These are the people who carried Jamaican music to the four corners of the world and not the none sense that they are making today-so-called trap dancehall
OMG this is the best I have heard.......so true. I hung with beautiful people and my mum still didn't realise how beautiful my heart was. RIP mama, wish she could see me now. Thank you for sharing this......simply lovely.
I bought this single around the early eighties after hearing it in nightclubs that had reggae nights that I attended. Just thought I'd look it up, can't believe its on U Tube. Great...
Heard this on John Peel waay back in time late 70s! Always had big love for reggae, and this music huge part of punk club culture. I still have all the classic reggae choons on 12inch (remember them??)
Had to explain the meaning & lyrical content of this tune to my school sixth form lecturer when I played this in class on my cassette player back in the late 1970s.
Always remeber this song. There was a dance in Waterhouse near my house and I remember hearing this song. FUN TIME!!!! Love this song!!! where is Tappa Zukie
oh Lord ..............people are you ready........... Tuneeeeeeeeeeeeee me too big fe shorts ....but me hope someone eye a dazzle inna me long frock lol lol lo
Gregory's Storm was the Original Song on the Rhythm.. Tappa Zukie's Oh Lord was a take off..so was Nigger Kojack's Green Bay Killings aMurder .. Maddu's Jamming So ... Pincher's Bandelero . even Sizzla's Come Mex wi mash dem dung caa lose
@daroyalgeneral Dunno bro - Im goin from something printed in the liner notes for one of Tappa's albums I read. So It was fully Tappa who was quoted saying that yes, he came up with it first and he specifically said it was known as the first slack tune So, maybe theres a different truth, but Im goin by a quote from Tappa - you may be right, I dunno ~ Peace :)