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Two Sevens Clash

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (98 ratings)
Two Sevens Clash album cover
01
Get Ready To Ride The Lion To Zion
3:27 $0.99
02
Black Starliner Must Come
2:42 $0.99
03
Jah Pretty Face
3:39 $0.99
04
See Them A Come
3:24 $0.99
05
Natty Dread Taking Over
3:46 $0.99
06
Calling Rasta Far I
2:30 $0.99
07
I'm Alone In The Wilderness
3:25 $0.99
08
Pirate Days
2:52 $0.99
09
Two Sevens Clash
3:30 $0.99
10
I'm Not Ashamed
3:59 $0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 33:14

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eMusic Review 0

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Richard Henderson

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
One of the greatest testaments to the Rastafarian faith to emerge from the cultural period.
Label: Shanachie Entertainment / INgrooves

The millennial paranoia inspired by Y2K ultimately resembled a garden-variety anxiety attack compared to the air of foreboding and apprehension that attended the dawn of July 7, 1977 — commemorated in song by Joseph Hill as the day when “the two sevens clash.” This album remains the benchmark recording by Hill's vocal trio, Culture, and one of the greater testaments to the Rastafarian faith to emerge from the cultural period. Hill's grainy voice warns his audience of the need to prepare for repatriation ("Get Ready to Ride the Lion to Zion") and for the ascension of Rastas to their rightful place in society (“Rasta Taking Over”). Many of Kingston's mightiest studio musicians, among these the ubiquitous Sly & Robbie, support Culture's soaring harmony vocals, as does production by the Mighty Two (producer Joe Gibbs and engineer Errol Thompson).

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Outstanding

polymorf

Sometimes a collection of songs are created that have the power to transform and expand one's horizons forever. Two Sevens Clash is one, an outstanding revelatory experience that gives an insight into Culture, their culture and the times in which it was made. It crosses musical boundaries and draws you in like few reggae albums before or since. It loomed large amongst the musical influences of 70s punks as bands like the Clash explored the fusion of rock and reggae. However it has become timeless in the way that good music does - no gimmicks, just great songs well sung.

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All-time Classic Roots Rasta Reggae Album

jadoctorbird

One of the greatest reggae albums ever, every track of Two Sevens Clash is a gem of Rastafari message music. This album even influenced made the Jamaican government nervous in 1977 (the two sevens), with prophecies of Marcus Garvey. Musically, it catches Sly Dunbar and the Revolutionaries (the backing band) at the peak of the reggae-rockers era. A must-have for music collectors. The 30th Anniversary version is even better, adding dubs and deejay versions.

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One of the greatest

jangarun

An historic album. Few LPs ever rivaled this one.

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They Say All Music Guide

One of the masterpieces of the roots era, no album better defines its time and place than Two Sevens Clash, which encompasses both the religious fervor of its day and the rich sounds of contemporary Jamaica. Avowed Rastafarians, Culture had formed in 1976, and cut two singles before beginning work on their debut album with producers the Mighty Two (aka Joe Gibbs and Errol Thompson). Their second single, “Two Sevens Clash,” would title the album and provide its focal point. The song swept across the island like a wildfire, its power fed by the apocalyptic fever that held the island in its clutches throughout late 1976 and into 1977. (Rastafarians believed the apocalypse would begin when the two sevens clashed, with July 7, 1977, when the four sevens clashed, the most fearsome date of concern.) However, the song itself was fearless, celebrating the impending apocalypse, while simultaneously reminding listeners of a series of prophesies by Marcus Garvey and twinning them to the island’s current state. For those of true faith, the end of the world did not spell doom, but release from the misery of life into the eternal and heavenly arms of Jah. Thus, Clash is filled with a sense of joy mixed with deep spirituality, and a belief that historical injustice was soon to be righted. The music, provided by the Revolutionaries, perfectly complements the lyrics’ ultimate optimism, and is quite distinct from most dread albums of the period.
Although definitely rootsy, Culture had a lighter sound than most of their contemporaries. Not for them the radical anger of Black Uhuru, the fire of Burning Spear (although Hill’s singsong delivery was obviously influenced by Winston Rodney), nor even the hymnal devotion of the Abyssinians. In fact, Clash is one of the most eclectic albums of the day, a wondrous blend of styles and sounds. Often the vocal trio works in a totally different style from the band, as on “Calling Rasta Far I,” where the close harmonies, dread-based but African-tinged, entwine around a straight reggae backing. Several of the songs are rocksteady-esque with a rootsy rhythm, most notably the infectious “See Them Come”; others are performed in a rockers style, with “I’m Alone in the Wilderness” an exquisite blend of guitar and vocal harmonies. One of the best tracks, “Get Ready to Ride the Lion to Zion,” is a superb hybrid of roots, rocksteady, and burbling electro wizardry; its roaring lion (created who knows how) is a brilliant piece of musical theater. “Natty Dread Take Over” twines together roots rhythms, close harmonies, and big-band swing, while even funk and hints of calypso put in appearances elsewhere on the album. Inevitably, the roots genre was defined by its minor-key melodies, filled with a sense of melancholy, and emphasized by most groups’ lyrics. But for a brief moment, roots possibilities were endless. Sadly, no other group followed Culture’s lead, and even the trio itself did not take advantage of it, especially after parting ways with Gibbs. When Culture re-emerged in the mid-’80s, they swiftly moved into a reggae lite/world music mode a world apart from where they started. Thus, Clash remains forever in a class all its own. – Jo-Ann Greene

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