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Culture - Black Man King 1998
From the compilation
Gathering Of The Spirits
Label:Shanachie Records #45040
Format: CD, 1998
Lyrics
What a liberty
What a disrespect, rude
You're taking with Jah people and disturbance them
No respect for His Imperial Majesty
Rule out of order
You must suffer by that, yeah
You nuh fi trouble black man king, white boy
Nuh trouble black man king
Nuh fi trouble black man king, white boy
Nuh trouble black man king, yeah
Death is on your shoulder
If you trouble black man king, hey
Death is on your shoulder
If you trouble black man king
Say you nuh fi trouble black man king, white boy
Nuh trouble black man king
Nuh fi touch black man king, white boy
Nuh trouble black man king
Death is on your shoulder
If you trouble black man king, hey
Death is on your shoulder
If you trouble the black man king
You brought I down here, then you slave I
No respect for the sons of Rastafari
You slave I already, and all in your intention, hey
But if you think yu bad army , come, come try it again
What?!
You nuh fi trouble black man king, white boy
Nuh trouble black man king
Nuh fi trouble the black man king, white boy
Nuh trouble the black man king
Death is on your shoulder
If you trouble the black man king, aah
Death is on your shoulder
If you trouble the black man king
Just a deal with the people like world police
Behave like those, they don't enjoy
And if you give them a fly in your air Jeep
You just a tell dem they can't enjoy themselves
Thou shall not smoke
You nuh fi touch black man king, white boy
Nuh trouble black man king
You nuh fi trouble black man king, white boy
Nuh trouble black man king
For, death is on your shoulder
If you trouble black man king, yeah
Death is on your shoulder
If you trouble black man king
Just the other day, I forward 'round a Trinidad
A sister island to my island, and
Early in the morning I saw my grandmother, whoa
Was forwarding to cane piece to cut sugar again
Nuh bother touch black man king, white boy
Nuh trouble black man king
You nuh fi trouble black man king, white boy
Nuh trouble the black man king
For, death is on your shoulder
If you trouble black man king, again
Death is on your shoulder
If you trouble black man king
Birds have their nest
Foxes have their holes
And the hole some people in, got nowhere to live
Listen me
One hundred acres for ?? and not a free square to live
And that is wrong, you have to have a heart to give
Hear me man
You nuh fi trouble black man king, white boy
Nuh trouble black man king
Nuh fi trouble black man king, white boy
Nuh trouble black man king
For, death is on your shoulder
If you trouble black man king, yeah
Death is on your shoulder
If you trouble black man king, sinner man
Death is on your shoulder
If you trouble black man king, yeah
Death is on your shoulder
If you trouble black man king..
Culture / International Herb
Live at Reggae On The River 2004
C U L T U R E - AVAILABLE NOW
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Written,arranged and produced by Joseph "Culture" Hill.
Lead vocals by Joseph Hill
Vocals by Albert Walker
Played by Dub Mystic.
Dexter Valmond - Bass
Dean Pond - Bass
Noel Ricky Richardson - Guitar
Aikens - Keyboards
Chris Whitley - Keyboards
Additional Musician:
Dean Pond - Percussion
Also featuring:
Dean Fraser - Sax
David Madden - Trumpet
Recorded at Mixing Lab,Kingston,Jamaica.
Engineered by Fathead & Carrot
Mixed at Lion & Fox Studio by Jim Fox.
Tafari Music / Ascap - 1997
RIVERSIDE
Where is the love to be found, oh People? Nowhere around
For I woke on Saturday morning
Feeling sticky and dirty after work
Took a walk down a Riverside
I roll a little spliff
Sat down a stone and start to cool off
With my burden down the Riverside
For I check around the youth
And I try to teach the truth
Chorus:
Lay their burden on the Riverside
I walk through every corner
Try to find someone to talk to but I have to
/chorus/
For I walk and I talk
And I linger and I search
/chorus/
And I walk , I met the youthman Pocket
And I try to search around them
/chorus/
And I sat down quietly, Watch the fishes circle around the little stones
/chorus/
I cup my ears and I heard the little birds whistling in the tree likee so
/chorus/
Live good among your neighbor like sister and brother and come with me a Riverside
All you need is pray to Jah, quietly
You see secret shall be revealed
/chorus/
Jah provides for the birds in the air and the fishes in the sea so what about me
/chorus/
Look at the crow they toil not neither do they spin
Yet father provide for them
/chorus/
Let uss walk and talk and pray quietly in search
/chorus/
Look at the color of those clothes, oh Jah
Make each and every one individually
/chorus/
Where is the love? Where is the togetherness too?
/chorus/
I can't take the war and I can't take the shooting
Neither the looting, just
/chorus/
I tried around Rema, even in The Jungle
To find a quiet rest
Round there in a Nannyville, my heart come to a trail
/chorus/
And I Knock, and I search, and I whisper and I preach
/chorus/
Where is the quietness and the love to be found in some corner?
/chorus/
Let us walk, let us search, let us examine and let us see
/chorus
Roots legends Culture produced a sublime set of conscious reggae at The Buttermarket in Shrewsbury UK in 2003, reaffirming Joseph Hill as one of the all time great reggae writers and singers.
Set List:
See Them a Come 00:00
Jah Rastafari 03:41
Behold! 07:24
Cumbolo 11:50
Disobedient Children 16:04
Tell Me Where You Get It 19:28
Lion Rock 25:41
Iron Sharpening Iron 30:00
Zion Gate 35:00
Pass On 40:07
Wings of a Dove 44:00
Stop the Fussing and Fighting 47:51
World Peace 52:02
Money Girl 58:01
Babylon Can't Study 01:02:43
Peace and Love 01:07:23
International Herb/Legalise It 01:13:06
Two Sevens Clash 01:19:30
I'm Not Ashamed 01:28:19
No Sin 01:34:28
Chant Down Babylon 01:43:11
Performance Credits:
Lead Vocals - Joseph Hill
Backing Vocals - Telford Nelson and Albert Walker
With the "Forces of Justice" Band:
Lead Guitar - Robin Armstrong
Keyboards - Christopher Whitley and Ear Michelin
Bass Guitar - Stephen Samuels
Drums - Kenneth Joseph
Production Credits:
Director - Chris Wroe
Producer - Dave Bassett
Cameras - Jenny Wroe, Chris Wroe, Glyn Evans, Chris Jones, Stuart Wassell, Emma Puente
Front of House - Pete Ashton
Post Production - Neil Darbyshire
Photography - Chris Nottingham
Vison Mixer/Editor - Jonathan Tritton
Editor - Murat Yusuf
Sound Engineer - Kenyatta Hill
UK Tour Manager - Wilf Walker
Management - Pauline Hill
Produced as part of "The Live Roots Tours" series in partnership with Ents TV Production, originally released on DVD in 2005. Later licensed for DVD release in South Africa in 2008 with Revolver Records.
Please support Culture on their official online sites:
https://www.facebook.com/officialculturereggae
http://www.culturereggaeband.com/
🎤Submit your music: https://ffm.link/musicsubmissionrastavibration
Please follow Rasta Vibration on our official online sites:
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https://www.rvpgroup.net
Subscribe to Rasta Vibration for more: https://www.youtube.com/channe....l/UCFdSvuyHZwNlQva_W
© 2005 Rasta Vibration Ltd / Ents TV
#Culture #TheLiveRoutsTours #ReggaeLive #CultureReggae
Rare version of Zion Gate.
From the album: Stronger Than Ever
:)
For Joseph,Respect.Written,produced and arranged by Joseph HILL.
Joseph Hill, vocals and percussion
Albert Walker, vocals
Ire'land Malomo, vocals
Performed by Dub Mystic
Dean 'Digital' Pond, drums
Anthony 'Lion' Arthur, bass
Ricky 'Swann' Richardson, guitars
Noel 'Barry' Aikens, keyboards
Also featuring
Dean Fraser, sax
Chico, trumpet
Nambo Robinson, trombone
Vin Gordon, trombone
Harry T, percussion
Tony 'Asher' Brisset, keyboards
Recorded at Mixing Lab, Kingston, Jamaica
Engineered by Fathead
Mixed at Lion and Fox Studio, Washington, D.C.
Engineered by Jim Fox
ONE STONE
Hold not Thy peace oh God of my salvation
Because the mouth of the wicked and deceitful is open
Rastaman throw one big stone
And it brings a bad feeling to all wicked men
Natty man throw one stone
And it bring a bad feeling to all wicked men
Only when man like Marcus Garvey speak
Wicked men would ah hear
Instead of that they only sit and and rob and cheat
And oppress the poor
Nyabinghi throw one stone
And it bring a bad feeling to all wicked men
Binghiman throw one stone
And it bring a bad feeling to all wicked men
If Rasta make a progressive move
Wicked men a red eye
All they want to see
The days when they can send out Rasta
Can't bend I out, I send out Babylon
Binghiman throw one stone
And it bring a bad feeling to all wicked men
Things change, the table is turned
And you'll have to live, and live and learn
President Mandela was in prison
For twenty add years
And he leave from the prison
And take the seat of the president
Stone one
Binghiman we throw one stone
And it bring a bad feeling in a Africa
Binghiman we throw one stone
And it bring a bad feeling in a European land
He have eyes to see let them see
He who have ears to hear, let them hear
What the prophet of the land say
Truthful, one throw one stone
And it bring a bad feeling to all wicked man
For Joseph,Respect.Written,produced and arranged by Joseph HILL.
Joseph Hill, vocals and percussion
Albert Walker, vocals
Ire'land Malomo, vocals
Performed by DUB MYSTIC
Dean 'Digital' Pond, drums
Anthony 'Lion' Arhur, bass
Ricky 'Swann' Richardson, guitars
Noel 'Barry' Aikens, keyboards
Also featuring
Dean Fraser,sax - Nambo Robinson,trombone - Chico,trumpet - Vin Gordon,trombone -Harry T.,percussion - Tony "Asher" Brisset,keyboards.
Recorded at Mixing Lab, Kingston, Jamaica
Engineered by Fathead
Mixed at Lion and Fox, Washington, D.C.
Engineered by Jim Fox
I TRIED
I tried and I tried and I tried and I tried
To make them understand
I tried and I trried and I tried and I tried
But they just can't understand
I tried and I tried and I tried and I tried
To make them understand
But they just can't understand
The more victimization is up on their back
The more foolish they become
The more victimization is up on their back
They satisfy Lord for less
I tried oh Jah how I tried
But they just can't understand
I tried and I tried and I tried and I tried
But they just can't understand
This one turn them fool
That one turn them fool
So what are they waiting for
Fix up yourself and prepare to meet Jah
That will satisfy Lord for more
I tried oh Jah how I tried
But they just can't understand
I tried and I tried and I tried and I tried
But they just can't understand
Father die in pain
Mother die in pain
Slavery continue
They say we have no right no where
In no corner of the world
And I tried to make notice
But they just can't understand
I tried and I tried and I tried
To mek them know
But they just can't understand
Twenty-four hours make one day
They told us
Seven days make a week
And out of all that
They hold 365 days
They can only name you seven days
We beat drums by night
We beat drums by day
They take no heed
The church bell a-ring
And the children a-sing
And them still satisfy Lord for less
Son is waiting
For his sentence you know
Father in the field
Can't find nothing
And mother nah no money
My Daddy was sure
My Mommy was poor
Ain't got no money
Still no bother me
All I need to see is love
And unity
STREAM + ADD ► https://orcd.co/culturechantingon
"Chanting On" is an impressive compilation drawn from several critically acclaimed Culture albums spanning the 80's and 90's as well as earlier roots material.
Culture is reggae’s preeminent harmony group. Born in the 70′s golden age of reggae, the ever viable Culture garnered continual US and international acclaim for its long series of classic “roots” albums. Culture’s legendary “Two Sevens Clash” (Shanachie) was Reggae Album of the Year in 1977 and is acknowledged today by Rolling Stone Magazine (April 11, 2002) as #25 of the 50 all time coolest records (the only reggae album to make the list).
C&P 2014 Revolver Records
#culture #reggae #rootsreggae
Download Full Audio:
https://hearthis.at/deejay-den....noh/culture-best-of-
Autobiography
Joseph Hill was born in the rural Jamaican parish of St. Catherine in 1949, Hill began his musical career in the late 1960s as a percussionist. As the Rastafarian influence on reggae grew in the 1970s, he formed Culture and remained its driving force through more than 30 albums.
One of reggae's most enduring bands, Culture was led by Hill for three decades. He penned the group's best-known songs, including "Two Sevens Clash," "Natty Never Get Weary" and "I'm Not Ashamed."
Hill said "Two Sevens Clash," Culture's most influential record, was based on a prediction by Pan-Africanist Marcus Garvey, who said there would be chaos on July 7, 1977, when the "sevens" met. With its apocalyptic message, the song created a stir in his Caribbean homeland and many Jamaican businesses and schools shuttered their doors for the day.
Joseph Hill, lead vocalist and songwriter for traditional roots reggae group Culture, died on 19 August 2006. He was 57. Hill abruptly fell ill and died in Berlin while the group were in the middle of a European tour, according to his daughter Andrea. She did not know the cause of death.
In 2005, the singer, a devout Rastafarian, was honored by the Jamaican government for his contribution to the island nation's culture
Playlist
1. Culture - international herb
2. Culture - Disobedient children
3. Culture - Down in jamaica
4. Culture - I'm not ashamed
5. Culture - callie weed song
6. Culture - two sevens clash
7. Culture - its hard to live
8. Culture - tell me where you get it
9. Culture - black starliner
10. Culture - zion gate
11. Culture - poor people
12. Culture - legalization
13. Culture - outcast
14. Culture - long day a bwal
15. Culture - old tatoo
16. Culture - jah rastafari
17. Culture - one grandson
18. Culture - peace and love
19. Culture - satan company
20. Culture - wings of dove
21. Culture - five to one strip
22. Culture - lion rock
23. Culture - tribal war
24. Culture - money girl
25. Culture - walk in jah light
26. Culture - why am rastaman
27. Culture - humble africa
28. Culture - blackman king
29. Culture - poverty
30. Culture - How did i stray
31. Culture - have have
32. Culture - revolution time
33. Culture - fussing and fighting
34. Culture - be honest
35. Culture - riverside
36. Culture - peace love and harmony
37. Culture - mr sluggard
38. Culture - stone
39. Culture - Cousin rude boy
40. Culture - marcus
41. Culture - a slice of mount zion
42. Culture - addis ababa
#dj_denno #culture #reggae_roots
::::::::::::::: Dj Dennoh The Spin Tichaa ::::::::::::
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Provided to YouTube by The Orchard Enterprises
Humble African · Culture
Humble African
℗ 2007 Fat Eyes Productions
Released on: 2000-01-01
Auto-generated by YouTube.
Reggae band Culture performing live in Capetown, South Africa on December 15th, 2000. This full-set video captures Culture on the night of their first ever show in South Africa, performing a huge 20 song run of some of their all time greatest songs to over 10,000 reggae music fans.
Set List:
Introduction 00:00
I Tried 00:16
Payday 03:35
Addis Ababa 07:52
Tribal War 10:37
Won't Somebody 12:52
Ganja Time 17:35
Legalisation 18:46
Revolution 22:24
Disobedient Children 25:44
Down In Jamaica 28:59
She Want Money 33:00
Rally Round 35:20
Trust Me 38:27
Jah Jah See Dem Ah Come 41:49
Jah Rastafari 43:44
International Herb 46:36
Get Ready 50:41
Never Get Weary Yet 53:43
Too Long In Slavery 56:42
Two Sevens Clash 01:01:32
Credits:
All Songs Written By - Joseph Hill
Lead Vocals - Joseph Hill
Backing Vocals - Albert Walker, Telford Nelson
Guitar - Robin Armstrong
Bass Guitar - Steven Samuels
Keyboards - Desi Hyson, George Koukao
Drums - Ken "Trini Jo" Joseph
Engineer - Afrique Kenyatta Hill
Producers - Joseph Hill, Pauline Hill
Mastered By - Jim Fox
This performance occurred as part of the first South African Reggae Festival. Produced in collaboration with Sanctuary Records, this recording was originally released on DVD in 2002, and licensed for DVD production to RAS Records in Europe and Revolver Records for Africa.
Please support Culture on their official online sites:
https://www.facebook.com/officialculturereggae
http://www.culturereggaeband.com/
🎤Submit your music: https://ffm.link/musicsubmissionrastavibration
Please follow Rasta Vibration on our official online sites:
https://www.facebook.com/RastaVibrationMusic/
https://open.spotify.com/playl....ist/2UPsLSLaxwWjN7Lx
https://www.rvpgroup.net
Subscribe to Rasta Vibration for more: https://www.youtube.com/channe....l/UCFdSvuyHZwNlQva_W
© 2002 Rasta Vibration Ltd.
#Culture #LiveInAfrica #ReggaeLive
Very few people can discuss the early days of the Wailers and Trenchtown with the gravitas of the Honorable Neville O'Riley Livingston, OM OJ, aka. Bunny Wailer.
This is an excerpt from an interview conducted by Stafford Ashani with Bunny for Reggae Strong, that took place in New York City, on September 9, 1988.
Rest in Peace, Bunny and Stafford. You left us many gifts.
Bunny Wailer, (born Neville O'Riley Livingston, 10 April 1947, Jamaica), also known as Bunny Livingston and affectionately as Jah B,[1] is a singer-songwriter and percussionist and was an original member of the reggae group The Wailers along with Bob Marley and Peter Tosh. A three-time Grammy award winner, he is considered one of the longtime standard bearers of reggae music.
#reggaemusic #BunnyWailer series features #DaddyUroy #BobAndy #TootsandtheMaytals
Interviewer: Emprezz Giolding
Bunny Wailer
Rock And Groove
(1981)
Label: Tafari
Bunny Wailer - Rise and Shine
Rise And Shine
Written by Neville O'Riley Livingston
This is the cry of a people
who were robbed and raped from their homeland
and their loved ones.
A people stripped of their culture,
their dignity, their liberty and their rigths
and by the cruel and presumptuos
hands of the colonial and imperialistics slavers
were cargoed into the west,
where for over 400 years they have toiled and laboured,
and with their blood, their sweat, them tears and hands
they have built the great city of Babylon,
only to be paid with the wages of the taskmaster's whip,
torture and death.
Oh yea yea! This is my history!
Oh yea yea yes! Oh!
We've been down in the valley much too long.
We've been down in captivity oh so long.
We've been down in humillity much too long.
We've been down in slavery oh so long.
But we're gonna rise and shine!
And win our liberation,
for now is the time
when all nations must be free.
So rise and shine!
Restore your strength and power,
waste no more time,
remember your history.
We've been down in a sufferation much too long.
We've been down in a condemnation oh so long.
We've been down in a segregation much too long.
We've been down in humilliation oh so long.
But we're gonna rise!
As the morning sun that surrounds you,
it's international morality time,
where mankind must be born anew.
So rise and shine!
For the sake of the younger generations,
putting hearts and minds,
to brotherhood and unity.
Oh yea yea yea yea yes!
Remember the slavemaster's ship!
Remember the taskmaster's whip!
Oh yea!
We've been down in the valley much too long.
We've been down in captivity oh so long.
We've been down in slavery much too long.
We've been down in humillity oh so long.
But we're gonna rise and shine!
And win our liberation,
for now is the time
when all nations must be free.
Rise and shine!
Restore your strength and power,
waste no more time,
remember your history.
Yes we're gonna rise and shine!
Bunny Wailer - Cool Runnings
Label: Solomonic
Released: 1981
Studio version of Hypocrite, from Bunny Wailer's album, Bunny Wailer Sings The Wailers.