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7 Music Artist : Jah Wobble & the Modern Jazz Ensemble Music Label : 30 Hertz Records Release Date : 2011-03-01 Artistopia's Price :$13.39
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This is right up there with the best of them; Miles, Zawinul, Arthur Blythe, Dave Brubeck et al. But its its own thing at the same time. It grooves hard. It just keeps coming at you. Like Mike Tyson. Boxes clever like Ali. Sean Corby reminds me of a young Donald Bird. George King cool and understated on keys. Marc Layton-Bennet is monster on kit. He just eats it up. Clive Bell studiously working his moves; interweaving and threading his flute melodies; bopping and weaving; jabbing and moving. Chris Cookson on guitar, thinking textural, floating just out of range. Jah Wobble on Bass ; orchestrating the moves..... still a contender. I saw this band in London last November. The BEST I have ever seen . Truly. Troy Pasternak
Full Circle Music Artist : Holger Czukay Music Label : Blue Plate Caroline Release Date : 1992-07-31 Artistopia's Price :$10.11
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Psychic Life Music Artist : Jah Wobble Music Label : Cherry Red UK Release Date : 2011-11-15 Artistopia's Price :$20.37
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2011 studio album from Post-Punk bass/Dub master Jah Wobble is a collaboration with Manchester's rising star Julie Campbell, who issued an acclaimed album on Warp under her Lonelady guise in 2010. Psychic Life sees Wobble reunited with fellow ex-PiL guitarist Keith Levene for the first time since the groundbreaking Metal Box album in 1979. The album opens with the mutant disco single 'Tightrope'. Cherry Red.
Take Me to God Music Artist : Jah Wobble Music Label : Polygram Records Release Date : 1994-06-21 Artistopia's Price :$16.98
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1994 album featuring guest appearances from Baaba Maal, Gavin Friday, Natacha Atlas & Najma.
2008 release, a project from legendary bass player, musician, producer, songwriter and poet Jah Wobble. Chinese Dub is a fascinating fusion of Jah Wobble s trademark Dub music interweaved with traditional Chinese melodies and instrumentation. The album features Jah Wobble and his regular band, Clive Bell, Chris Cookson, and Mark Sanders plus International Chinese concert circuit performer & recording artists Zi Lan Liao on the Guzheng (Chinese zither), Vocalists Gu Yinji & Wang Jinqi and the Pagoda Chinese Youth Orchestra from Liverpool, the oldest and largest Chinese youth orchestra in Europe. 11 tracks. 30 hertz Records.
The Early Years Music Artist : Jah Wobble Music Label : 30 Hertz Records Release Date : 2001-10-12 Artistopia's Price :$16.18
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What you have here, on a convenient 2 disc set, is the legendary, lost Bedroom album, five complete 12 inch singles and a selection from the equally legendary and even more lost Tradewinds album. The master tapes are long gone. The discs were re-mastered from the holy records themselves. This music was recorded in a bedroom and various studios in London and in a nightclub in Amsterdam, during the early '80's and released on Lago, the record label without a logo or an address. 24 trcks. 2001.
Molam Dub Music Artist : Jah Wobble's Invaders of the Heart Music Label : 30 Hertz Records Release Date : 2000-04-18 Artistopia's Price :$14.30
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Jah Wobble & The Invaders of The Heart present a more commercial album. He is joined by the Molam singing group from Laos who are now based in Paris. 2000.
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Japanese Dub Music Artist : Jah Wobble & the Nippon Dub Ensemble Music Label : 30 Hertz Records Release Date : 2010-04-20 Artistopia's Price :$14.76
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Following the overwhelming success of his 2008 release, Chinese Dub, Jah Wobble - creatively adventurous music-maker and master of the cross-cultural collaboration - turns his attention to Japan, releasing a ten track album featuring himself alongside Joji Hirota (vocals, taiko drums), Keiko Kitamura (vocals, shamisen, koto), Clive Bell (shakahatchi) and Robin Thompson (hikaritchi, sho, shamisen) as the Nippon Dub Ensemble. The background to Japanese Dub is best explained by Wobble himself: For some time I've fancied having a crack at merging Japanese music with dub. I was very happy with the Chinese Dub album that I put together a couple of years ago, and was confident that I could do a similar job with Japanese styles. It can t be denied that traditional Japanese music is heavily influenced by Chinese music. However, paradoxically, there is something unique and unmistakable about Japanese music. To an extent this is due to their distinctive chromatic modes, but above all the Japanese are incredible reductionists. Somehow they take other cultures stuff, and in their own respectful way, rationalise it, reduce it, and thereby make it their own. I knew I wanted a selection of folk songs on this album, and I also wanted Japan s famous taiko drums to be represented (my bass with taiko drums is a marriage made in heaven). Luckily I know a man called Joji Hirota who has a great knowledge of Japanese culture generally, is an expert taiko drummer and sings like a Japanese Van Morrison. He sent me a selection of old Japanese songs to chose from and I immediately fell in love with Kokiriko, which is said to be the oldest known song in Japan (to be honest, I wish he hadn t introduced me to that tune because it drove me nuts. Similar to Phoenix and Dragon on Chinese Dub it entered my psyche, and I can t get it out. I wake up humming it in various keys and tempos, as well as in multitudinous instrumental arrangements, from solo mandolin through to absurd James Last style string arrangements. It haunts me as I try and sleep. This thousand year old melody tortures me on a daily basis). An underlying aesthetic principle that governs much Oriental (especially East Asian) music is referred to as jo-ha-kyu (or ya yueh in Chinese). It is a philosophy, or approach, that concerns movement; in its simplest definition it means beginning, middle and end. It can also be understood as slow, faster (and more complex), and sudden finish. This concept can be seen in all forms of Japanese art and culture, from martial arts to tea ceremonies, and in music and theatre. The biggest challenge to me on both Chinese Dub and Japanese Dub was reconciling jo-ha-kyu with rhythmic groovy dance music. Heavy dub bass is the ideal musical instrument to solve that conundrum. When phrased properly the bass can meld the rigid with flexible, the fixed with the fluid, and the soft with the hard. The bass truly is the king of instruments. Sometimes, as a bassist, I feel like the big geezer at the base of those human pyramids that you get at Chinese and Russian Circuses, taking the weight of the other players, allowing the ones above me in the pyramid to perform their miraculous acrobatics. I knew that if this was going to be a proper Japanese record, I had to attempt a track in a kabuki (highly stylized classical Japanese dance-drama) style. This presented a big challenge to me because I found kabuki to be a vast area with many styles existing within its compass. I kept it simple, opting for a classic Japanese chromatic mode, koto, played splendidly by Keiko Kitamura, with a hip hop style rhythm and heavy bass underpinning her. Of course, the beat box that I created the beat with is Japanese in manufacture. All my gear at home is Japanese. This album is Japanese in every sense of the word.