Create account Log in

Sound System: The Island Anthology

[Edit]

Download links and information about Sound System: The Island Anthology by Steel Pulse. This album was released in 1997 and it belongs to Reggae, Roots Reggae, World Music genres. It contains 30 tracks with total duration of 02:32:13 minutes.

Artist: Steel Pulse
Release date: 1997
Genre: Reggae, Roots Reggae, World Music
Tracks: 30
Duration: 02:32:13
Buy on iTunes $19.99
Buy on Amazon $18.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Handsworth Revolution 5:23
2. Bad Man 5:38
3. Soldiers 4:40
4. Sound Check 3:30
5. Prodigal Son 5:09
6. Ku Klux Klan (12" Version) 6:49
7. Prediction 5:27
8. Macka Splaff 4:24
9. Bun Dem (12" Version) 6:07
10. Nyah Love (Live) 3:58
11. Unseen Guest 6:03
12. Sound System (12" Version) 5:45
13. Jah Pickney - R.A.R. 4:33
14. Tribute to the Martyrs 6:46
15. Babylon Makes the Rules / Devil's Disciples (12" Version) 8:03
16. Uncle George 4:42
17. Biko's Kindred Lament 5:29
18. Blasphemy (Selah) 6:55
19. Macka Splaff (Live) 5:19
20. Drug Squad 4:04
21. Harassment 4:18
22. Reggae Fever 3:26
23. Shining 3:57
24. Heart of Stone (Chant Them) [12" Version] 6:19
25. Rumours (Not True) 3:54
26. Caught You Dancing (12" Version) 6:55
27. Burning Flame 3:10
28. Higher Than High 3:21
29. Nyahbinghi Voyage 5:02
30. Don't Give In 3:07

Details

[Edit]

Sound System: The Island Anthology compiles the first three Steel Pulse albums, all recorded for the Mango label, were easily the best they ever made. This two-disc set compiles the entirety of those three albums (Handsworth Revolution, Tribute to the Martyrs and Caught You, the last of which was titled Reggae Fever for U.S. release) along with a handful of B-sides and live versions. The familiar pleasures are all here — the dry, heavy skank of "Bun Dem" and "Soldiers," the strangely dreamy outrage of "Tribute to the Martyrs," the lighter grooves that buoy "Shining" and "Rumours (Not True)." The extra tracks aren't much to write home about; frankly, the two B-sides and two live tracks sound like filler. But the 12" version of the majestic "Babylon Makes the Rules" feel like divine revelation, as does the dubwise extension of "Heart of Stone" that was hinted at so tantalizingly in its original album version. For all of his jazzy excesses, David Hinds remains one of the finest reggae singers around, and there has never been a rhythm section to match this one for brick-wall solidity. An essential collection of top-flight British reggae.