» » Keith Hudson - Pick A Dub
Keith Hudson - Pick A Dub FLAC album

Tracklist

1 Pick A Dub 2:38
2 Black Heart 2:40
3 Michael Talbot Affair 2:54
4 Don't Move 2:43
5 Blood Brother 2:54
6 Dreader Than 2:02
7 In The Rain 3:13
8 Part 1-2 Dubwise 3:17
9 Black Right 3:11
10 Satia 3:06
11 I'm All Right 3:02
12 Depth Charge 2:43

Companies, etc.

  • Phonographic Copyright (p) – Atra Records Ltd.
  • Copyright (c) – Blood & Fire Limited
  • Made By – PDO, UK – 10297691

Credits

  • Arranged By, Written-By – Keith Hudson
  • Artwork By [Original Concept] – Brent Clarke
  • Artwork By [Original] – Ian Mullings
  • Bass – Aston "Family Man" Barrett
  • Drums – Carlton Barrett
  • Guitar – Earl "Chinna" Smith
  • Mastered By – Kevin Metcalfe
  • Melodica – Augustus Pablo
  • Photography [Cover] – Phil Hale
  • Producer – Aston "Family Man" Barrett, Keith Hudson
  • Vocals – Horace Andy, Keith Hudson

Notes

Recorded & mixed at Harry J Studios, Jamaica.

Mastered at the Townhouse, London.

Licensed from Brent Clarke/Atra Records Ltd.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode (Printed): 7 83564 00032 6
  • Barcode: 783564000326
  • Matrix / Runout: BAFCD003 10297691 02 & MADE IN THE U.K. BY PDO
  • Mould SID Code: IFPI 0452
  • Mastering SID Code: IFPI L134

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
MAM 003 Keith Hudson & Family Man* Keith Hudson & Family Man* - Pick A Dub ‎(LP, Album) Mamba MAM 003 UK 1974
VP2526 Keith Hudson Pick A Dub ‎(CD, Album, RE) 17 North Parade, VP Records VP2526 Europe 2016
JI0001 King Tubby & The Barrett Bros. King Tubby & The Barrett Bros. - Pick-A-Dub ‎(LP, Album, RE, Gol) Jusic International JI0001 UK 2015
none Keith Hudson Pick A Dub ‎(LP, Album, Han) Mamba none Jamaica 1975
VPRL2526 Keith Hudson Pick A Dub ‎(2xLP, Album, RE) VP Records, 17 North Parade VPRL2526 US 2016


Keith Hudson - Pick A Dub FLAC album

Musician performer: Keith Hudson

Title: Pick A Dub

Country: UK

Date of release: 1994

Style: Dub

Genre: Reggae

Size FLAC: 1230 mb

Rating: 4.4 / 5

Votes: 293

Other Formats: WMA AUD TTA MP3 DTS XM MMF

Related to Keith Hudson - Pick A Dub FLAC Albums

Aradwyn
This is a seminal record as it's possibly the first dub album, essential in any serious Reggae collection. All decent numbers, very well executed.
Aradwyn
This is a seminal record as it's possibly the first dub album, essential in any serious Reggae collection. All decent numbers, very well executed.
Keel
Although i love Reggae very very much, i am not so fond of Dub Records. Most add nothing much to the Originals and opposed to Reggae as a Message delivering social artform often has nothig much to say. But this very album impresses me deeply with it's slow skanking riddims and the larger than life bass, that seems to be crawling over the ground all the time with wall shaking intensity. Very spartanic drumming and guitar licks, only Augustus Pablo's Harmoica gives the songs their melodic qualities. There are indeed quite a few nice melodic songs on Pick a Dub, even a Cover of House Of The Rising Sun. You hear the line 'I'm Alright' - - that's nearly all that's left from Ruddy Thomas Vocal Hit.Tracks 11 + 12 with additional horn section seem to be added to the original 1974 Jamaican recording, they have horns added. There are no horns listed on the album credits. Track 12 ( Depth Charge ) is another song here that has a few vocals left and uses them to great effect. With horns way back in the mix this has an upful positive vibe which ends this deep set on a High Note. Less Is More : The concentration on only the core of a Riddim Section - Soul Syndicate : The Barret Brothers (Aston + Carlton) on Bass + Drums are just different from the other jamaican drum + bass Duos. They often vary their patterns and interact differently all the while, unlike the metronomic regularity + precision of Sly + Robbie or The Roots Raddics. Earl 'Chinna' Smith is spot on with his oGuitar and Augustus Pablo's Melodica is usually the Lead Instrument on most songs . They all were in their prime and Reggae was just about to be established way back in 1974. No Wonder Blood & Fire re-released this as one of their first Dub Records. The quality of the music and their packaging proved that their was a bigger market for this type of Reggae and helped Blood & Fire become a household name in re-releasing Roots Reggae and lots of Dub.
Keel
Although i love Reggae very very much, i am not so fond of Dub Records. Most add nothing much to the Originals and opposed to Reggae as a Message delivering social artform often has nothig much to say. But this very album impresses me deeply with it's slow skanking riddims and the larger than life bass, that seems to be crawling over the ground all the time with wall shaking intensity. Very spartanic drumming and guitar licks, only Augustus Pablo's Harmoica gives the songs their melodic qualities. There are indeed quite a few nice melodic songs on Pick a Dub, even a Cover of House Of The Rising Sun. You hear the line 'I'm Alright' - - that's nearly all that's left from Ruddy Thomas Vocal Hit.Tracks 11 + 12 with additional horn section seem to be added to the original 1974 Jamaican recording, they have horns added. There are no horns listed on the album credits. Track 12 ( Depth Charge ) is another song here that has a few vocals left and uses them to great effect. With horns way back in the mix this has an upful positive vibe which ends this deep set on a High Note. Less Is More : The concentration on only the core of a Riddim Section - Soul Syndicate : The Barret Brothers (Aston + Carlton) on Bass + Drums are just different from the other jamaican drum + bass Duos. They often vary their patterns and interact differently all the while, unlike the metronomic regularity + precision of Sly + Robbie or The Roots Raddics. Earl 'Chinna' Smith is spot on with his oGuitar and Augustus Pablo's Melodica is usually the Lead Instrument on most songs . They all were in their prime and Reggae was just about to be established way back in 1974. No Wonder Blood & Fire re-released this as one of their first Dub Records. The quality of the music and their packaging proved that their was a bigger market for this type of Reggae and helped Blood & Fire become a household name in re-releasing Roots Reggae and lots of Dub.