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This Stream Features Guest DJ's
The first Jamaican recording studio opened
in 1951 and recorded "mento" music, a fusion
of European and African folk dance music. The island was
awash in rhythm'n'blues records imported by the so called
"sound systems", eccentric traveling dance-halls
run by no less eccentric disc-jockeys such as Clement
Dodd (the "Downbeat") and Duke Reid (the "Trojan").
The poor people of the Jamaican ghettos, who could not
afford to hire a band for their parties, had to content
themselves with these "sound systems". The "selectors",
the Jamaican disc-jockeys who operated those sound systems,
became the real entertainers. The selector would spin
the records and would "toast" over them. The
art of "toasting", that usually consisted in
rhyming vocal patterns and soon evolved in social commentary,
became as important as the music that was being played.
Complete
Story

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