Page 8 - BOX SET BOOKLET _ Down In Jamaica _ 40 Years Of Vp Records
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demonstrating reggae’s evolving identity in the late 80s. The quintessential
            production from this timeframe is “Rumours” from the ‘cool ruler’ Gregory
            Isaacs. Isaacs shared the glory of the Gussie Clarke produced backing track
            with J.C. Lodge, whose “Telephone Love” is every bit as essential in any
            DJ’s selection from that period, as is Lady G’s “Nuff Respect.” VP licensed,
            manufactured and distributed thousands of titles from an array of emerging
            and established producers in the late 80s, including Gussie Clarke, Steely &
            Clevie, Fatis Burrell (Vena and Xterminator), and Maurice Johnson, better
            known as Black Scorpio. These releases can almost always be identified by a
            VPRD catalog number on singles, a VPRL catalog number on LPs, as well as
            VP’s Queens address and contact information on the label.

            Once Jamaican music’s identity had hardened, post “Sleng Teng,” the new
            term of art by the late 80s was ‘dancehall.’ This was, quite simply, the
            contemporary music played by sound-systems in Jamaican dancehalls.
            The new sound had a rhythmic pattern that was born out of reggae, but
            emphasized when studio engineers pushed the fader in a familiar rhythmic
            pattern, actually related to the Cuban son clave. The first studio recording                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          Down In Jamaica: 40 Years Of VP Records
            to demonstrate this pattern was Barrington Levy’s “On The Telephone.” More
            than anything, the term ‘dancehall’ was used to distinguish new Jamaican
            music from classic reggae, which seemed to rest on the other side of this new
            creative divide. As VP Records grew, dancehall was the term associated with
            the generation of deejays/emcees who had been on the rise for nearly two
            decades but who were now on top. The term reggae was never abandoned
            but would be used, sometimes misleadingly, as a catchall for all Jamaican
            music.

            By the end of the 80s, deejays were the dominant griots of Jamaican
            culture, emphasizing rhythmic delivery and rhyme, sometimes gimmickry
            and ‘slackness,’ to capture the fleeting adoration, whimsy and impatience
            of dancehall congregants. The deejays who could hold the microphone for
            hours and entertain a crowd at a dance would be those whose work was in
            demand on recordings, often bringing lyrics from the dance to the recording
            studio, a hallmark of the new art form.

            A new wave of pure dancehall stars emerged in the wake of early 80s reggae
            deejays Yellowman, Nicodemus, Michigan & Smiley, Charlie Chaplin, and
            Little John. These included Admiral Bailey, Major Worries, Chaka Demus,
            Super Cat, Shabba Ranks, Capleton, Ninja Man, Buju Banton, Beenie Man,
            Cutty Ranks, and Bounty Killer. VP Records released seminal, breakthrough,
            and hit songs by this new generation of stars on its Gold Disc label, starting
            in 1990, underscoring the company’s sustained relevance in the reggae
            industry. The company licensed hit songs for a compilation series called
            Strictly The Best, under the supervision of staff member Karl Miller. The
            series started in 1990 and reached volumes 58 and 59 in 2019. The Reggae
            Gold series, started in 1992 and encompassing 25 volumes through 2018,
            has been similarly successful. These highly anticipated compilations have
            included a lion’s share of the relevant hit songs and artists to come out of
            Jamaica over 25 years. Strictly The Best, Volume 1 led off with Foxy Brown’s



                                                                                                                                                                                               Opposite page, King Jammy’s Super Power setting up, late 80s. This page, top left, Ninja Man and Shabba Ranks in session. Top right, Bounty Killer. Bottom, Toyan, Gregory Isaacs, and Dillinger.
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