African Roots

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 47:05

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Surprised!!

hybrid-god

Now this is true roots reggae!! Was very surprised to hear this. Just gave it a shot and now downloaded the entire album. Definitely one of the best since the Black Uhuru days. Very happy!!

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Best since Uhuru...only too short.

DoctorStrangeDub

About the only negative about this album is that it is too short... Michael Rose is in fine form, and the band put together by Ryan Moore (Twilight Circus) is phenomenal -- Style Scott , Vin Gordon, Dean Fraser,Bobby Ellis, Chinna Smith, Scully Simms, and Ryan M. This may be the best album from Michael Rose since the Black Uhuru heyday. Just wish we got more than 47 minutes of this rootical gem.

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They Say All Media Guide

Michael Rose has been a stalwart of the roots reggae scene since his early days as a solo artist recording with producer Niney the Observer in the 1970s; he hit his commercial and artistic peak as lead singer for Black Uhuru during that band’s most productive period, but his subsequent solo work has been quite respectable as well (if uneven). African Roots finds him on M Records, a label that has previously served as the exclusive home to Twilight Circus Dub Sound System, the one-man dub band otherwise known as Legendary Pink Dots bassist Ryan Moore. The combination of Rose’s powerful vocals and Moore’s dark, dubwise production turns out to be a perfect fit, and with sidemen like percussionists Scully Sims and Norman Grant (of the Twinkle Brothers), drummer Style Scott (of Dub Syndicate), trombonist Vin Gordon, and Chinna Smith on guitar, it would be a shock if the album were less than spectacular. And, in fact, it very rarely falls below that standard — Rose sounds invigorated by the powerful rhythms he’s given to work with, and even if his lyrics don’t range very far afield from the usual “stepping out of Babylon,” “Better must come,” “Nah go a no burial” tropes, he manages to make even the most tired lyrical ideas sound fresh and heavyweight. The Manasseh remix of “No Burial” that closes the album is a particular highlight. Recommended. – Rick Anderson

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