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Skinhead reggae from Trojan Records, you can never go wrong on this one. Play this loud!

Tenemos excelentes. 17 tracks unavailable on any format for decades, this fascinating compilation is a must for fans of rock steady and boss reggae, with the set superbly demonstrating the ever-developing sound of Jamaican music over a period now widely regarded as the most compelling in. KTFdedicated to upsetters and the rarer sides of early reggae but also ska, calypso and and modern style.

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2. Vampires - Upsetters
4. Pee Pee Cluck - Pioneers
6. Reggae Pressure - Hippy Boys
8. Lock Jaw - Dave Barker
10. Dynamic Pressure - Music Specialists
12. Children Are You Ready - Versatiles
14. Good Time Rock - Hugh Malcolm

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15. Movements (The Joe Gibbs Way) - Count Matchuki & The Destroyers
17. Look Who A Bus Style - Meditators
19. Hold Down - Kingstonians
21. Bangarang - Stranger Cole & Lester Sterling
23. Lee Van Cleef - King Stitt
25. Jesse James - Laurel Aitken
27. Check Him Out - Bleechers
Reggae
29. Love Up Kiss Up - Termites

Skinheads were responsible for making reggae popular. Crazy though this sounds, it’s actually true. Let’s take a peek into the past and see exactly how a genre of music originating from an island in the Carribean became a world phenomenon.

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Sure, reggae was massive in Jamaica – no-one can deny that. Outside of its home, it was little more than a curio – so called “race” or “minority” music. You see, record labels were consciously marketing different genres to black audiences and white audiences. And “black” music didn’t get the promotion and airtime that “white” music got.

This all changed in 1969. As skinhead culture has spread to every corner of Great Britain, sales of reggae records sky-rocketed. Hundreds of thousands of copies were being sold to youths anxious to get a hold of the latests sounds -in spite of basically non-existent advertising. It was only a matter of time before reggae burst from its obscurity and into the charts. Finally, the first ever record to become a #1 hit outside of Jamaica topped the charts – Desmond Dekker’s “Israelites”.

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Desmond Dekker – “Israelites” (Pyramid, 1969)

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To be sure, this record’s themes of slavery and suffering prefigured the wave of Rastafarian roots reggae which was to become widely popular in the 1970s. In the meantime, groups of mostly-white short-haired youths were essentially the only reggae fans around. This song – a skinhead anthem to this day – is a testament to that.