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Striker Lee

Posted: Tue Apr 15, 2008 10:38 pm
by Guest
where did him take all this riddims from they sound familar to me, i need some one to enlighten me about that yute works.

Re: Striker Lee

Posted: Tue Apr 15, 2008 10:58 pm
by kalcidis
Bunny Lee? Well ... he was one of the most prolific producers in the reggae industry. I'm not sure I really understand your question?

Re: Striker Lee

Posted: Wed Apr 16, 2008 6:38 am
by donstrumental
DonDigital wrote:where did him take all this riddims from they sound familar to me, i need some one to enlighten me about that yute works.
Which rydims you talking bout? Striker Lee put out a lot of rydims of all different styles.
The equivelent in the 70's to what Jammys did in the 80's

Re: Striker Lee

Posted: Wed Apr 16, 2008 9:32 am
by Guest
yeh datz what im talkin about. i just see a 45 by john holt "stealing" and i could swear its the same version like on volcano.. is that the same one?

Re: Striker Lee

Posted: Wed Apr 16, 2008 11:13 pm
by Guest
exactly as i thought:

lee:
http://www.buyreggae.com/sounds/3/37750A.mp3

junjo:

http://www.buyreggae.com/sounds/1/14246A.mp3


so he is more like king tubby then.

Re: Striker Lee

Posted: Fri Apr 18, 2008 11:26 am
by Guest
so who made the version to joy in the morning by dennis, is that jammys??

Re: Striker Lee

Posted: Fri Apr 18, 2008 7:52 pm
by donstrumental
so he is more like king tubby then.[/quote]

No ! King Tubby was an engineer,Striker Lee was probably (imo) the biggest producer of the 70's.

Jammys was an engineer who worked at King Tubbys studio before he became a producer but he did mix a lot of Stiker lee material so some Stiker tunes may sound like Jammys.

Maybe your question should be.."What does a producer do?"

I think the signature sound of Striker Lee was the"flying cymbal"

Check out Johnny Clarke's output from 1975-1978

Re: Striker Lee

Posted: Sat Apr 19, 2008 4:30 am
by Guest
ok, interesting

ok to make more clear bout what i mean,

and to make i self ovastand this mix up,
how did lee get that steling version it was originally channel one. it only sounds different from mixing. now this dennis tune, listen it very carefully and you will hear datit is da same version from jammy they just added some effect on the drums. to me a producer is like fattis & jammy, they got an idea, they gather musician and work wid dem sometimes they buy version but me never yet hear a version by both of dem which got only remixed like dat stealing version. i kinda dont ovastand the role of a striker lee in the program.

Re: Striker Lee

Posted: Sat Apr 19, 2008 8:07 am
by donstrumental
the two versions of stealing are definately two different recordings with different musicians,the volcano is the later version.

Put up the dennis tune and mek me hear it!

Re: Striker Lee

Posted: Sat Apr 19, 2008 12:48 pm
by Guest
hey guys I know that this site ignores on purpose what was made before 1970 but bunny lee has been one of the pioneers in jamaican music!

he started his career in 1962 working for duke reid,then leslie kong and ken lack. then he ran his own label and hit the charts during the rocksteady era with classics like "my conversation" (the uniques).

remember that tubby made very early dub versions for duke reid. during the early 70's, bunny was maybe the most important producer and he hosted his friend king tubby for versions (they knew eachother cos they worked for duke reid in the late 60's).

I know it's difficult to believe for many people here but channel one wasn't a founder at all. tubby and dubs came straight from the rocksteady era!