"... Soul Jazz's albums are different: not only have they encouraged a new, younger audience, parallel to the one that enjoys rare funk and spiritual jazz, to appreciate this music, their records are coherent. They're not just a heap of tunes that happen to be sharing a black vinyl apartment. They're themed and meld musically. They have a reason to exist ... With an informative, eminently enjoyable sleeve note about the growth of roots reggae and its place in Rastafarianism and black awareness, fittingly Black Man's Pride lacks nothing".