![]() This is the original paperback edition of the groundbreaking first book to explain the skills of the elite emcees of Dancehall, Jungle, Garage, Grime, and Hip Hop. If you have said yes to all of the questions above then you need this book in your reference library. With hits like Over U Body, Smoke The Sensi, Wine Up U Body, Sweetest Thing, as well as more recent hits with Shy FX Every Day, Chase & Status Just Come Back, Roughest Gunark remix, as well as his hits with Congo Natty like Champion DJ, Badder Than Them aka Imperial Majesty, and classics like Push Up U Lighter, as well as the UK Garage remix of Request The Style aka RIP Groove, Top Cat is a Living Legend of the UK urban music scene.ĭo you want to learn to MC like your favorite dancehall deejays or hip hop rappers?ĭo you want to be able to do the fundamental skills so well that can put you on a par with the emcees you look up to?ĭo you have more half a loaf for a brain? Top Cat scored hits for Fashion Records with Gallist/Sess Weh U Want, Request The Style, Bunn The Sensi, as top 5 singles in the Reggae Charts. In 1992 both Top Cat and Tenor Fly joined Fashion Records to record projects for release, working with Chris Lane and Gussie P at A Class Studio. Recording his first album Sensimilla Man for another Legendary producer and member of Sir Coxsone sound Blacker Dread, Top Cat then joined Sir Coxsone sound and was part of the MC team of Daddy Freddy, Tenor Fly, Ricky Tuffy and Jah Prento that toured the UK, Europe and the US during that time. His first his Love Mi Sess (produced by the Legendary Reggae producer Joe G RIP) topped the Reggae charts in February and March 1989 as was awarded Record of the Year and the Entertainment Enterprise Awards that year. I have the peace of mind that when I play out live, my tracks are tagged properly and at the highest quality format.Top Cat has been making hit songs for over three decades. There are people out there that would disagree with me, but whatever, that's just how I feel about it. you should pay for your tracks, just to show support to the artists and the music you love. What do you think about this? I personally feel that if you're gonna take DJ'ing seriously or even as a career approach. you'll even see my post where I ask what a 'belland' is. now, what I didnt realize (because I was seeing it from this kid's point of view) where he was just doing this for fun, and practicing, he got flamed for this.really hard.īasically, most of the forum members believe (to which I agree to some point) is to pay for your tracks before posting a mix on the internet.Īnd it goes on.and on. In that playlist he had listed a 'dubplate' (read it on the thread, you'll understand better what a dubplate is). ![]() I frequent another site called DNBArena, (.uk) and came across this thread.Ī 15 year old kid got into mixing a few months ago and had made a mix to share with the rest of the forum members, hoping for some feedback on his mixing technique, selection etc.
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