- Digital
Various Artists
If I Had a Pair of Wings: Jamaican Doo Wop, Vol. 3
Death Is Not The End
- Cat No: DEATH038
- Release: 2020-11-27
- updated:
Track List
-
1. Jiving Juniors - Sweet as an Angel
02:23 -
2. Alton & Eddie - My Heaven
02:29 -
3. Higgs & Wilson - When You Tell Me Baby
02:35 -
4. Lloyd Adams - I Wish Your Picture Was You
02:35 -
5. The Moonlighters - Don't You Know
02:12 -
6. Ricketts & Rowe - Dream Girl
03:22 -
7. Annette & Shenley - The First Time We Met
02:35 -
8. Belltones - I'll Always Call Your Name
03:10 -
9. Ruddy & Sketto - Little Schoolgirl
02:55 -
10. Derrick & Patsy - Crying in the Chapel
02:22 -
11. The Blues Busters - I've Done You Wrong
02:17 -
12. Jiving Juniors - My Sweet Angel
02:44 -
13. Higgs & Wilson - Change of Mind
02:58 -
14. Wilfred Jackie Edwards - Never Go Away
02:44
16bit/44.1khz [wav/flac/aiff/alac/mp3]
Repressed by popular demand!
Lauren Laverne's comp of the week on BBC Radio 6 Music.
Guardian feature: https://www.theguardian.com/music/2020/oct/12/a-thousand-teardrops-how-doo-wop-kickstarted-jamaica-pop-revolution-reggae-rocksteady
"...all of the music on this compilation is the result of the forward-thinking artists and producers that realised the worth of local Jamaican artistry during a time when the island’s leading political figures had not yet managed to throw off the colonial yolk. These are sounds with a certain innocence and the optimistic promise of better to come, with the influence of American pop ballads and doo-wop looming large, yet already pointing to the innovations of the future. Listen keenly and take in the sounds of the Jamaican music industry at its very beginnings, its singers and players drawing from the popular styles of the island’s larger neighbour and already changing those styles into something their own." - David Katz
Lauren Laverne's comp of the week on BBC Radio 6 Music.
Guardian feature: https://www.theguardian.com/music/2020/oct/12/a-thousand-teardrops-how-doo-wop-kickstarted-jamaica-pop-revolution-reggae-rocksteady
"...all of the music on this compilation is the result of the forward-thinking artists and producers that realised the worth of local Jamaican artistry during a time when the island’s leading political figures had not yet managed to throw off the colonial yolk. These are sounds with a certain innocence and the optimistic promise of better to come, with the influence of American pop ballads and doo-wop looming large, yet already pointing to the innovations of the future. Listen keenly and take in the sounds of the Jamaican music industry at its very beginnings, its singers and players drawing from the popular styles of the island’s larger neighbour and already changing those styles into something their own." - David Katz