Riddim, Mr Officer (Chezidek & Lorenzo), Su Su Pon Rasta (Naggo Morris' rewrite of the 1975 cut) and now the latest:
This, my friends, is the loudmouth 'Stop That Sound Riddim'. As the bullet holes on the artwork suggest, it's deadly.
SHELL DOWN!!
Out now on three 7-inch vinyls and one 10 (with the version on the flip), it has fine cuts from Sizzla and General Levy. My favourite has to be the above, ultimately because I remember seeing a video of the duo recording it back in 2006, tearing it up ina studio, and I hoped to God that it would, one day, get pressed. Well, that moment has arrived, over half a decade later! Check them performing it here:
Absolute muadness! Heaps of energy.
Overall, the production - as with pretty much all Irie Ites material - is totally on point; the bass is well-balanced with the mid-range sounds and vocals (as a comparison, Da Grynch aka Curtis Lynch aka bossman of Necessary Mayhem has his composition & drops down to a t, however I feel sometimes there is a flatness sonically and the low frequencies are a little too imposing, but that's just me).
Above: Spectacular on the promo ting
Back to the French label: beautiful sampling of the 1978 Keith & Tex classic 'Stop That Train' (sped up to 94bpm from the original plodding tempo of 79), alongside some intense spitting, makes for a great alliance of rootical and party vibes. BOOF.
Above: European soundboy humour from DJ Coltjah, Irie Ites Sound
* Oh, and Necessary Mayhem, UK, they're on it in many ways!
PS: Furybass Soundsystem are killing it - if you missed their last one (production by Red Cat), don't sleep on the latest re-press - this one is bass-driven, tun up!