| The Way It Is (VP, 2006 [orig. released 1978])
*GUEST
REVIEW*
I Kong is the nephew of Leslie Kong, producer of many reggae bands
from the early days, including The Wailers. (It was Kong's release
The Best of the Wailers that angered the band so much that Peter
Tosh cursed
him.) Family legacy aside, I Kong's The Way It Is is an interesting specimen from the late seventies. It shares a lot in common with the work of
Willie Williams, Fred
Locks, and Prince Alla. The production has a fun little finish to it that incorporates much of the
sunshiny-ness of late-sixties/early-seventies sunshine pop, yet all the
rootsiness of the era in Jamaica. The set opens up with the
e-harpsichord intro of "Ghetto Cry," a bouncy little tune about the hardship of children growing up in the ghetto. "Wolves in Sheeps
Clothing" is full of thick sunny wah-wahs and Jerry Garcia-ish picking. I Kong's vocal is similarly soft and
reminiscent of
Peter Tosh's "Pick Myself Back Up". The penultimate track is a not-to-be-missed cover of the then-popular gospel song "I Wish We'd
All Been Ready," which is a song about the Rapture and the sentiment of those who were left behind once they realize the truth. Still, all of
the kitsch only adds value to a tight and heavy set of seventies roots. Every track here is on par with anything you'll discover in the
recent wave of reissues from labels such as VP, Blood & Fire, or Moll-Selekta.
There are no real standouts, just a great selection.
- Trammell Scruggs |
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