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  • Penthouse to release Ska album

    Penthouse to release to Ska album this month


    Monday, July 02, 2012













    SKALICIOUS is the title of a ska album to be released this month by Penthouse Records.

    The set has 15 songs by artistes including singers Marcia Griffiths, Tessanne Chin, Etana, Ernie Smith, singjay Buju Banton and deejay Exco Levi.
    (L-R) Tessanne Chin. Buju Banton.
    Marcia Griffiths
    Ernie Smith



    (L-R) Tessanne Chin. Buju Banton.


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    Head of Penthouse, producer Donovan Germain, says he started work on the project five years ago.
    "I thought it would be something different, I don't want to confine myself to reggae," Germain told the Jamaica Observer.
    He said not all the artistes he called up were keen on doing ska, an uptempo, horn-hooked beat that emerged in the early 1960s.
    "Some were skeptical, they played it safe.
    Banton, currently serving a 10-year prison sentence in the United States for drug trafficking, contributed the song Better Must Come while Griffiths did My Promised Land.
    Strings of Love (Tessanne Chin) Johnny Too Bad (Etana), Jamdown 50 (Ernie Smith) and Five Decades by Toronto-based Exco Levi are some of the other songs on Skalicious.
    Multi-instrumentalist Ernie Wilks, and horn players Dean Fraser (saxophone), trombonists Nambo Robinson and Everton Pessoa and trumpeter Dwight Richards, worked on the album.
    Germain, one of the top producers in contemporary reggae, has dabbled with ska in the past, particularly on Banton's 1997 album, Inna Heights.
    Skalicious is the title of a ska album to be released in July by Penthouse Records.
    The set has 15 songs by artistes including singers Marcia Griffiths, Tessanne Chin, Etana, Ernie Smith, singjay Buju Banton and deejay Exco Levi.
    Head of Penthouse, producer Donovan Germain, says he started work on the project five years ago.
    "I thought it would be something different, I don't want to confine myself to reggae," Germain told the Jamaica Observer.
    He said not all the artistes he called up were keen on doing ska, an uptempo, horn-hooked beat that emerged in the early 1960s.
    "Some were skeptical, they played it safe.
    Banton, currently serving a 10-year prison sentence in the United States for drug trafficking, contributed the song Better Must Come while Griffiths did My Promised Land.
    Strings of Love (Tessanne Chin) Johnny Too Bad (Etana), Jamdown 50 (Ernie Smith) and Five Decades by Toronto-based Exco Levi are some of the other songs on Skalicious.
    Multi-instrumentalist Ernie Wilks, and horn players Dean Fraser (saxophone), trombonists Nambo Robinson and Everton Pessoa and trumpeter Dwight Richards, worked on the album.
    Germain, one of the top producers in contemporary reggae, has dabbled with ska in the past, particularly on Banton's 1997 album, Inna Heights.



    Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/enter...#ixzz1zVYGwxw2
    • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

  • #2
    I see him a gwaan wid veterans on this album & him could a buss some new artists as well.
    Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

    Comment


    • #3
      Yes, But....

      Originally posted by Hortical View Post
      I see him a gwaan wid veterans on this album & him could a buss some new artists as well.
      Hortical, I understand what you mean, but sometimes things have to be more -- much more -- than merely “buss(ing) some new artist.”

      An entire generation has lost out on the true greatness and true creativity of Jamaican culture, thanks in part to the concern of young producers with “bussing new artists.” I think that what Donovan is doing here is highly commendable, and with the blend of artists he has used, I expect some interesting and authentic (albeit repackaged) musical performances on each track.

      Poster X and I have had our disagreements, but I will always agree with him on this one thing: Ska is a very important part of our culture and we should never lose it or allow future generations to be unaware of its greatness and the great musicians, composers and arrangers that Jamaica once had!

      Comment


      • #4
        I only hope it is supported because the main reason why we lose it is because people don't buy it. People only talk about the good dis and that but a man can't complete a project like this and get nothing in return, only "good project".
        • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

        Comment


        • #5
          I agree & disagree, however I would have liked a producer of his pedgree to feature a relatively unknown artist(s) on the scene. Based on Jamaica's current appetite for music, this album will have more appeal internationally.
          Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

          Comment

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