JTR7-02
 

MAFFI 7"-series:

Solo Banton w/ disrupt - Talk To Me (7")

       
 

(click HERE to enlarge)

 

The second cut in our 7" series based on the rough 80ies-Casio-riddim niceness of the Maffi
producers from Copenhagen is pure floor dynamite: "Talk To Me " by MC and sound man
veteran Solo Banton hailing from the Realityshock Crew outta Reading / UK. The ultra-raw
bassline, driven forward by the in-your-face drummachine beats, with Solo's massive vocal
action on top - somewhere between Prince Far I at his best and Burru Banton on fire - is
screaming for reloads with no end. disrupt version on B.

Mastering by Dubplates & Mastering, Berlin.

 

A-Side: Solo Banton- Talk To Me

B-Side: disrupt - version

 

 

 

       
             

 

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(click HERE to enlarge)

 

The Maffi 7" series on Jahtari:

When a new type of electronic (and inexpensive) music gear revolutionarized the sound
of Reggae and Dub forever in the mid-1980s a wave of great releases was the result on
legendary labels like Firehouse, Unity, Jammy$, Xterminator, etc. The raw and straight-
forward charme of these minimal riddims, pulled off with nothing but the cheapest Casio
and SynDrum models, is still unmatched; drawing it's strangely timeless qualities from a
closeness of sound aesthetics one might more associate with early Electro or Techno
records than classic Roots Reggae. While the original Jamaican vibe remained all over the
place the riddims were shot to a new futuristic dimension of sound.

The special mark of innocent roughness was replaced in the early 1990s by a more clean,
soft - and boring - synthsizer sound, rather striving to emulate a 1970s King Tubby with
a FM synth than continuing to explore the musical future of Reggae. Thus the Computarized
era ended as sudden as it had started, and remained a relavitely small niche genre, mostly
for avid collectors, ever since. The sound came back to the wider attention of a bigger
audience with the Watch How The People Dancing comp on Honest Jon's only recently.

Jahtari is now launching an ongoing 7"-series well in that very spirit of the mid-80ies
computarized Reggae vibe: dirty Casio basslines, smashing drum machines and simple
melody hooks with that funny preset sounds of old. Expect a line of dynamite floor killahs,
starring one top vocalist after the next, produced by the MAFFI crew outta Copenhagen,
Denmark, and finished off for maximum niceness by disrupt.

       
       
       
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