Let's start year three right...a new year and a new mix...this one featuring producer extraordinaire King Tubby...from Wikipedia:
"King Tubby...was a Jamaican electronics and sound engineer, known primarily for his influence on the development of dub in the 1960s and 1970s. Tubby's innovative studio work, which saw him elevate the role of record producer to a creative height previously only reserved for composers and musicians, would prove to be highly influential across many genres of popular music. He is often cited as the inventor of the concept of the remix, and so may be seen as a direct antecedent of much dance and electronic music production...King Tubby's production work in the 1970s would see him become one of the best-known celebrities in Jamaica, and would generate interest in his production techniques from musicians across the world. Tubby built on his considerable knowledge of electronics to repair, adapt and design his own studio equipment, which made use of a combination of old devices and new technologies to produce a studio capable of the precise, atmospheric sounds which would become Tubby's trademark. With a variety of effects units connected to his mixer, Tubby was able to 'play' the mixing desk like an instrument, bringing instruments and vocals in and out of the mix (literally 'dubbing' them) to create an entirely new genre: dub music...Using existing master tapes or his own highly skilled session musicians, Tubby would twist the instrumental parts of songs into unexpected configurations which highlighted the heavy rhythms of their bass and drum parts with minute snatches of vocals, horns and keyboard. These techniques mirrored the actions of the soundsystem selectors, who had long used EQ equipment to emphasise certain aspects of particular records, but Tubby was able to use his custom-built studio to take this technique into unexpected areas, often transforming a hit song to the point where it was almost unrecognizeable from its original... It is unlikely that a complete discography of Tubby's production work could be created based on the number of labels, artists and producers with whom he worked, and subsequent repressings of these releases sometimes contained contradictory information. His name is credited on hundreds of b-side labels, with the possibility that many others were by his hand yet uncredited, due to similarities with his known work...King Tubby was shot and killed on February 6, 1989 by an unknown group of people outside his home in Duhaney Park, upon returning from a session at his Waterhouse studio. It is thought that the murder was probably an attempt at robbery."
Click here for the full entry.
The Tracks:
Gorgon Version by Cornell Campbell & The Aggravators from
King Tubby's in Fine Style
Shooter Dub by King Tubby from
Down Santic Way: Santic's Jamaican Productions 1973-1975
Corner Crew Dub by Augustus Pablo from
King Tubbys Meets Rockers Uptown
King Tubby's Borderline Dub by King Tubby & Augustus Pablo from
Dub Chill Out
Shaolin Temple Dub by Barrington Levy from
In Dub: The Lost Mixes from King Tubby's Studio
King Tubby Dub by King Tubby from
400% Dynamite!
Free Africa by Horace Andy from
King Tubby Meets the Reggae Masters
Dub Is My Woman by Larry Marshall from
I Admire You (In Dub)
That's Life/Life Time Dub by Ronnie Davis/King Tubby & Aggrovators from a rip of
Clocktower 7" CT 735Jah Children Rise/Rising Dub by Earl Sixteen & The Heptones/King Tubby from a rip of a
Trench Town 10"South Africa/From Cape To Cairo (extended) by Mighty Travellers/King Tubby from a rip of a
Pressure Sounds 7"Download
Burning Dervish Vol 25: King Tubby