Feldub & Earl Sixteeen – Stand Firm

Heavyweight stepper riddim with flying horns in combination with soulful rasta lyrics by legendary Earl Sixteen followed by dubwise cut.
Full support!

O.B.F. – Lava

Fresh from Dub Quake label here comes another set of heavyweight sound system scorchers from unstoppable O.B.F. crew.

General Two x Doctor Heba – Bosanski Lonac

Doctor Heba outa Dub & Roll records crew teams up with legendary underground rapper General Two to produce original dub rap album Bosanski Lonac.
Yes you hear that right. This is not dub-hop or mashup remix style music but original dubwise riddims produced specially for General Two lyrics and mixed live in session.

Entire album mix is filmed and live dubwise action shown without any cuts or edits documenting this unique release.



Favourite track:
Dole u Bosni




Download and support:

Ob.dub – Singular Colors

ODGProd label releases one after another future dub albums. Check out Ob.dub coming in with enough ethereal melodies, breakbeats, rootical vocals, hot bass and proper skanks.

Ob.dub – Singular Colors

On reggae and hip-hop

DJ Kool Herc: ‘When I extended the break, people were ecstatic, because that was the best part of the record to dance to.’

DJ Kool Herc, the chief architect of hip-hop, was born Clive Campbell in Kingston, Jamaica. At the age of twelve, in the winter of 1967, Campbell moved to Bronx, New York. The year he migrated to America, sound-system culture in Jamaica had a ubiquitous presence in Kingston’s lower-class neighbourhoods.
As a twelve-year-old preteen now living in the Bronx, Campbell already possessed a persistent reggae and sound-system consciousness having experienced the innovative music of
Prince Buster, the Skatalites, Don Drummond, and dancehall deejay U-Roy.

At eighteen, Campbell attempted to recreate the Jamaican dancehall experience in the Bronx by spinning the latest Jamaican reggae records at neighbourhood parties, but his young African-American audience was not feeling the reggae beat and did not comprehend the Jamaican patois rhymes of sound-system MCs known as toasters.
As DJ Kool Herc, Campbell shifted to playing funk records, but his reggae background caused him to favour funk with heavy-weight bass lines and lively percussive drumming. Kool Herc’s record selections were transmitted through hi-fi stereo equipment that spoke with the same awesome power and sonic quality of a roots Jamaican sound system.
The selector, as a deejay is called on a reggae sound system, though using one turntable-the norm during the ’60s and ’70s- was still capable of altering the arrangement of a tune spinning off a record on the turntable platter. The selector skillfully inflicted a completely different sound context on a roots reggae recording by manipulating the controls on the sound system’s amplifier to briefly remove the bass on a tune, accentuate the singing of the song’s vocalist, and highlight the harmony of trumpet, saxophone, and trombone. The selector would create tension in a live remix by bringing back the bass booming like a compact implosion.
By the ’70s, the selector had the ability to vary the sonic texture of the recording by creatively deploying reverb and echo chamber to repeat the sweetest elements of a vocal or horn solo and as a special sound effect that dramatized certain aspects of the recording with a live feel.

American Electronic Music Owes It All to People of Color



Kool Herc’s approach to creating something fresh from pre ­recorded funk on vinyl was different because he used two turnta­bles. But his approach was similar in that he shared the same objec­tive as the selector, which was to do a live remix of the record to heighten the entertainment of his audience. He extended the intox­icating rhythmic feel of percussive conga, bongo, or trap drums sizzling the break of records like Mandrill’s “Fencewalk,” the Incredible Bongo Band’s “Apache,” and the live version of James Brown’s “Give It Up, Turn It Loose” by playing the same record on two turntables using a sound mixer to seamlessly prolong the per­cussive breakbeats.

Herc pioneered the innovative use of two turntables and a sound mixer as active instruments that became more than passive facilitators, more than just pieces of electronic equipment that merely played what was recorded on vinyl.

Invention Hot Spot: Birth of Hip-Hop in the Bronx, New York, in the 1970s


These electronic instruments were now used to rearrange pre­recorded music to suit the immediate needs of the disco and the dance floor. When DJ Kool Herc rocked a block party, dispatching African­ American funk with the overwhelming sonic power of a reggae sound system, no other deejay dared to compete.

Kool Herc’s party flyer



Text from:
Dubwise : reasoning from the reggae underground
Chapter: Raggamuffin Rap: The Interconnections of Reggae and Hip-Hop
Author:
Klive Walker, 2005.

Digitron Sound meets Haris Pilton – Not Granted riddim

Heavyweight combination with Hornsman Coyote brass section, Digitron steppas and Haris Pilton flavor and styles results in 11 track mixes including Dubolik dub and vocals by Tadiman, MC Lipin, Jahmadeus and Berise.
Nah miss!

Anja G. & Dr. Obi – Moonlight

Another roller from AmpliFyah label – catch the last 7″ dubplate vinyl preorder or bag the digital highgrade from BandCamp.

This one coming with specially heavy dubwise.

Bademah feat Tenor Youthman – Blood A Run Remixed

Eleven remixes in different styles ranging from deep dubstep to heavy dubwise cuts of sold out Tenor Youthman and Bademah 7″ tune “Blood A Run”.
Witness the versatility of world wide band of wicked versionists each ramping up original sounds into unique and fresh blends.
Cover art by Amar Zahiragić.
From release notes:

Tenor Youthman and Bademah made a song called Blood A Run that we released on vinyl 7″ on our label in 300 copies that is sold out long time ago and original song and dub were limited to those 300 copies. Message of this release needs to be heard so we decided to do a remixed digital release that will be available on all streaming platforms. Producers and artists on this release are from Canada, Russia, Sweden, Bosnia and Hercegovina, Croatia, Slovenia and Serbia united to send a message of peace and a positive vibrations of Dub music to the world.
Its free for grabs until we run out of free DL slots.
Mastered by DUBSALON SKYLAB STUDIO 11 TROPICS and Doktor Heba @ Buna River Studios Mostar

Sumac Dub – Jam Session #8

In recent years around the world in dub nuff sound with looping station start the song from scratch sometimes using beatboxing or instruments or sampling and go into the mix.
By definition, dub is a psycho-acoustic manipulation of source sound material. Material that is somewhat familiar to the listener, like many reggae riddim versions so that one is caught by surprise in change of the sound. This gave birth to remixing, sampling, and other styles of sound culture ecological recycling. But future dub warriors sometimes do not dub from master tape, cassette tape, DAT, or USB, but create sounds from the scratch and go into the mix.

Here Sumac Dub throws in turntable sounds to accompany ambience of birds and synths until full blown riddim mix emerges.
Follow trough as jam session goes from slow live playing, looping and scratching, to ruff and dub mixing.
Well Kids and Elders, is that DUB nuff?

EGOLESS – Only way Out is Trough

Main man Egoless unearths another masterpiece straight from the depths of inner struggle mirroring dire situation the World is in right now.

Favourite track:
Asentra

Munay Ki Dub – Groove Of Meditation [DUB042]

From the press release:


“In September 2019, Munay Ki Dub released their debut EP “MKD” with European dub label Dubophonic Records, lyrically using the English and Spanish languages as a form of political expression and social awareness/consciousness, musically gliding between digital roots reggae, dub & bass and steppa. Within the first few weeks of its release, MKD was sounding out on radios in Argentina, Peru, Mexico, Italy, Spain, UK, Ireland, Israel, Hawaii, Finland, Belgium, Cyprus, Greece, Turkey, Germany, Holland, France, Australia, Canada and the US.”

Favourite track:

Gayatri Dub

Mungo’s Hi Fi – Antidote

Back in July, the mighty Mungo’s crew released a perfect antidote to stress: dubs of songs to come.
Inspired by dub pioneers such as King Tubby, Scientist and Errol Thompson, this is no carbon copy style.
More roots than step, proper downtempo DUB vibes to chill out.

Favorite track: Intravenous Dub

https://mungoshifi.bandcamp.com/album/antidote