The Congos - Heart Of The Congos (Deluxe Edition) [1996]
The Congos - Heart Of The Congos (Deluxe Edition) [1996]
CD1 01 - Fisherman 02 - Congoman 03 - Open up the Gate 04 - Children Crying 05 - La Bam Bam 06 - Can't Come In 07 - Sodom and Gomorrow 08 - The Wrong Thing 09 - Ark of the Covenant 10 - Solid Foundation CD2 1) At The Feast (Of The Passover) 2) Nicodemus (12'' Single Mix) 3) Open The Gate (12'' Single Mix) 4) Don't Blame It On I 5) Play On Mr. Music {With The Upsetter Revue} 6) Chances (Album Mix) 7) Rainy Night In Portland 8) Bring The Mackaback 9) Congoman (12'' Single Mix) 10) Congoman Chant 11) Noah Sugar Pan 12) Solid Foundation (Disco-Cork Mix) 13) Nicodemus (7'' Single Mix) 14) Nicodemus Dub 15) Open The Gate (7'' Single Mix) 16) Open The Gate Dub 17) Too Late (12'' Single Mix) 18) Rainy Night In Portland (Disco Mix) 19) Rainy Night Dub 20) Fisherman Dub Watty Burnett - Vocals (Background) Robert Johnson - Guitar (Rhythm) Winston Wright - Organ Boris Gardiner - Bass Geoffrey Chung – Bass Keith Stewart – Piano Mikey "Boo" Richards - Drums Noel "Scully" Simms - Percussion Uziah "Sticky" Thompson – Percussion Barry Llewellyn - Vocals (Background) Candy McKenzie - Vocals (Background) + Sly Dunbar - Drums Gregory Isaacs - Vocals (Background) The Meditations - Vocals (Background) Lee "Scratch" Perry - Percussion, Producer Ernest Ranglin - Guitar
The words “Lee”, “Perry” and “genius” crop up together frequently; yet these days evidence of the producer’s excellence seems to be limited to erratic stage performances and wilful eccentricity. Heart of the Congos, however, is the most vivid example of what he’s capable of.
Recorded between 1976 and 1977, Heart… is all about Perry’s own breadth of vision and ingenuity despite an impressive cast, including Ernie Ranglin, Sly Dunbar and Gregory Isaacs. Heart… is part of Perry’s string of roots classics, but good as War Inna Babylon and Super Ape were, this collection leaves them standing.
The Congos came to Perry as a duo of Cedric Myton, a falsetto, and Roy Johnson, tenor. Perry immediately underpinned their harmonies by adding baritone Watty Burnett. This gave Myton’s soaring tones free rein on Ark of the Covenant and Solid Foundation, and added greater depth to the deep roots of Open Up the Gate and Sodom and Gomorrow. But most importantly, it connected to traditional Jamaican three-part harmonising, giving the singing a very familiar rocksteady-ish feel.
Perry’s mission at the Black Ark was to ruralise reggae, removed from Kingston’s urban edginess; and with these deeply spiritual Rastafarian singers he had the perfect focus for his musical creations. On Fisherman, Children Crying and La La Bam-Bam, he takes things so deep into the island’s interior you need a machete to hack through. Thick, blurring layers of drum and bass soften into each other, while the guitar cascades down like creepers, giving the plaintive singing the support it needs to keep moving.
In every instance the lyrics are never less than righteous, jumbling up biblical parables (Fisherman), beseeching Jah (Children Crying) or chanting down Babylon (Congo Man). The end result is the ultimate roots reggae statement. But in true Perry style, Heart… was mired in dispute and it took close to 20 years for the recommended (remastered and beautifully packaged) Blood & Fire version of the LP to come out.
Any preceding versions of this set are to be avoided. After all, if you’re going to buy the best roots reggae album ever recorded, you deserve to be able to hear it properly. ---Lloyd Bradley, bbc.co.uk
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