REQUEST LINE: 860-486-9487
IM: WHUSDJ
CURRENT SHOW
Off the Deep End
IM: WHUSDJ
CURRENT SHOW
Off the Deep End
Playlist - Sound_Medicine_03_27_12
| Song | Artist | Album |
| Liian Paljon Hyvää | Jukka Poika | Yhdestä Puusta (March 2012) |
| A Finnish reggae artist (born 1980). | ||
| Mun Skidit | Jukka Poika | Yhdestä Puusta |
| Soutaa Huopaa | Elokuu | Soutaa Huopaa |
| Lola Rastaquouere [Dub Style] | Serge Gainsbourg | Aux Armes Et Caetera |
| a French singer, songwriter, actor and director. In Jamaica in 1978 he recorded "Aux Armes et cetera", a reggae version of the French national anthem "La Marseillaise", with Robbie Shakespeare, Sly Dunbar, and Rita Marley. Bob Marley was furious when he discovered that Gainsbourg made his wife Rita sing erotic lyrics. | ||
| Train To Skaville | The Ethiopians | Engine 54 |
| Engine '54: Let's Ska and Rock Steady - (1968). Releasing the rocksteady "Train to Skaville", which was their first success. | ||
| Dem Nuh Care | Busy Signal | Boops Riddim |
| He was nicknamed Busy Signal by his friends because of the fact that he is constantly busy. Busy Signal, is an artist from St Ann, Jamaica. Known as one of the artists leading the contemporary Dancehall movement, Busy Signal has been a large part of the scene since 2003. | ||
| Rolling In The Deep (Remix) | Adele Rolling In The Deep (Jr. Blender Remix) | |
| Old`s Cool (Feat. Dr Ring Ding) | Dreadsquad | The Riddim Machine |
| Dreadsquad - sound system set up in Lodz, Poland (third-largest city) in 2001, created by two DJs - MMF'a and Funksion'a. | ||
| Ship Is Sailing | Jimmy Cliff | Sacred Fire (2011) |
| Reggae history doubles back on itself on Jimmy Cliff's new EP, which opens with a cover of “The Guns of Brixton,” the Clash tune that name-checks Cliff's 1972 movie “The Harder They Come.” What's more, the EP was produced by Tim Armstrong of Rancid, a devoted Clash acolyte whose own Jamaican leanings speak to Cliff's influence on punks from successive generations. | ||
| Guns of Brixton | Jimmy Cliff | Sacred Fire |
| Money Money | Natural Black | Mortima Hardly |
| Coming from what is, arguably, the most interesting set of circumstances to be found on the landscape of modern Roots Reggae music, the Guyana born Natural Black has spent the better portion of the past decade and a half or so establishing himself as one of the most dependable artists in the business. | ||
| Barber chair | Tarrus Riley | Challenges |
| Tarrus Riley (born Omar Riley, 1979, The Bronx, New York City, United States) is a Jamaican-American reggae singer, member of the Rastafari movement and the son of Jamaican reggae singer Jimmy Riley. He made his recording debut as a teenager. In 2004, Tarrus released his debut album, Challenges. | ||
| Rasta Got Soul | Fantan Mojah | Macka 3 Music |
| Owen Moncrieffe aka Fantan Mojah was born in St Elizabeth Parish, Jamaica. To gain experience, he took a job working with a traveling soundsystem, and performed songs during soundchecks. He adopted the name Mad Killer, in an homage to one of his favorite artists, Bounty Killer. After being exposed to the Rastafarian movement his music began to take on a more positive tone, and he was encouraged by Capleton to take the name Fantan Mojah. | ||
| Jus A Feeling | Fantan Mojah | Macka 3 Music |
| Zimbabwe | Sizzla Kalonji | The Chant |
| He is one of the most commercially and critically successful contemporary reggae artists and is noted for his high number of releases.[1] As of 2011 he had released over 40 solo albums. Sizzla was born in Kingston in 1976 to devout Rastafari movement parents.[3] Like them Sizzla subscribes to the Bobo Ashanti branch of the Rastafari movement.[4] He was raised in August Town, Kingston Jamaica where he studied mechanical engineering at Dunoon High School. | ||
| Smile (Feat U Roy) | Singing Melody | They Call Me Mr. Melody |
| Nitt Nitt Moye Garabbaam Ft. Ebou Gaya Mada | Tommy Tornado | Cool Down |
| A gifted Dutch saxophonist who Joined the famous Rude Rich and High Tones at the age of 18. | ||
| Di Eagle An' Di Bear | Linton Kwesi Johnson | Making History (1983) |
| a UK-based dub poet. He became the second living poet, and the only black poet, to be published in the Penguin Classics series. His poetry involves the recitation of his own verse in Jamaican Patois over dub-reggae, usually written in collaboration with renowned British reggae producer/artist Dennis Bovell. His middle name 'Kwesi' is Ghanaian. | ||
| Kudala Ngikuncenga | Lucky Dube | Life and Times |
| Back to My Roots | Lucky Dube | Life and Times |
| e recorded 22 albums in Zulu, English and Afrikaans in a 25-year period and was South Africa's biggest selling reggae artist.[2][3] Dube was murdered in the Johannesburg suburb of Rosettenville on the evening of 18 October 2007. While at school he discovered the Rastafari movement. At the age of 18 Dube joined his cousin's band, The Love Brothers, playing Zulu pop music known as mbaqanga whilst funding his lifestyle by working as a security guard at the car auctions in Midrand. | ||
| Runaway Baby | Bruno Mars | Doo-Wops & Hooligans |
| Nigerian Funk | Keziah Jones | Nigerian Wood |
| New Cannonball Blues | TV On The Radio | Nine Types Of Light |
| paps touré | Mdungu | Afro What |
| Subterranean Homesick Blues | Michael Franti | Chimes Of Freedom - The Songs Of Bob Dylan |
| Bob Dylan's 115th Dream | Taj Mahal | Chimes Of Freedom - The Songs Of Bob Dylan |

