No More Freind (CD) ~ The Meditations (Artist) Cover Art

No More Freind (CD)

By: The Meditations (Artist)


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Product Description


Track Listing

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DISC 1 for No More Freind (CD) Album By The Meditations (Artist)
1   No More Friend
2   Forcing Me
3   Jack On Top
4   Mother Love
5   Book Of History
6   Carpenter Rebuild
7   Fuss & Fight
8   Slick Chick
9   Talk Of The Town
10   Big City
11   No More Friend - (12" mix)
 


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Review

The Wire (p.63) - "[With] the lovely 'Carpenter Rebuild' -- reminiscent of Burning Spear's 'Tradition' with its chirruping vocal refrain -- a relaxed one-drop rhythm with vocal to match..."

Title Note

Audio Mixer: Soldgie.

Audio Remasterer: Peter Norman.

Liner Note Author: Patrick M. Griffith.

Recording information: Channel One.

Photographer: Steve Angel.

The Meditations, one of reggae music's preeminent vocal harmony groups, produce a blend of tough roots rhythms and smooth, soulful vocals that made them among the most popular Jamaican groups of the 1970s. Building upon the impeccable standards they had set in the previous decade, NO MORE FRIEND, released in 1983, adds modernizing touches (courtesy of producer Linval Thompson), updating the group's sound for a new decade. Anchored by perhaps the tightest rhythm section in reggae, the Roots Radics band, the trio's vocals truly soar, creating an exuberant mix of sumptuous harmonies and thundering, dubby beats

At the time of No More Friend's release back in 1983, The Meditations referred to it as their dance album, although there's not a hint of the disco-fied rhythms so popular amongst the roots crowd of the day, never mind the harder hitting sounds emanating from the sound systems. In fact the title track, which kicks off the set with its soaring harmonies and breezy horns, conjures up the sumptuous sounds of the rocksteady age, while "Forcing Me" exposes rocksteady's own roots -- Motown soul, and here the trio's harmonies glisten. But still this is the Sixties' as seen through the prism of the Roots Radics, and so even at its most effervescent, Style Scott's beats still boom, as Errol "Flabba" Holt's heavy bass thrums along. On "Jack on Top," Holt's bass throb underpins the whole piece, which beautifully blends '70s roots and the trio's '60s soul vocal styling. From there Friend begins slipping ever deeper into roots territory and dub elements begin to feed through the numbers. "Book of History" is the set's fulcrum, pushing towards dread with its dubby mix, booming beats, haunting melancholy atmosphere, and the trio's soulful recalling of past suffering. Much effort obviously went into the sequencing of this album, which has a wonderfully organic ebb and flow. Beyond "Book of History," the set begins to imperceptibly lighten, "Carpenter Rebuild" features a brighter melody, but the heavily reverbed beats and the arrangement's dubby quality gives this cultural allegory a sharp edge. "Carpenter Rebuild" itself was rebuilt the following year, remixed and released as the lighter "Having Fun" 12" single. "Slick Chick," another hefty dubby number, moves the trio out of the cultural realm and into the kingdom of sexy girls. "Talk of the Town" boasts a sparse, heavily dubbed backing, but overhead, the trio are lightly tripping their way into trouble; indeed tongues will be wagging about the way the group are salivating over schoolgirls. No wonder then that everyone is heading to the "Big City," although the Meditations work hard to convince listeners of the greater charms of country living. Producer Linval Thompson and mixer Soldgie may not have created the ultimate dance album, but they did oversee a classic record, filled with stunning arrangements and fabulous performances from the trio, with the lighter numbers as lyrically eloquent as the cultural numbers. "Mother Love," for instance, is one of the most heartfelt appreciations of a mother's hopes and fears ever delivered. In the previous decade, most of Friend would have deservingly been served up as singles, only the title track and "Carpenter Rebuild" received their due, but the rest of the set was equally worthy. [Greensleeves' 1997 edition included one bonus track.] ~ Jo-Ann Greene



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