Bass Culture: A Dub & Reggae Music Magazine by Dubmatix
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Early 80s Reggae Dancehall (One Hour Mix)
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Early 80s Reggae Dancehall (One Hour Mix)

The Bridge Between Roots & Digital
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This mix dives deep into the crucial transition period of Jamaican music during the early 1980s—those rich, rugged years when the roots reggae era evolved into the raw pulse of early dancehall, also known as rub-a-dub. The 17 tracks featured here capture the stripped-down riddims, streetwise vocals, and echo-laden dub textures that defined this moment in time.

These were the years when roots consciousness met sound system swagger, and the groove got heavier, slower, and more bass-focused. As political tensions rose in Jamaica and the optimism of the ‘70s roots began to fade, artists and producers responded with music that reflected reality—gritty, direct, and dance-ready.


About This Era (1979–1985): The Roots–Dancehall Crossover

Why It Happened

After nearly a decade of deeply spiritual and political roots reggae, a younger generation pushed for change. They craved music that could still carry a message but move the dancefloor and reflect everyday life. The result: rub-a-dub and early dancehall, a style with emphasis on drum and bass, minimal overdubs, and toasting (a rhythmic, talk-over vocal style) alongside melodic singing.

Who Shaped the Sound

  • Sly & Robbie (The Rhythm Twins): Their Taxi label and riddims drove innovation—combining militant basslines with minimal, hard-hitting drum grooves.

  • Henry “Junjo” Lawes: A towering figure of this time, producing massive hits for artists like Yellowman, Don Carlos, Michael Prophet, and more—often backed by the mighty Roots Radics band.

  • Roots Radics: The go-to session band for rub-a-dub—slow tempos, dubbed-out textures, and basslines that could anchor any vocal.

  • Joe Gibbs, Channel One, Jammy’s, Techniques, and Volcano were the key studios and labels shaping the sound.


PLAYLIST

  1. Tony Tuff – Come Fe Mash It

  2. Little John – Smoke Ganja Hard

  3. Gregory Isaacs – Oh What a Feeling

  4. Barrington Levy – Trying to Rule My Life

  5. Half Pint – Sally

  6. Michael Prophet – Gunman

  7. The Meditations – Carpenter Rebuild

  8. Linval Thompson – Look How Me Sexy

  9. Don Carlos – Laser Beam

  10. Super Cat – Dance Inna New York

  11. Yellowman – Nobody Move Nobody Get Hurt

  12. Freddie McGregor – Roots Man Skanking

  13. Josey Wales – It A Fi Burn

  14. Wailing Souls – Inchpinchers

  15. Anthony Johnson, Jah Thomas, Toyan – Gunshot

  16. Cornell Campbell – Boxing Around

  17. Bunny Wailer – I'm The Toughest


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