From August Town

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From August Town album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 65:18

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freee wi up VP!

crowward

star another great album but not for people in Jamaica to download... free but still a prisoner (even digitallly)

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Top 5 of 2007 for The Dig

Black Toad

The album is best #5 of 2007 for reggae in the Japanese magazine "the Dig" (issue 51 winter 07-08)

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A great debut!

kent

A great debutalbum from the man behind Jah Cure´s smash hit "True Reflections". Produced by the great saxofon player Dean Fraser. I recommend this album to all lovers of reggae and r&b. When asked what he would like to achieve with the album From August Town, Duane said "I would love for people to sit, watch and listen to good music without violence without hate. Music that fills you with love and hope".

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They Say All Music Guide

The violent and senseless death of South African reggae star Lucky DubĂ© in late 2007 was not only a horrible tragedy for his family and friends; it also left a hole in the reggae firmament where once there had been a soaringly beautiful voice with a perfect (if rather repetitious) sense of pop hooks. Duane Stephenson doesn’t fill that hole perfectly, nor would listeners want him to, but his singing does provide some of the same cathartic rush that DubĂ©’s did, and on his solo debut (his first album since leaving his post as lead singer for To-Isis) he brings a variety of stylistic influences to bear on what amounts to a really rather unique take on modern roots reggae. His debt to DubĂ© is most clearly evident on “Misty Morning,” “August Town,” and the lovely “Heaven Will Rise Up.” But on “Ghetto Pain” and several other tracks, the combination of rockish guitars and reggae rhythms makes for a fresh sound, and every once in a while he departs from reggae entirely, as on the explicitly soul-derived “Exhale” and the R&B exercise “I Don’t Need Your Love” (neither of which is that great, frankly). There are a few other clunkers, including the plodding rockers exercise “Love inna di City,” which neither Anthony B. nor Mystic Routes is able to energize. But the nice thing about a program this lengthy is that only about half of it needs to be great in order for it to offer good value for the money — and more than half of this disc is great. – Rick Anderson

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