"For all its Biblical heft - the title was taken from a Marcus Garvey prophecy about chaos erupting on 7/7/77 - Culture's reggae classic Two Sevens Clash, like Funkadelic or gospel, took suffering as a means for uplift ... Though it's considered a classic of roots reggae (...) Two Sevens Clash generally sounds a lot brassier than most of the records in its category. The rhythms, if not always dance-oriented, are springy and uptempo, the harmonies are major, and Joe Gibbs's production is bright (contra, say, dub's intoxicant muddiness). And Hill is ultimately the catalyst reveling in the middle, a wily, lemony voice, never shying away in melody or delivery, never letting harsh reality cancel out his hope, but never pretending things are any less miserable than they actually are ... The title track was released as a single in March and became so massive that when July 7th arrived, businesses closed, the military perked up, and, reportedly, most people stayed indoors ... Culture was signed by a subsidiary of Virgin (with the help of Johnny Rotten - Two Sevens Clash was considered a classic amongst the punks), and Hill performed around the world until his death last August. That July 8th came never mattered".