| Stainless
is all about the sounds. Always a hefty lineup,
Renaissance, Karim, Code Red, Matterhorn
and Mighty Crown all took turns and played as they
were well supposed to. The night's proceedings however turned
out to be all about two of the booked sounds - Mighty Crown
- specifically the solo Sammy T and Matterhorn.
Although
Code Red kept the tempo at a level high throughout
their segment, relative hell broke loose when, backed by
Master Lee, Sammy T took to the stage. "Dis
a di BL@@DCLAAT CHINEY MAN YUH A LOOK FAH?" Wake
di town! Sammy T. started his set with a slew of Brand Name
dub plates including Wyclef's "911"
and Nas' "Got Yourself A..."
Mighty Crown, I hope you got yourself a.... Woowee!
Trus' mi, it's been a while since I catch dem type a dub
deh. Come een like Toni Braxton in '92- "If I never
hear Jaro sound play again..." Alright, alright
so I was impressed, needless to say. I spend far too little
time these days pennying the music and too much time talkin'
shop at these events.
Sammy
T played a solid, extremely well received set, full of an
energy only a Yard-Core Japanese could eminate. Jamaica
was in dire need of a fresh sound to play for them. The
last time Mighty Crown
was in Jamaica was for Sumfest last summer.
Up
next was the infamous Tony "Mentally
Ill" Matterhorn who had been behind
the sound selectin' his records throughout Sammy's set.
Seeming a bit perturbed apparently due to the 4 power failures
during the course of the night, Matterhorn hit front stage
with gratuitous ferocity. The crowd gave back though - with
Baygon and lighters. Although this was not labelled as a
clash, the two definitely went head to head with intentions
clearly meant to be take offense. Matterhorn was also all
over Black Chiney who
weren't in class that night. The feud stemmed from a impromptu
clash in Miami months ago which Black Chiney took smiling.
Keep it locked right here for info on the next encounter.
Next
up were the artists who had been looming backstage for a
few during the last sound segment. Elephant
Man and Vybz Kartel closed the show (despite
the generator failing again mid-performance) but Looga
Man D-U-N IT. I said it before and i will not
hesitate to say it again - look out for the original Dutty
Cup member in 2003. Dutty comin to take over the planet,
dammit.
The
sparse crowd filed out in an orderly fashion way past 4am.
Visions of Sammy T. taking Stainless danced in their heads
that night, no doubt.
Big
up Karim,
Philip and the whole Stainless massive. Nice of y'all
to invite us. Bless!
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