Music
Reviews
Damian
"Junior Gong" Marley
Welcome
To Jamrock
[Explicit Content]
Genre: Reggae
Medium: CD
Label: Universal
Release Date: 9/13/2005
$18.99 from Heavenly Daze CDs & Records
Guest review by David Jeffries:
Armed with an air horn, an Ini Kamoze sample, and a gritty tale of life in
Jamaica, Damian Marley made a huge splash with his massive single "Welcome
to Jamrock," a reggae-meets-hip-hop track that dominated urban radio and
street-level mixtapes during the summer of 2005. Dancehall kings Elephant Man
and Beenie Man had made some worthy crossover progress in 2004, but Damian's
hit was the biggest Jamaican splash on mainstream American radio since the days
of Shabba Ranks, maybe the days of father Bob himself. Delivering on the promise
of the single, Welcome to Jamrock the album is the full-length revolution that's
filled with purposeful material, guest appearance from reality television star
Bobby Brown included. There's more than enough slick studio trickery to alienate
earthy roots fans and this is reggae in one of its loosest definitions, but anyone
who's kept his eye on Damian and his brother Stephen -- who is all over the album
as a producer, songwriter, and singer -- can tell you this is where the talented,
genre-blending duo was headed. Reggae with guest rappers can end up sounding
horribly contrived, but the sonic stew the brothers create allows for rap, samples,
and all things synthetic and acoustic, along with everything else you'd expect
on a Massive Attack album if the dour bunch were fueled by Red Stripe and ghetto
Kingston spirit. The slinky "Beautiful" with Brown is the only time
the polish threatens to take over, but its new jack-meets-smooth jazz sweetness
sounds legit coming from the R&B-loving Damian. "Move!," which
borrows a bit of Dad's "Exodus," is a less hooky but no less urgent
successor to "Jamrock," as are the trip-hopping "For the Babies" and
the opening "Confrontation," which features dialogue from revolutionary
heroes Marcus Garvey and Bunny Wailer. Less earth-shaking but just as rich are
the swashbuckling "The Master Has Come Back" -- a more spiritual "Return
of the Mack" -- and "All Night," a playful number that is very
fun, very Fatboy Slim. "We're Gonna Make It" proves Damian can still
kick it in a full band and roots style while the heavy reverb with lively jestering
on the closing "Khaki Suit" gives the album its most dancehall moment,
bringing things comfortably home after 13 tracks of uninhibited exploration.
Besides the fantastic single, this album has "legs," with a bulging
lyric sheet filled with vivid and crafty lines that offer plenty to focus on
once all the sonic brilliance has sunk in. A career-defining moment that lives
up to a huge hit, Welcome to Jamrock is a tremendous achievement.
David
Jeffries, All Music Guide

2005
All Media Guide LLC. Portions of content provided by All Music Guide, a trademark
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Inc.
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