Music / reggae

The Treasure dub albums collection


Reviews (2)


Louder than war

d. 9. Sep. 2019

By

By

Ian Canty

d. 9. Sep. 2019

"The one gripe I would have with this new set is it's a shame a little more information about the tracks themselves and their source material isn't included the sleeve note, but apart from that this another great selection of some classy dub albums. Brown's effortless skill in the studio is here for all to see and this is fine listening that also reminds you what talent abounded at Treasure Isle too, both in the production booth and on the studio floor".


Songlines

2020 January/February

By

By

Mark Sampson

2020 January/February

"Three of the most important dub albums in one release: When the gun-slinging ex-cop Duke Reid passed on in 1975, rival producer Sonia Pottinger acquired his legendary Treasure Isle studio and back catalogue. She oversaw a series of excellent retrospectives as a reminder of the studio's seminal role in bridging ska and rocksteady. Among them were these three formerly hard-to-find albums: Treasure Dub Volumes 1 & 2 and Pleasure Dub, engineered by Reid's nephew, Errol Brown, who cut his first dub plates under the watchful eye of King Tubby, among others. With raw material by the likes of Alton Ellis, Phyllis Dillon and The Paragons, and a house band led by the former Skatalite tenor saxophonist Tommy McCook, he couldn't go wrong. Full of old-school dub, with echo, drop-out and snatches of the original vocals, rather than anything too tricky and rhythm-heavy, the three albums plus eight previously unreleased tracks add up to an impeccable and irresistible collection".