Pick a Dub

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (80 ratings)
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EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 34:34

eMusic Review 0

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Jeff Chang

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Keith Hudson, Pick a Dub
Label: Blood And Fire / Virtual

The weird and wonderful Keith Hudson was, among other things, a certified dentist. He also can make a good claim to introducing DJing on record, giving U-Roy his first big hit with "Dynamic Fashion Way" and doing the same for Big Youth with "S.90 Skank." As dubmaster, he was enigmatic and brilliant. This set, from 1974, captures him working with the Soul Syndicate to reveal a sound that still thrills, troubles, seduces and conquers. From the title track, a version of "S.90 Skank," through to "Depth Charge," the brocaded closer, every bar is freighted with emotion. A true classic.

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Space Music...

mickofleeds

This is the music that should have been on that voyager space probe...

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Solid state dub

Prova

A Peelie fave -- JP turned me on to this one, I suggest you take his advice. 'Brand' also here on eMusic is worth checking — even more wigged-out.

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Brilliant

Oldunson

First dub album I bought in the mid 70s. Still sounds as brilliant as then!

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A Dub Pick

JonBonJon

I don't know a lot about dub, but I've been listening to this record a lot lately and enjoying it especially for the drumming, which is busy in a good way (lots of rim shots, etc.). The drums are frequently up front in the mix. Fans of Stewart Copeland's drumming will enjoy this, especially tracks 4 through 8 (though 7 and 8 seem almost identical).

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They Say All Music Guide

In his excellent book England’s Dreaming, Jon Savage refers to Pick a Dub as “the greatest dub album ever, twelve cuts, all fantastic.” It’s easy to concur with Savage’s assesment, with the lone caveat that there are some Lee Perry and King Tubby sides that might be as good. That caveat notwithstanding, Pick a Dub is sensational, arguably the crowning achievement of Hudson’s career. In fact, coming as early as it did in the development of dub — it was originally released in 1974 — Pick a Dub is seminal work, a landmark in progressive remixing on a par with early King Tubby, Augustus Pablo, and Rupie Edwards. What makes this record so scintillating is the intensity of the bass and drums, as well as Hudson’s relatively naked production. There are not a lot of goofy sound effects and studio screwing around, just buckets of blood and sweat all rolled into a seductive slab of percussive heaviness that will rattle every filling in your head. Once a forgotten obscurity, Pick a Dub was rescued by the folks at Blood and Fire, who re-released it in 1994. Go buy it today. – John Dougan

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