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Most Wanted - Crucial Cuts (1979-1984)

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Download links and information about Most Wanted - Crucial Cuts (1979-1984) by The Wailing Souls. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Reggae, Roots Reggae, Dancehall genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 01:18:29 minutes.

Artist: The Wailing Souls
Release date: 2007
Genre: Reggae, Roots Reggae, Dancehall
Tracks: 12
Duration: 01:18:29
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. War (12" Mix) (featuring Ranking Trevor) 5:22
2. Jah Give Us Life [Don't Feel No Way] (12" Mix) 6:39
3. Fire House Rock 4:17
4. Kingdom Rise & Fall (12" Mix) 10:09
5. A Day Will Come (12" Mix) 6:41
6. See Baba Joe (12" Mix) 8:56
7. Who No Waan Come (12" Mix) 6:19
8. Up Front (12" Mix) 6:10
9. Diamonds & Pearls (12" Mix) 7:54
10. They Don't Know Jah (12"" Mix) 6:13
11. Bounce Back (12" Mix) 6:15
12. War Deh Round a John Shop (12" Mix) 3:34

Details

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Greensleeves' 2007 release Most Wanted: Classic Cuts 1978-1984 isn't the definitive Wailing Souls compilation, but with the band's discography sprawling across labels, decades, and many flavors of reggae, a one-disc wrap-up is a bit too much to ask. Most Wanted focuses on the transitional years of 1978-1984, just missing their seminal 1977 hit "Bredda Gravalicious," but displaying their evolution from rugged roots music to more mature roots and on to dancehall. "Bredda"'s successor, "War," is here, and like every other cut save "Fire House Rock," it's presented in its desirable 12" mix, which in this case stretches the infectious groove past the five-minute mark. Even better, "Kingdom Rise & Kingdom Fall" is rightfully epic at over ten minutes and "See Baba Joe" makes it to almost nine with its easy-strolling dub tacked on. Almost all of these extended mixes are previously unreleased on CD and extremely hard to find in any format, so it's a bit odd that Greensleeves doesn't crow about it on the cover, deciding instead to market this as a mere "best-of." For hardcore fans, this is the logical follow-up to Pressure Sounds' The Wailing Souls at Channel One, and it would be just as revelatory if didn't overlap that set by a couple tracks.