Count Ossie - Remembering Count Ossie: A Rasta "Reggae" Legend FLAC

Tracklist
| 1 | Going Home To Zion Land |
| 2 | African Shuffle |
| 3 | Sodom And Gomorrah |
| 4 | Leaving This Land |
| 5 | Air Horn Shuffle |
| 6 | Music Go Round And Round |
| 7 | Swinging For Joy |
| 8 | So Long (Negus Can Call You) |
| 9 | One Bright Morning |
| 10 | Fire Escape |
| 11 | Gun Fever |
| 12 | Babylon Gone |
| 13 | First Gone |
| 14 | Count Ossie Special |
Versions
| Category | Artist | Title (Format) | Label | Category | Country | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HM-50100-2 | Count Ossie | Remembering Count Ossie: A Rasta "Reggae" Legend (CD, Album, RM) | Moodisc Records International | HM-50100-2 | US | 1996 |
| HM-50100-1 | Count Ossie | Remembering Count Ossie : A Rasta "Reggae" Legend (LP, Ora) | Moodisc Records International | HM-50100-1 | US | 1996 |
Credits
- Percussion [1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th Ikety Funde], Drums [Bass] – The Wareikas
- Percussion [Overdub], Effects [Sound Effects], Mastered By [Remastered] – Harry A. Mudie
- Percussion [Repeater Ikety Funde] – Count Ossie
- Saxophone [Tenor] – "Big Bra" Gaynair
- Trombone – Rico Rodriquez
- Written-By – Harry A. Mudie (tracks: A1, A3 to A7, B3 to B7)
Notes
From original vinyl records (4 ") of approximately 1961
Barcodes
- Barcode: 731485010016
Video
Album
Count Ossie Special, 02:43. Serve Him and Live, 02:26. Hello Sharon, 02:14. Unfortunately, the station stopped broadcasting. Perhaps, this is a temporary station problem. You can leave your e-mail and we will let you know when the broadcast of the station will be online again: Or listen to the other country dec name stations. You gotta wonder what Count Ossie would think of these songs being released now under his name. Mudie's maneuvers on the effects' front don't really damage Fire Engine or Gun Fever Remix, but they do cheapen Herb I Feel in its obvious quest for the ganja anthem audience. On balance, Remembering Count Ossie is no lost treasure trove for casual listeners or seekers of early Nyabinghi percussion chants. Album 1996 16 Songs. Count Ossie. Reggae , 1996. free to Count Ossie Remembering Count Ossie A Rasta Reggae Legend African Shuffle, So Long The Negus call you and more. 16 tracks 42:09. Count Ossie, born Oswald Williams, 1926, St. Thomas, Jamaica-18 October 1976 was a Jamaican Rastafari movement drummer and band leader. As a young boy he grew in a rasta community were he learned techniques of vocal chanting and hand drumming. In the late 1950s, he with other percussionists formed the Count Ossie Group. His first sound recordings were made after meeting Prince Buster. Count Ossie 17-06-2014. Total duration:42 min. So Long The Negus Call You. Remembering Count Ossie A Rasta Reggae Legend. Air Horn Shuffle. Gun Fever. Fire Escape. One Bright Morning. First Gone. Babylon Gone. Count Ossie & The Mystic Revelation Of Rastafari Tales Of Mozambique 2LPMP3 LP. Jo Jo Bennett Poison Ivy with Strings 7. Ras Attitude Royal Lionage LP. Various Reggae Jazz & More: Cool & Spicy CD. Count Ossie Remembering Count Ossie: A Rasta Reggae Legend CD. Big Joe, Mudies All Stars Drifter's On Th Ball 7. Gregory Isaacs, John Holt Looking Back Duet 7. A1 African Shuffle A2 So Long Negus Can Call You A3 Air Horn Shuffle A4 Gun Fever A5 Fire Escape A6 One Bright Morning A7 First Gone B1 Babylon Gone B2 Music Go Round And Round B3 Leaving This Land B4 Swinging For Joy B5 Going Home To Zion Land. B6 Count Ossie Special B7 Sodom And Gomorrah. Count Ossie, born Oswald Williams 1926 18 October 1976, was a Jamaican Rastafari drummer and band leader. In the early 1950s, he set up a Rasta community in Rockfort near Wareika Hill on the east side of Kingston, where many of Kingston's musicians learned about the Rastafari movement. The music has some historical value, and it's a pleasant enough listen, but is probably best left to historians of Jamaican music. Tracklist: African Shuffle. Far Cry is a jazz album by musician Eric Dolphy with trumpeter Booker Little, originally released in 1962 on New Jazz, a subsi. Paul Robeson - At Carnegie Hall 1960. When Paul Robeson took the stage at Carnegie Hall in May of 1958, it had been 11 years since he had previously concertized freely in the U























