The Strong One

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (18 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 69:10

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Amazing!

Moncho

An amazing album. One album I can't stop playing. Great stuff!!

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A Great Rastafari Woman Roots Reggae Album

jadoctorbird

It is rare to find a strong roots reggae album by a woman. Etana is a fantastically talented young Jamaican singer and composer who has revived Rastafari Woman roots reggae singing. Etana burst onto the scene with "Wrong Address," about the difficulties ghetto dwellers face in finding work outside the ghetto. However, it was "Roots", which established her as a great singer and sparked a revival of Rastafari singing among the female masses of Jamaica. "Roots" asserts the power of the Rastafari faith to rescue the youth in these times, in spite of the brainwashing of the modern mass media. This album is a modern all-time Rastafari roots reggae classic which puts Etana in the league of such greats as Marcia Griffiths.

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strong

cool87cats

i love this album its great and the video roots is really great. this album is really great and words are so uplifting and a blessing to hear.

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They Say All Media Guide

Etana’s embrace of roots reggae came in the wake of her abrupt departure from a U.S.-based female vocal group in which she was expected to dress and act in ways that she found inappropriate and immodest. Returning to her home outside of Kingston, Jamaica, she adopted Rastafarianism and eventually immersed herself in a solo career. Her debut album is an impressive set of modern roots compositions that nicely balances smooth production, danceable beats, conscious lyrics, and startlingly beautiful singing. She has very quickly attracted top-notch help: the backing musicians on The Strong One include Sly Dunbar, Dean Fraser, Robbie Lyn, and Dalton Browne, among other A-list session men, and if the sound is occasionally just a little bit on the slick side, there’s no denying the quality of both her singing and songwriting. Highlights include the sharply arranged and soca-flavored “Wasting My Time” (on which she makes a fine singjay turn), the gorgeous “Roots” (on which she shows off a surprisingly wide vocal range), and the unabashedly romantic “Closer” (on which she demonstrates that her focus isn’t entirely otherworldly). An impressive debut from a major talent. – Rick Anderson

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