PODCAST BATTLE: 4 big sounds ina Firehouse CLASH
4 big sounds ina
Firehouse CLASH
10 rounds of head to head reggae sounds clash
Each week, four tracks are entered, one is named winner of the round.

The compilation you’re looking at right now is a twenty-five year project in the making.  Okay, that’s not quite true, it was more like three months, but it is in some sense the product of a quarter century-long friendship between four people who have shared a passion for reggae since junior high school.  Howard, Brad, Scott, and I originally hail from Central Florida.  Like many North Americans, we were exposed first through BMW, the great Jimmy Cliff, and the Clash.  Intrigued by what we heard, we began seeking out other reggae artists and their records where we could find them.  Soon we became regulars at a local club, Negril Palms, where a phenomenal outfit, New Breed, was the house band.  Luckily no one seemed to care that we were under-age.  

We also came to know a number of local Caribbean migrants to Central Florida, many of whom had come as H2 workers to harvest citrus. Among them was the deeply religious Kabrasta Negasta, a dread who lived in a little red, gold and green house (dubbed the Judah Seal Museum); dressed only in military khaki (like Selassie, he told us); and openly smoked and sold his sacrament (for which he spent too much time in the dungeon).  We spent many hours in the company of Kab and his Idren, where oily sticks of incense burned; the chalice bubbled; dreads came and went; the cops occasionally paid a call; and the heaviest (what Kab called “orthodox”) rhythms pounded out of giant speakers – think of Hugh Mundell’s “Western Kingston Style.”  For us, this immersion in race, class, and cultural difference cast a spell on us like nothing else in our high school years.  Our collective love of Jamaican music shaped how we saw the world, what we thought mattered, and how much bass is required for music to be listenable. 

We are now scattered across the globe, from Florida to Connecticut, and from Oregon to Mozambique, but are all still as hooked as we ever were. The idea for the podcastbattle was Howard’s, whose vision emerged out of the desire to find some way for us all to share the music we all have continued to explore.  Adding the competitive element insured that our old obsessions would kick in, sending each of us in panicked searches through cds, vinyl and old cassettes to find the track that would rule the sound clash each week.  Here is the result.  We hope you enjoy it.

Style Brad Howard Joe Scott
10 wild card

Aswad
Natural Progression

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Wailing
Souls
Mr. Fire Coal Man

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Toots
& the Maytals
Pomp and Pride

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Stephen
Marley
Someone to Love

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9 Wild Card


Tiken Jah Fakoly
Delivrance

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The Wailers
Lively Up Yourself

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Gregory Isaacs
Mr. Cop

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LKJ
Sonnys Lettah

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8 Wild Card

Gregory Isaacs
Confirmed Reservation

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Ini Kamoze
General

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Damien Marley
Welcome to Jamrock

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The Ethiopians
Everything Crash

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7 Wild Card

[part 2]


 
  Culture
Work on Natty

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Michael Smith
Picture or Picture

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7 Wild Card


Culture
Marcus

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Joe Higgs
There's a Reward

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Desmond Dekker
Fu Manchu

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Jimmy Cliff
Wahjahka Man

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6 Dub



Dub Syndicate
Hey Geoff


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The Clash
Justice Tonight / Kick it Over

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Augustus Pablo
Rockers Dub



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Dub Syndicate
Night Train


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5 DJ
 (part 3)



radio
Bobby Culture & Nicodemus
Going Home


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Buro Banton
Boom Wa Dis


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Big Youth
S 90 Skank

 

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Michigan & Smiley
Blackness Awareness

 

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5 DJ
 (part 2)

Gunslinger
The Buzz Feeling

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Asher Senator
Asher in Court

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Sister Carol
A No Me Name Peggy

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U-Roy
Natty Rebel

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5 DJ
 (part 1)


Major Danger
Danger Gwan

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Early B
Take Out Your Bible

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Big Youth
Lion's Den

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Dillinger
CB200

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4 dancehall



Anthony B,
Raid the Barn

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Barrington Levy
Under Me Sensi

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Sugar Minott
Herbman Hustling

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Tenor Saw
Ring De Alarm

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3 roots



Rocky Dawuni Fadaland

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The Skulls
Black Slavery Days

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The  Congos
Fisherman

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Max Romeo
  Uptown Babies

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2 rockers



The Gladiators
Bongo Red


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The Gladiators
Pocket Money


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Horace Andy
Skylarking


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Dr Alimantado
 
Marcus Garvey School


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1 orthodox


The Abyssinians
Satta Massagana


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Hugh Mundell
Lets All Unite


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Delroy Wilson
Addis Ababa


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Fred Locks
Black Star Liners


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 green = winner of the round