Black Dignity
is by no means the only Peter Tosh collection
anyone should own, since it covers a tumultuous sliver of time. The tracks here
are Trojan Records-associated songs that come from the early '70s, a time when Tosh was issuing
solo singles out of resentment for the slow pace his band, the Wailers,
was taking and resentment for the back seat he was taking to the Wailers'
leader, Bob
Marley. You miss the earlier Tosh carving out a
solo career and all the post-Wailers success
that was to come, but the Wailers'
most distrustful and urgent member didn't issue anything without a purpose. The
singles here are all important and as the excellent, career-spanning liner
notes by Rick
Glanvill point out, the producers Tosh was working
with were in their prime, most notably Joe Gibbs. It
was a producer/singer match made in heaven with Gibbs tempering Tosh's venom with
sweet but very certain soul. On the Gibbs tracks it
feels like that tense moment right before the kettle is about boil, something
you'll feel when the excellent "Maga Dog" comes through the speakers.
Black
Dignity fills a void just by including the heralded Gibbs version of
the track, but it also includes no less than four mostly faceless dub versions
of the song that contain little or no involvement from Tosh (to be fair,
the cover does mention "and friends"). The wild "Here Comes the
Judge" -- which is followed by two of its dubs -- and the earthy,
nyahbinghi-flavored "(Earth's) Rightful Ruler" are also crucial cuts
the collection makes easy to obtain, the latter featuring an appearance by a
young, very different-sounding U-Roy. The Lee
"Scratch " Perry tracks are the Tosh-centered cuts
he did with the
Wailers and do a good job of representing the singer's contribution to the
group. "Brand New Second Hand" shows what the Wailers
were like with Tosh
at the controls and makes a great argument that there should have been more of
it. The track list doesn't flow as well as one would hope, but this is a more
academic outing without any best-of disguise. Taking that into account and
looking at the scant bit of Tosh Trojan has in
its vaults, one can't help but respect how well Black Dignity
brings the singer's "lost years" into the light. Start elsewhere if
you're a newcomer, because this is a gap-filling gift for hardcore fans.
1. Peter Tosh &
The Wailers - Brand New Second Hand - 3:11
2. Peter Tosh - Them
A Fe A Beaten - 1:53
3. Winston Wright
& Larry McDonald - Reuben - 2:03
4. Peter Tosh &
The Wailers - Stop The Train - 2:22
5. Peter Tosh - Here
Comes The Judge - 3:27
6. Winston Wright -
Rebelution - 3:19
7. The Destroyers -
Ah So - 3:17
8. Peter Tosh &
The Wailers - Soon Come - 2:20
9. Peter Tosh &
The Wailers - Memphis - 2:08
10. Peter Tosh -
Arise Black Man - 2:36
11. Peter Tosh &
The Wailers - Four Hundred Years - 2:32
12. Peter Tosh - Maga
Dog - 2:44
13. Peter Tosh &
Winston Scotland - Skanky Dog - 2:36
14. The Now
Generation - Boney Dog - 2:38
15. Bunny Flip -
Maingy Dog - 2:59
16. Joe Gibbs, The
Love Generation - Fat Dog - 2:57
17. Peter Tosh &
The Wailers - Go Tell It On The Mountain - 3:12
18. Peter Tosh -
Nobody's Business (Aka Leave My Business) - 3:11
19. Peter Tosh &
The Wailers - Downpressor - 3:12
20. Peter Tosh &
The Soulmates - Rudie's Medley - 3:!2
21. Peter Tosh &
The Wailers - Can't You See 2:42
22. Peter Tosh -
Black Dignity - 3:37
23. Peter Tosh &
U Roy - (Earth's) Rightful Ruler - 2:33
24. Peter Tosh &
The Wailers - Brand New Second Hand (Alternate Version) - 3:54
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