/
DE

Pressure Sounds Ska 2 Items

Reggae & Dancehall 26 Roots & Culture 16 Dub 7 Ska 2
Hide Filter & Categories Show Filter & Categories
Filter Results
Format
Format
Vinyl
LP
Close
Used Vinyl
Used Vinyl
No Used Vinyl
Close
Artist
Artist
King Tubby & The Aggrovators
The Skatalites
Close
Label
Label
Archives De La Zone Mondiale
Asian Man
Audioplatter
Bad Time
Badasonic
Black Butcher
Black Butcher / Pork Pie
Black Butcher Classics
Blue Beat
BMG
BMG Rights Management
Bomber Music
Brainlab Groove
Brixton
Buenritmo
Burning Heart
Burning Sounds
Castle Face
Chrysalis
Chrysalis Records
Concrete Jungle
Cyclone
Destiny
DMF
Drum & Bass X Rock A Shacka
Duke Reid Classics
Emotional Rescue
Epitaph
Epitaph/Slugtone
Equiknoxx Music
Fajador
Firehouse
Fruits
Gran Quilombo D
Harlem Shuffle
Honeypie
I Buy
Jamaican
Jamaican Art
Jarring Effects
Jump Up
King Earthquake
Kingston Sounds
Klimt
Kob Records
La Onda
Late Lunch
Liquidator
Liquidator Music
Mad Butcher
Mind Control
Moll-Selekta
Mr Bongo
Names You Can Trust
Napoli Rockers Syndicate
Onlyroots
Original Gravity
P-Vine
Petra
Pork Pie
Pressure Sounds
Prophecy Productions
Radiation
Radiation Roots
Railroad
Ram Goat
Randale
Record Kicks
Return Of The Super Vape
RhIno
Ring Of Fire
Rock-A-Shacka
Roots Vibration
Round Midnight
Rusty Knife
Season Of Mist
Skycap
Smith And Miller
Soul Jazz
Soulgramma
Spark Up N Listen
Stag-O-Lee
Strut
TBL
Tigers Archive
Tighten Up
Time Capsule
Trojan
Une Vie Pour Rien
Une Vie Pour Rien ?
Union Square - Salvo
Union Square Music
Unionsquare
Universal
Voice Of Jamaica
VP
White Peach
Zephyrus
Close
Pressing
Pressing
Original
Reissue
Close
Country
Country
EU
UK
Close
Year
Year
2023
1982
Close
Price
Price
15 – 30 €
30 – 50 €
Close
New In Stock
New In Stock
180 Days
365 Days
Close
Back In Stock
Back In Stock
90 Days
180 Days
365 Days
Close
Availability
Availability
Stocked Items Only
Close
Reset all Filters No Used Vinyl Pressure Sounds
King Tubby & The Aggrovators - Dubbing In The Back Yard
King Tubby & The Aggrovators
Dubbing In The Back Yard
LP | 1982 | UK | Reissue (Pressure Sounds)
19,99 €*
Release: 1982 / UK – Reissue
Genre: Reggae & Dancehall
Add to Cart Coming Soon Sold out Currently not available Not Enough Coins
A reissue of a classic dub/reggae album, originally released in 1982.
The Skatalites - Ska-Boo-Da-Be
The Skatalites
Ska-Boo-Da-Be
LP | 2023 | EU | Original (Pressure Sounds)
30,99 €*
Release: 2023 / EU – Original
Genre: Reggae & Dancehall
Add to Cart Coming Soon Sold out Currently not available Not Enough Coins
a Sino/Japanese twist.

In the early 1960s Justin Yap and his brother Ivan [aka ‘Jahu’] ran the Top Deck sound system from their family’s ice cream parlour and restaurant in Barbican, Kingston. The local success of the sound system encouraged them to venture into the recording business, and by 1962 Justin had recorded singers Larry Marshall, Ephraim ‘Joe’ Henry and Ferdie Nelson. The fledgling label enjoyed a modest local Jamaican hit in 1963, with trumpeter Baba Brooks and the Trenton Spence Orchestra's “Distant Drums” issued on Top Deck Records as the b-side to Larry Marshall’s hit “Too Young To Love”. As a fan of exotica composer Martin Denny, Justin had heard “Jungle Drums” on Denny’s 1959 LP “Afro-Desia”. His liking for Martin Denny would prove fruitful later, when Justin recorded the Skatalites in a mammoth all-night session in 1964 at Clement Dodd’s Studio One on Brentford Road.

By 1963-1964, hundreds of ska tracks were being recorded by Clement Dodd, Arthur ‘Duke’ Reid, Vincent Edwards, Vincent Chin, Leslie Kong and Prince Buster and others. Justin had linked up with Allen ‘Bim Bim’ Scott, a friend of Clement ‘Coxson’ Dodd, owner of the Studio One label who had already recorded the musicians who became the Skatalites.

Justin and Ivan organised a session in November 1964 at Studio One; it lasted 18 hours. The length of the session allowed for alternate takes to be recorded, but the highlights of the sessions were the five original compositions by Don Drummond – “Marcus Junior”, “The Reburial”, “Confucious”, “Chinatown” and “Smiling”. The first two are in tribute to the Pan-Africanist Marcus Garvey; “The Reburial” refers to the occasion of his interment in Jamaica in 1964, his remains having been brought from the cemetery in Kensal Green London, where he was originally buried in 1940, and reburied in King George VI Memorial Park Kingston [later renamed National Heroes Park].

Along with these originals were some well-chosen cover versions. Two came from the Duke Ellington songbook: “Ska-Ra-Van” is of course Ellington and his trombonist Juan Tizol’s classic composition “Caravan”, while “Surftide Seven” is Ellington’s “In A Mellotone”. The LP title track “Ska-Boo-Da-Ba” is a version of Bill Doggett’s 1958 “King” US 45 “Boo-Da-Ba”. “Ringo” had also appeared on Arthur Lyman’s “Taboo” LP [1958] as “Ringo Oiwake”. Originally it was sung by Hibari Misora – a very famous vocal song in Japan, recorded in 1952, the melody composed by Masao Yoneyama. Yet another tune copped from Lyman’s “Taboo” LP is “China Clipper”, composed by the pianist / arranger / orchestrator Paul Conrad.

The last track on this fine LP is “Lawless Street”, a feature for Roland Alphonso. Unlike the other Skatalites, Roland wasn’t a graduate of the celebrated Alpha School, like many of Jamaica’s top musicians from Bertie King to Yellowman. Alphonso was a graduate of Boys Town School in Denham Town. “Lawless Street” was another tune that was recorded twice at the session – the second version features vocal ‘peps’ and exhortations by DJ King Sporty.

By late 1966, Justin emigrated to the USA, settling permanently in New York. There he took up US citizenship and was called up to serve in the US Army in Vietnam, In the early 1970s he worked in computers and eventually drove a New York cab. In his all too brief involvement in the competitive Jamaican music business he certainly left his mark as a producer. He produced some of the best ska ever made, and the LP reissued here is perhaps the most coherent LP in that genre, deriving as it does from a single session.

The celebrated record producer at Randy’s Studio, Clive Chin:

“It wasn’t the fact that they [the musicians] really love Justin; it was the fact that Justin used to pay them the right money and make them comfortable. Make sure them have them smoke, them food, them drink, and after them finish they got paid.” Unlike many other producers, Justin actually attended the sessions.

It stands as his defining legacy in Jamaican music history.
Back To Top