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    • 3 Min.
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    • Dj Frado Music
  2. Wild West Ridim by Capleton released in 2004. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic.

  3. Listen to Wild West Ridim on Spotify. Capleton, Da'Ville, Danny English, Egg Nog · Ep · 2004 · 6 songs.

  4. www.amazon.de › Wild-West-Ridim-Capleton › dpAmazon.de:Wild West Ridim

    Amazon.de:Wild West Ridim. Zum Hauptinhalt wechseln.de. Lieferung an Kassel 34117 Standort aktualisieren Musik-CDs & Vinyl ...

    • Bad Mind
    • Jah Jah City
    • Who Dem
    • In Her Heart
    • Tour
    • Rock Stone
    • Raggy Road
    • Everybody
    • New Name
    • Consuming

    Produced by Sly and Robbie’s Taxi label, Badmindis a righteous call out among Capleton’s earliest recordings. Addressing that relentless, ever-present, plague — badmind — the deejay delivers a thumping how-to for hopping on the “pearly gates train”: “Yuh nuh fi grudgeful and yuh nuh fi envious, yuh heart haffi clean and yuh mus’ not corrupt.”

    This powerful social commentary on sly characters and senseless killing is relevant even in the present day. Found on More Fire, Capleton’s seventh studio album, the track features on the Morgan Heritage produced Liberation Riddim, and made Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley’s Rolling Stoneplaylist of the Top 5 Greatest Reggae Protest Songs.

    “Slew dem, a bere feelings dem a carry!” Capleton blares on the intro to Who Dem, a booming cut on Ward 21’s Bellyas Riddimfrom 1999. It’s one of the artist’s most recognized and prolific singles, a dubplate must-have, and is guaranteed to raise the roof at any Jamaican dance once the edgy bass line drops.

    Known to effortlessly tow the line between righteous and bawdy content, Capleton executes this Chrome Riddim‘gyal tune’ with cheeky, rapid-fire rhymes, “She nuh waan nuh man fi play wid her parts”, he spits on the rhythmic track, which also features on VP Record’s cutting edge round-up series, Reggae Gold 2004.

    Touris Capleton’s lament over a lifted Slick Rick beat on the drastic cultural shift he encountered after a 90’s hiatus. “Come back in Jamaica, everything insecure/ And de DJ dem nah teach people no more/ If slackness a the sickness then culture a the cure,” he chanted on the song Pitchfork ranked 28th on their 50 Best Dancehall Songs Of All Time p...

    Capleton infuses this Rasta ballad against poverty, politricks and the struggle with his compelling yet melodious flow. Assuming first verse duty on Stephen Marley’s 2014 single, Shango switches up his vocals between his regular rootsy chatter and the deeper register heard on the vivid call-to-action, “Mi seh one by one, one by one we stepping out ...

    Capleton samples The Abyssinians’ roots reggae classic “Satta Massagana” (translation: ‘give thanks’) adding his own brand of introspective flair. “Troddin this road for the longest while/ and still me lamp never run outa oil”, he intones on the Bobby Digital remake, a far-reaching fan fave illustrating the point he made to Ultimate Reggae journali...

    Capleton’s sharp songwriting is on display in this humorous anecdote about himself and a “sexy likkle chick”. Though he dedicates (livicates) the song to “all loverboy an lovergirl” in the intro, lines in the chorus have elevated the song to an overall love anthem. The Prophet’s vocals fit flawlessly on UK drill rapper Kano’s Can’t Hold We Down fea...

    It’s hard to believe his one time label, Def Jam, requested that Shango get vocal training to tame his gritty roar. Songs like New Name showcase his unmatched knack for “deejaying ferociously over up-tempo rhythms” as United Reggae put it. Rohan “Snowcone” Fuller (Applause Riddim) provides the driving beat as Capleton defends various causes — Rasta...

    Consuming is The Prophet’s contribution to Don Corleone’s Mad Guitar Riddim, where his rapid-fire bars “dash a fire” on “wicked men”. Explaining his signature metaphor, the trailblazer said ‘fire’ is “really a spiritual, a wordical, and a musical fire; a way of reminding one’s brother that they are going astray”.

  5. A list of all tunes (songs) performed by Capleton (real name: Clifton George Bailey III).

  6. Capleton. Riddimguide.com is the worlds largest database for Reggae and Dancehall music. It's the #1 resource for DJs, collectors and every reggae-fanatic out there.