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Album
The eclectic legacy of Jamaican music has continued to create a wide variety of new musical impulses over the last five decades. Whether Ska, Reggae, Dub or Dancehall -- the small Caribbean island has continually produced entirely new genres of music that reflect the struggles, successes and great ingenuity of its people. Inspired by new production technologies and cultural shifts, Jamaican music never ceases to bear new fruits. With their debut album, The Unlimiters have taken up this tradition with the aim of forging new paths. The eight-piece set from Berlin is largely inspired by early Ska, a style of music created at the beginning of the 1960s when Calypso merged with Jazz and Rhythm and Blues to form a unique and home-grown Jamaican sound that is still exemplified by unforgettable artists such as The Skatalites and Prince Buster. Another ingredient in the sound of The Unlimiters is the British Ska reissue, file under "Two-Tone" -- with the likes of The Specials, The Selecter or The Beat -- dating from the end of the 1970s and blending the raw energy of punk and new wave into Jamaican grooves. The vibrant mix of dance tunes, smart clothing, good humor and anti-racist politics was a top ten mainstay for years. The Unlimiters direct their dancing shoes to the path of the forefathers of Rocksteady and Ska, and they're up to continue the enterprise. Driving rhythms meet soulful harmonies meet instrumentals downtown, uptown and on a grand scale -- flavored with a touch of
Hard Times
The Unlimiters
Casioyama
The Unlimiters
The Reaper
The Unlimiters
Let It Go
The Unlimiters
Extortion
The Unlimiters
Tough Relations
The Unlimiters
Peking Chicken
The Unlimiters
Plutonium
The Unlimiters
Madhouse
The Unlimiters
Backdoor Buddies
The Unlimiters
Burning
The Unlimiters
Zabumba
The Unlimiters
Robber In The House
The Unlimiters
Loophole
The Unlimiters
35h
The Unlimiters
Rubbermaid
The Unlimiters