Nothing Better Than You (feat Anna Fondi & Erika Scherlin)
You Came Along (feat Stevie Biondi)
Touch The Sky (feat Sweet Candies)
Never Give Up (feat Laura Lanzillo)
Summer Madness (feat Anna Fondi)
Review: Prolfic producer Neiro 'Papik' Poggi founded the Soultrend Orchestra almost 15 years ago as a vehicle for his acid jazz, funk, soul, disco and jazz-funk fantasies. The project has been 'on ice' for a while, with Now Imagine, officially the band's second studio set, appearing a decade after its predecessor. It's a typically musically rich affair with a string of guest vocalists joining the expansive 'orchestra' to run through happy, sun-splashed tracks. Highlights come thick and fast throughout, from a lightly Latin-tinged cover of Sister Sledge disco classic 'Lost In Music' and the Jamiroquai-esque warmth and soul of 'Wiser' (featuring Wendy D Lewis), to the vibraphone-wielding smooth grooves of 'Touched By Your Love' and the glossy jazz-funk-goes-house rainbows of 'You Came Along' (featuring Steve Biondi).
Prince Buster & His All Stars - "Black Soul" (2:54)
Prince Buster - "Dark End Of The Street" (alternate take) (3:10)
Teddy Charmer - "All In My Life" (2:48)
Prince Buster - "Tribute To The Toughest" (4:55)
Lee Perry - "Call On Me" (3:13)
Prince Buster - "Don't You Know I Love You So" (2:47)
Gregory Isaacs - "Dancing Floor" (2:17)
Winston Samuels - "I'm Still Here" (alternate take) (2:53)
Ernest Ranglin - "Come Get Me" (2:35)
Review: Prince Buster, born Cecil Bustamente Campbell in 1938, was a key figure in the birth of ska and rocksteady, and infamously embodied the term "rude boy"; he'd come to enshrine a symbol of rebellious youth culture in Jamaica. A leading conspirator in early soundsystem culture, Buster's story stretches as far back as the days of systems such as Tom The Great Sebastian as well as variou Kingston-bound stacks operated by Coxsone Dodd. Now this eagerly awaited third volume from Rock A Shaka continues to compile Buster's best works, the standouts among them being 'A Tribute to The Toughest' from 1967 - believed to be a precursor to the long-loved 'Ghost Dance' - and his cover of James Carr's 'Dark End of the Street,' Ernest Ranglin's 'Come Get Me,' and Winston Samuels' 'I'm Still Here.'
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