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商品カタログ - レゲエレコードコム
レゲエレコード ドットコム ダブ・ストア・サウンド・インク レゲエとブラック・ミュージックのオンラインショップ - レゲエレコード・ドットコム

レゲエ & ブラック・ミュージック オンラインショップ

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presented by DUB STORE SOUND INC.

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Dub Store Recordsより、アルバム2タイトル予約開始!
(4件)

Various - Merritone Rock Steady 2: This Music Got Soul 1966-1967 (2LP)

Dub Store Records JPN 1966- 1967

¥5,380

フェデラル・レコーズ黄金時代の作品で描き出された、ロックステディ誕生の瞬間!

大部分をケン・クーリのマスターテープより収録したクールなロックステディ・コレクション。ジャンルの立役者であるリン・テイトと、ジャマイカ屈指の名シンガー&コーラス・グループが生み出した偉大なる音楽がここに!

Anthony Red Rose - Red Rose Will Make You Dance

Dub Store Records JPN 1986

¥2,880

キング・タビーズ・ダンスホールの象徴曲「Tempo」収録の名盤!


ダンスホール新時代、キング・タビーが手がけたアンソニー・レッド・ローズの出世作「Tempo」を含む新生タビーズが狼煙を上げた名作復刻!

Anthony Red Rose - Red Rose Will Make You Dance

Dub Store Records JPN 1986

¥2,268

キング・タビーズ・ダンスホールの象徴曲「Tempo」収録の名盤!


ダンスホール新時代、キング・タビーが手がけたアンソニー・レッド・ローズの出世作「Tempo」を含む新生タビーズが狼煙を上げた名作復刻!

Various - Merritone Rock Steady 2: This Music Got Soul 1966-1967

Dub Store Records JPN 1966- 1967

¥2,780

American rhythm & blues fervour, boosted by a multitude of sound systems playing 78rpm records on increasingly larger sets, gripped Jamaica from the late forties onwards but, towards the end of the decade, the American audience began to move towards a somewhat softer sound. The driving rhythm & blues discs became increasingly hard to find and the more progressive Jamaican sound system operators, realising that they now needed to make their own music, turned to Kingston’s jazz and big band musicians to record one off custom cut discs. These were not initially intended for commercial release but designed solely for sound system play on acetate or ‘dub plates’ as they would later be termed. These ‘specials’ soon began to eclipse the popularity of American rhythm & blues and the demand for their locally produced music proved so great that the sound system operators began to release their music commercially on vinyl and became record producers. Clement ‘Coxsone’ Dodd, Duke Reid ‘The Trojan’ and Prince Buster, who operated his Voice Of The People Sound System, were among the first to establish themselves in this new role and the nascent Jamaican recording industry now went into overdrive.

In 1954 Ken Khouri had numbered among the first far sighted entrepreneurs to produce mento records with local musicians (mento is Jamaica’s original indigenous music) before progressing to opening Jamaica’s first record manufacturing plant. Three years later he moved his operation to Foreshore Road (later renamed Marcus Garvey Drive) where, with the assistance of the inestimable Graeme Goodall, he updated and upgraded his recording studio. The importance of this enterprising move was critical to the development of Jamaican music and its influence both profound and far reaching.