Home
Revenge of the Underdog
Loading Inventory...
Barnes and Noble
Revenge of the Underdog
Current price: $21.49
Barnes and Noble
Revenge of the Underdog
Current price: $21.49
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
*Product Information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, and additional information please contact Barnes and Noble
The short-lived
Singers & Players
were something of a reggae supergroup, comprised of various top-notch studio players (among them several members of the legendary
Roots Radics
) and a revolving lineup of singers including, at various times,
Bim Sherman
and the gravel-voiced DJ
Prince Far I
.
Revenge of the Underdog
was the follow-up to
War of Words
, the group's debut, and was one of the more important early production efforts by the very young
Adrian Sherwood
. There really is not a single weak track here:
Lizard Logan
,
and
all take turns working over the rhythm from "Dungeon" by
the Wailing Souls
;
delivers two of his most indelible performances with the stern "Prodigal Son" and the more light-hearted "Water the Garden."
Bim Sherman's
wispy voice is showcased to fine effect on the sufferer's anthem "Too Much Work Load." On every track,
Sherwood
spins his glistening web of intrusive, hyperactive magic, a production approach that would never work for anyone else but almost always does for him. No reggae collection should be without this one. ~ Rick Anderson
Singers & Players
were something of a reggae supergroup, comprised of various top-notch studio players (among them several members of the legendary
Roots Radics
) and a revolving lineup of singers including, at various times,
Bim Sherman
and the gravel-voiced DJ
Prince Far I
.
Revenge of the Underdog
was the follow-up to
War of Words
, the group's debut, and was one of the more important early production efforts by the very young
Adrian Sherwood
. There really is not a single weak track here:
Lizard Logan
,
and
all take turns working over the rhythm from "Dungeon" by
the Wailing Souls
;
delivers two of his most indelible performances with the stern "Prodigal Son" and the more light-hearted "Water the Garden."
Bim Sherman's
wispy voice is showcased to fine effect on the sufferer's anthem "Too Much Work Load." On every track,
Sherwood
spins his glistening web of intrusive, hyperactive magic, a production approach that would never work for anyone else but almost always does for him. No reggae collection should be without this one. ~ Rick Anderson