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“If I Was Your Girlfriend” (Edit) 3:47
“Shockadelica” 3:31
“Shockadelica” (12″ Long Version) 6:13
“U Got the Look” (Long Look) 6:41
“Housequake” (Edit) 3:22
“Housequake” (7 Minutes MoQuake) 7:12
“I Could Never Take the Place of Your Man” (Fade) 3:39
“Hot Thing” (Edit) 3:41
“Hot Thing” (Extended Remix) 8:32
“Hot Thing” (Dub Version) 6:53
CD 4 / LPs 5 & 6: Vault Tracks I (All tracks previously unreleased)
“I Could Never Take the Place of Your Man” (1979 version) 3:13
“Teacher, Teacher” (1985 version) 3:08
“All My Dreams” 7:24
“Can I Play with U?” (featuring Miles Davis) 6:40
“Wonderful Day” (Original Version) 3:48
“Strange Relationship” (Original Version) 6:42
“Visions” Lisa Coleman 2:19
“The Ballad of Dorothy Parker” (with Horns) 4:56
“Witness 4 the Prosecution” (Version 1) 4:00
“Power Fantastic” (Live in Studio) Prince, Wendy Melvoin, Coleman 7:18
“And That Says What?” 1:50
“Love and Sex” 4:12
“A Place in Heaven” (Prince Vocal) 2:58
“Colors” Wendy Melvoin 1:01
“Crystal Ball” (7″ mix) 3:30
“Big Tall Wall” (Version 1) 5:59
“Nevaeh ni Ecalp A” 2:33
“In a Large Room with No Light” Prince, Wendy Melvoin, Coleman 3:28
CD 5 / LPs 7 & 8: Vault Tracks II (All tracks previously unreleased)
“Train” 4:22
“It Ain’t Over ‘Til the Fat Lady Sings” 2:22
“Eggplant” (Original Prince Vocal) 5:19
“Everybody Want What They Don’t Got” 2:09
“Blanche” 5:37
“Soul Psychodelicide” (1986 Master) 12:37
“The Ball” 4:34
“Adonis and Bathsheba” 5:28
“Forever in My Life” (Early Vocal Run-Through) 6:25
“Crucial” (Alternate Lyrics) 6:15
“The Cocoa Boys” 6:06
“When the Dawn of the Morning Comes” 6:17
“Witness 4 the Prosecution” (Version 2) 5:03
“It Be’s Like That Sometimes” 3:19
CD 6 / LPs 9 & 10: Vault Tracks III (All tracks previously unreleased)
“Emotional Pump” 4:59
“Rebirth of the Flesh” (Original Outro) 5:28
“Cosmic Day” 5:39
“Walkin’ in Glory” 5:14
“Wally” 4:45
“I Need a Man” 5:33
“Promise to Be True” 3:38
“Jealous Girl” (Version 2) 4:52
“There’s Something I Like About Being Your Fool” 3:49
“Big Tall Wall” (Version 2) 5:46
“A Place in Heaven” (Lisa Vocal) 2:46
“Wonderful Day” (12″ Mix) 7:34
“Strange Relationship” (1987 Shep Pettibone Club Mix) 7:08
CD 7 / LPs 11-12A: Live in Utrecht 6/20/87 (All tracks previously unreleased)
“Sign o’ the Times” 5:36
“Play in the Sunshine” 4:36
“Little Red Corvette” 1:36
“Housequake” 4:52
“Girls & Boys” 4:17
“Slow Love” Prince, Davis 5:06
“Take the ‘A’ Train / Pacemaker / I Could Never Take the Place of Your Man” Billy Strayhorn, Leeds, Prince 10:17
“Hot Thing” 6:15
“Four” (with Sheila E. Drum Solo) Prince, Sheila E. 6:12
“If I Was Your Girlfriend” 5:17
CD 8 / LPs 12B-13: Live in Utrecht 6/20/87 (All tracks previously unreleased)
“Let’s Go Crazy” 6:10
“When Doves Cry” 2:46
“Purple Rain” 5:40
“1999” 5:54
“Forever in My Life” 13:12
“Kiss” 3:33
“The Cross” 7:44
“It’s Gonna Be a Beautiful Night” Prince, Fink, Leeds 13:55
DVD: Live at Paisley Park 12/31/87 (Live tracks previously unreleased)
“Intro” 0:29
“Sign o’ the Times” 5:11
“Play in the Sunshine” 4:22
“Little Red Corvette” 1:38
“Erotic City” 3:06
“Housequake” 4:08
“Slow Love” 0:59
“Do Me, Baby” 2:00
“Adore” 6:46
“I Could Never Take the Place of Your Man” 7:41
“What’s Your Name Jam” 5:31
“Let’s Pretend We’re Married” 0:52
“Delirious” 1:10
“Jack U Off” 1:43
“Drum Solo” (featuring Sheila E.) 4:02
“Twelve” 1:46
“Hot Thing” 4:55
“If I Was Your Girlfriend” 6:56
“Let’s Go Crazy” 6:51
“When Doves Cry” 2:44
“Purple Rain” 14:10
“1999” 3:14
“U Got the Look” 8:05
“It’s Gonna Be a Beautiful Night Medley” (featuring Miles Davis) 34:08
Khamisi
Khamisi
Purple Rain is the sixth studio album by the American singer, songwriter, producer, and multi-instrumentalist Prince. It was released on June 25, 1984, by Warner Bros. Records as the soundtrack album to the 1984 film of the same name. Purple Rain was musically denser than Prince’s previous albums, emphasizing full band performances, and multiple layers of guitars, keyboards, electronic synthesizer effects, drum machines, and other instruments.
Much of the album had a grandiose, synthesized, and psychedelic sheen to the production and performances. The music on Purple Rain is generally regarded as the most pop-oriented of Prince’s career, though a number of elements point towards the more experimental records Prince would release after Purple Rain. The music video for the album’s lead single “When Doves Cry” sparked controversy among network executives, who thought its sexual nature was too explicit for television. The risqué lyrics of “Darling Nikki” raised complaints from Tipper Gore and the Parents Music Resource Center and contributed to the implementation of Parental Advisory stickers and imprints on album covers.
Track listing
Side one
“Let’s Go Crazy” 4:39
“Take Me with U” 3:54
“The Beautiful Ones” 5:14
“Computer Blue” Prince, John L. Nelson, Wendy & Lisa, Dr. Fink 3:59
“Darling Nikki” 4:14
Side two
“When Doves Cry” 5:52
“I Would Die 4 U” 2:59
“Baby I’m a Star” 4:24
“Purple Rain” 8:40
Deluxe and expanded editions
Disc 1: 2015 remaster
“Let’s Go Crazy” (Prince and the Revolution) 4:39
“Take Me with U” (Prince and the Revolution) 3:54
“The Beautiful Ones” (Prince) 5:13
“Computer Blue” (Prince and the Revolution) 3:59
“Darling Nikki” (Prince) 4:14
“When Doves Cry” (Prince) 5:54
“I Would Die 4 U” (Prince and the Revolution) 2:49
“Baby I’m a Star” (Prince and the Revolution) 4:24
“Purple Rain” (Prince and the Revolution) 8:41
Disc 2: From the Vault & Previously Unreleased
“The Dance Electric” 11:29
“Love and Sex” 5:00
“Computer Blue” (“Hallway Speech” Version) 12:18
“Electric Intercourse” (Studio Version) 4:57
“Our Destiny/Roadhouse Garden” 6:25
“Possessed” (1984 Version) 7:56
“Wonderful Ass” 6:24
“Velvet Kitty Cat” 2:42
“Katrina’s Paper Dolls” 3:30
“We Can Fuck” 10:17
“Father’s Song” 5:30
Disc 3: Single Edits & B-Sides
“When Doves Cry” (7″ Single Edit) 3:48
“17 Days” (B-Side Edit) 3:55
“Let’s Go Crazy” (7″ Single Edit) 3:50
“Let’s Go Crazy” (Special Dance Mix) 7:35
“Erotic City” (7″ B-side Edit) 3:55
“Erotic City (“Make Love Not War Erotic City Come Alive”)” 7:24
“Purple Rain” (7″ Single Edit) 4:05
“God” (7″ B-Side Edit) 4:03
“God (Love Theme from Purple Rain)” (Instrumental) 7:54
“Another Lonely Christmas” (7″ B-Side Edit) 4:54
“Another Lonely Christmas” (Extended Version) 6:47
“I Would Die 4 U” (7″ Single Edit) 2:58
“I Would Die 4 U” (Extended Version) 10:15
“Baby I’m a Star” (7″ B-Side Edit) 2:55
“Take Me with U” (7″ Single Edit) 3:44
Disc 4: DVD – Live at the Carrier Dome, Syracuse, NY, March 30, 1985
“Let’s Go Crazy” 5:30
“Delirious” 2:45
“1999” 4:15
“Little Red Corvette” 5:10
“Take Me with U” 4:15
“Do Me, Baby” 4:40
“Irresistible Bitch” 2:00
“Possessed” 4:24
“How Come U Don’t Call Me Anymore?” 5:05
“Let’s Pretend We’re Married” 4:15
“International Lover” 1:00
“God” 8:30
“Computer Blue” 4:30
“Darling Nikki” 4:00
“The Beautiful Ones” 7:30
“When Doves Cry” 8:15
“I Would Die 4 U” 3:50
“Baby I’m a Star” 10:00
“Purple Rain” 18:24
Khamisi
Khamisi
Grand Champ is the fifth studio album by rapper DMX. It was released by The Island Def Jam Music Group, Def Jam Recordings, and Ruff Ryders Entertainment. The album was produced by multiple producers, including Swizz Beatz, Dame Grease, Kanye West, and No I.D. It features guest appearances from 50 Cent, Cam’ron, Eve, Styles P, Monica, and Jadakiss, among others.
Grand Champ was supported by two singles: “Where the Hood At?” and “Get It on the Floor”.
Track listing
“Dog Intro” (featuring Bashir Fadai) — 3:32
“My Life” (featuring Chinky) — 3:09
“Where The Hood At?” — 4:46
“Dog’s Out” — 4:03
“Get It on the Floor” (featuring Swizz Beatz) — 4:22
“Come Prepared” (Skit) — 0:35
“Shot Down” (featuring 50 Cent and Styles P) — 3:42
“Bring the Noize” — 3:30
“Untouchable” (featuring Syleena Johnson, Cross, Infa-Red, Sheek and Drag-On) — 6:05
“Fuck Y’all” — 3:43
“Ruff Radio” (Skit) — 0:43
“We’re Back” (featuring Eve and Jadakiss) — 4:25
“Ruff Radio 2” (Skit) — 0:18
“Rob All Night (If I’m Gonna Rob)” — 3:27
“We Go Hard” (featuring Cam’ron)  — 3:36
“We ‘Bout to Blow” (featuring Big Stan) — 3:31
“The Rain” — 3:27
“Gotta Go” (Skit)  — 1:07
“Don’t Gotta Go Home” (featuring Monica) — 4:17
“A’Yo Kato” (featuring Magic and Val) — 3:46
“Thank You” (featuring Patti LaBelle) — 3:01
“Prayer V” — 1:47
“On Top” (featuring Big Stan)  — 3:34
“X Gon’ Give It to Ya” (International Bonus Track) — 3:38
  • Musicians:
Khamisi
Khamisi
Year of the Dog… Again is the sixth studio album by rapper DMX. It was released by Ruff Ryders Entertainment, Sony Urban Music and Columbia Records. The album was mostly produced by Swizz Beatz, Scott Storch, with additional production by others. It features guest appearances from Busta Rhymes, Styles P, Amerie, and Jadakiss.
Year of the Dog… Again was supported by two singles: “We in Here” and “Lord Give Me a Sign”. The album received generally positive to mixed reviews from music critics but was a moderate commercial success.
Track listing
“Intro” — 1:32
“We in Here” (featuring Swizz Beatz) — 3:54
“I Run Shit” (featuring Big Stan) — 3:56
“Come Thru (Move)” (featuring Busta Rhymes) — 3:42
“It’s Personal” (featuring Jadakiss and Styles P) — 3:44
“Baby Motha” (featuring Janyce) — 4:41
“Dog Love” (featuring Amerie and Janyce) — 3:42
“Wrong or Right? (I’m Tired)” (featuring Bazaar Royale) — 5:24
“Give ‘Em What They Want” — 2:46
“Walk These Dogs” (featuring Kashmir) — 2:56
“Blown Away” (featuring Jinx and Janyce) — 4:02
“Goodbye” — 4:50
“Life Be My Song” — 4:02
“The Prayer VI” — 1:30
“Lord Give Me a Sign” — 3:28
  • Musicians:
Khamisi
Khamisi
The '69 Los Angeles Sessions is a reissued album recorded in February 1970 (originally named Fela Fela Fela) while Fela Kuti was living in Hollywood performing six nights a week at the Citadel de Haiti on Sunset Boulevard, at the time run by Bernie Hamilton.
KOOLA LOBITOS 64-68 (previously unreleased)
"Highlife Time" - 5:22
"Omuti Tide" - 3:50
"Ololufe Mi" - 5:16
"Wadele Wa Rohin" 4:05
"Laise Lairo" - 4:11
"Wayo" (1st version) - 4:41
The '69 L.A. SESSIONS
"My Lady Frustration" - 8:06
"Viva Nigeria" - 3:45
"Obe (Stew)" - 3:11
"Ako" - 2:40
"Witchcraft" - 5:25
"Wayo (Version 2)" - 3:27
"Lover" - 6:08
"Funky Horn" 4:42
"Eko Ile" - 4:12
"This Is Sad" - 4:23
Khamisi
Khamisi
Never Too Much is the debut solo studio album by American singer Luther Vandross.
Mostly composed by Vandross himself, the album reached number 19 on the US Billboard 200 and number one on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart and has been certified double platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). Never Too Much earned Vandross two Grammy Award nominations in 1982, including Best New Artist and Best R&B Vocal Performance, Male.
Track listing
Side one
"Never Too Much" 3:50
"Sugar and Spice (I Found Me a Girl)" 4:57
"Don't You Know That?" 4:01
"I've Been Working" 6:35
Side two
"She's a Super Lady" 5:04
"You Stopped Loving Me" 5:16
"A House Is Not a Home" 7:07
Khamisi
Khamisi
The Jazz Soul of Little Stevie is the debut studio album by Little Stevie Wonder.
The album showcases the 12-year-old Wonder's talents as a composer and instrumentalist. As with Eivets Rednow Wonder doesn't sing at all on this album. Since he only plays percussion, the keyboard, and the harmonica. Clarence Paul and Henry Cosby wrote and produced most of the album, though Wonder co-wrote two tunes. The original studio version of "Fingertips" is included on the album; a live version would become Wonder's first hit single.
Track listing
Side one
"Fingertips" (Henry Cosby, Clarence Paul) – 3:00 – Little Stevie on bongos
"The Square" (Cosby, Paul) – 3:03 – Little Stevie on harmonica
"Soul Bongo" (Marvin Gaye, Paul) – 2:20 – Little Stevie on bongos
"Manhattan at Six" (Cosby, Paul) – 3:47 – Little Stevie on drums
"Paulsby" (Cosby, Paul) – 2:47 – Little Stevie on organ and harmonica
Side two
"Some Other Time" (Cosby, Paul) – 5:11 – Little Stevie on harmonica
"Wondering" (Paul, Stevie Wonder) – 2:51 – Little Stevie on organ
"Session Number 112" (Paul, Wonder) – 3:18 – Little Stevie on piano and harmonica
"Bam" (Berry Gordy, Jr.) – 3:34 – Little Stevie on harmonica
Khamisi
Khamisi
The Atomic Mr. Basie (originally called Basie, also known as E=MC2 and reissued in 1994 as The Complete Atomic Basie) is a 1958 album by Count Basie, featuring the song arrangements of Neal Hefti and the Count Basie Orchestra.
Track listing
“Kid from Red Bank” 2:38
“Duet” 4:10
“After Supper” 3:22
“Flight of the Foo Birds” 3:21
“Double-O” 2:45
“Teddy the Toad” 3:40
“Whirlybird” 3:46
“Midnite Blue” 4:25
“Splanky” 3:35
“Fantail” 2:50
“Li’l Darlin'” 4:47
The Complete Atomic Basie Bonus Tracks (1994)
“Silks and Satins” (Jimmy Mundy) 4:05
“Sleepwalker’s Serenade (Alternative Take)” (Mundy, Hefti) 3:37
“Sleepwalker’s Serenade” (Mundy, Hefti) 3:39
“The Late, Late Show” (Roy Alfred, Murray Berlin) 2:52
“The Late, Late Show (Vocal Version)” (Alfred, Berlin) 3:02
Khamisi
Khamisi
Strictly 4 My N.I.G.G.A.Z… is the second studio album by American rapper 2Pac, released on February 16, 1993, by Interscope Records and TNT Recordings and distributed by Atlantic Records. N.I.G.G.A. in the title is punctuated to refer to 2Pac’s backronym “Never Ignorant in Getting Goals Accomplished”.
Track listing
“Holler If Ya Hear Me” 4:38
“Pac’s Theme (Interlude)” 1:56
“Point the Finga” 4:25
“Something 2 Die 4 (Interlude)” 2:43
“Last Wordz” (with Ice Cube and Ice-T) 3:36
“Souljah’s Revenge” 3:16
“Peep Game” (with Deadly Threat) 4:28
“Strugglin'” (with Live Squad) 3:33
“Guess Who’s Back” 3:06
“Representin’ 93” 3:34
“Keep Ya Head Up” 4:22
“Strictly 4 My N.I.G.G.A.Z…” 5:55
“The Streetz R Deathrow” 3:26
“I Get Around” (with Digital Underground) 4:19
“Papa’z Song” (with Wycked of W.A.T.M.) 5:25
“5 Deadly Venomz” (with Treach of Naughty by Nature, Apache and Live Squad) 5:13
Khamisi
Khamisi
2Pacalypse Now is the debut solo studio album by American rapper 2Pac. It was released on November 12, 1991 through TNT Recordings and Interscope Records. The album was produced by the Digital Underground production team the Underground Railroad, made up of Big D the Impossible, Shock G, Pee-Wee, DJ Jay-Z, Raw Fusion, and Live Squad. The album’s title is a reference to the 1979 war film Apocalypse Now.
Track listing
“Young Black Male” — 2:35
“Trapped” — 4:44
“Soulja’s Story” — 5:05
“I Don’t Give a Fuck” — 4:20
“Violent” — 6:25
“Words of Wisdom” — 4:54
“Something Wicked” — 2:28
“Crooked Ass Nigga” (featuring Stretch) — 4:17
“If My Homie Calls” — 4:18
“Brenda’s Got a Baby” — 3:53
“Tha’ Lunatic” (featuring Stretch) — 3:29
“Rebel of the Underground” — 3:17
“Part Time Mutha” (featuring Poppi) — 5:13
Khamisi
Khamisi
Monk’s Music is a jazz album by the Thelonious Monk Septet, which for this recording included Coleman Hawkins and John Coltrane. It was recorded in New York City on June 26, 1957, and released in November the same year.
Track listing
Side A
“Abide with Me” (Henry Francis Lyte, William Henry Monk) – 0:54
“Well, You Needn’t” – 11:24
“Ruby, My Dear” – 5:26

Side B
“Off Minor” – 5:07
“Epistrophy” (Monk, Kenny Clarke) – 10:46
“Crepuscule With Nellie” – 4:38
CD reissue
“Abide With Me” – 0:54
“Well, You Needn’t” – 11:24
“Ruby, My Dear” – 5:26
“Off Minor (Take 5)” – 5:07
“Off Minor (Take 4)” – 5:12
“Epistrophy” – 10:46
“Crepuscule with Nellie (Take 6)” – 4:38
“Crepuscule with Nellie (Take 4 and 5)” – 4:43
Original Jazz Classics Remasters
“Abide With Me” – 0:54
“Well, You Needn’t” – 11:24
“Ruby, My Dear” – 5:26
“Off Minor (Take 5)” – 5:07
“Epistrophy” – 10:46
“Crepuscule with Nellie (Take 6)” – 4:38
“Off Minor (Take 4)” – 5:12
“Crepuscule with Nellie (Takes 4 and 5)” – 4:43
“Blues for Tomorrow” – 13:3
Khamisi
Khamisi
Thelonious Monk with John Coltrane is a 1961 album by Thelonious Monk issued on Jazzland Records, a subsidiary of Riverside Records. It consists of material recorded four years earlier when Monk worked extensively with John Coltrane, issued after Coltrane had become a leader and jazz star in his own right.
Track listing
Side one
“Ruby, My Dear” – 6:17
“Trinkle, Tinkle” – 6:37
“Off Minor [take 4]” – 5:10
Side two
“Nutty” – 6:35
“Epistrophy” (Kenny Clarke, Monk) – 3:07
“Functional [take 1]” – 9:46
CD Reissue 2010 bonus track
“Monk’s Mood” – 7:52
Khamisi
Khamisi
Gifted is the debut studio album by Jamaican reggae singer Koffee. It was released on 25 March 2022 by Promised Land Recordings and Columbia Records.

Khamisi
Khamisi
Rapture is the debut extended play by Jamaican pop singer Koffee. It was released on Columbia Records under the copyright of Sony Music UK subdivision, Promised Land Recordings. In spite of having a minority of actual reggae content, Rapture won the Grammy Award for Best Reggae Album at the 62nd Annual Grammy Awards, making Koffee both the first female and youngest artist (at 19 years old) to win the award. After being nominated, Koffee stated: "I'm very honored, I'm very happy and very satisfied. I put a lot of work into my first project and to see that it has been recognized on this level has really fulfilled me so I'm very thankful."
Khamisi
Khamisi
The ExPerience is the debut studio album of Jamaican reggae singer and songwriter Lila Iké.

Track list:
Where I'm Coming From 4:03
Solitude 3:40
I Spy 3:06
Stars Align 3:22
Forget Me 3:51
Second Chance 4:07
Thy Will 4:00

Khamisi
Khamisi
Heart of the Congos is a roots reggae album by the Congos, produced by Lee "Scratch" Perry at his Black Ark studio with a studio band including Boris Gardiner on bass and Ernest Ranglin on guitar. The album was released in 1977. It is noted as being one of Perry's masterpiece productions of the Black Ark era.
The first issue of the LP in Jamaica was a very limited release said to consist of only several hundred copies. It was remastered using the original Black Ark quarter inch master tapes with the exception of 'At The Feast' and re-released in 1996 on the record label Blood and Fire, run by Steve Barrow, T Elwing, and Mick Hucknall, with assistance on the ground provided by Andrea Lewis. The original mix of the album was not officially re-issued on either LP or CD until 2017's 40th Anniversary Edition (although an 'unofficial' CD release, sourced from the original LP, was released in 2004 by CORN-FED Productions, based in Amsterdam). Until 2017, all editions subsequent to the first Jamaica release feature a second, substantially different, mix by Lee Perry. The 40th Anniversary Edition includes both mixes of the album, as well as ten bonus tracks.

Track list
"Fisherman"
"Congoman"
"Open Up the Gate"
"Children Crying"
"La La Bam-Bam"
Side two
"Can't Come In"
"Sodom and Gomorrow"
"The Wrong Thing"
"Ark of the Covenant"
"Solid Foundation"
Khamisi
Khamisi
Trenchtown Mix Up was The Gladiators' debut LP, recorded at Joe Gibbs' studio and released in 1976 on TR International/Virgin Records'. It included re-recordings of two songs originally recorded at Studio One ("Mix Up", originally titled "Bongo Red", and their 1968 debut release "Hello Carol"), and also included cover versions of Bob Marley's "Soul Rebel" and "Rude Boy Ska". Jo-Ann Greene, writing for Allmusic, said of the album: "Everything about this set is masterful, and it remains a classic".
Track listgla
"Mix Up" - 3.00
"Bellyfull" - 2.18
"Looks is Deceiving" - 2.30
"Chatty Chatty Mouth" - 3.16
"Soul Rebel" - 3.54 (Bob Marley)
"Eli Eli" - 3.03
"Hearsay" - 3.06
"Rude Boy Ska" - 2.26 (Bob Marley)
"Know Yourself Mankind" - 2.50
"Thief in the Night" - 3.39
"Hello Carol" - 3.36
Khamisi
Khamisi
Legend is a compilation album by Bob Marley and the Wailers. It is a greatest hits collection of singles in its original vinyl format and is the best-selling reggae album of all time. In 2003, the album was ranked number 46 in Rolling Stone magazine's list of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time" and maintained the ranking in a 2012 revised list.
As of March 2025, Legend has spent a total of 875 nonconsecutive weeks on the US Billboard 200 albums chart—the second-longest run in the chart's history. Also, as of February 2025, it has spent 1,174 weeks in the top 100 of the UK Albums Chart—the third-longest run in that chart's history.
Track list
Is This Love (A side)
No Woman No Cry (A side)
Could You Be Loved (A side)
Three Little Birds (A side)
Buffalo Soldier (A side)
Get Up Stand Up (A side)
Stir It Up (A side)
One Love / People Get Ready (B side)
I Shot The Sheriff (B side)
Waiting In Vain (B side)
Redemption Song (B side)
Satisfy My Soul (B side)
Exodus (B side)
Jamming (B side)
Khamisi
Khamisi
Satta Massagana is a roots reggae album released by The Abyssinians. It is widely considered The Abyssinians' crowning achievement and a classic roots reggae album.
The title track "Satta Massagana" was a huge hit and has been covered numerous times by both The Abyssinians and other artists since. It has even been adopted by some Rastafarian groups as a hymn used during services. The song, which translates from the Amharic language "አመሰገነ" as "He Gave Praise", was originally recorded for Studio One in 1969, but the label's owner, Clement "Coxsone" Dodd declined to release it.
Track list
"Declaration of Rights" (B. Collins) – 3:28 (Side one)
"Good Lord" (D. Manning, M. Planno) – 3:25 (Side one)
"Forward On To Zion" (B. Collins) – 3:46 (Side one)
"Know Jah Today" (B. Collins) – 2:56 (Side one)
"Abendigo" (L. Manning) – 3:33 (Side one)
"Y Mas Gan" (L. Manning) – 3:49 (Side two)
"Black Man's Strain" (B. Collins) – 2:45 (Side two)
"Satta A Masagana" (B. Collins, D. Manning, L. Manning) – 3:29 (Side two)
"I And I" (L. Manning) – 3:34 (Side two)
"African Race" (D. Manning) – 2:53 (Side two)
1993 Heartbeat re-issue
"Declaration of Rights" (B. Collins) – 3:28
"The Good Lord" (D. Manning, M. Planno) – 3:25
"Forward Unto Zion" (B. Collins) – 3:46
"Know Jah Today" (B. Collins) – 2:56
"Abendigo" (L. Manning) – 3:33
"Y Mas Gan" (L. Manning) – 3:49
"Black Man's Strain" (B. Collins) – 2:45
"Satta Massagana" (B. Collins, D. Manning, L. Manning) – 3:29
"I And I" (L. Manning) – 3:34
"African Race" (D. Manning) – 2:53
"Leggo Beast" (B. Collins) – 3:10
"Peculiar Number" (D. Manning) – 4:00
"Reason Time" (L. Manning) – 2:55
"There Is No End" (L. Manning) – 3:22
Khamisi
Khamisi
Marcus Garvey is the third album by reggae artist Burning Spear, released in 1975 on Fox Records in Jamaica and then internationally on Island Records later in the year. The album is named after the Jamaican National Hero and Rastafari movement prophet Marcus Garvey. A dub version of it was released four months later as Garvey's Ghost.
Track list
Marcus Garvey 3:24
lavery Days 3:37
The Invasion 3:17
Live Good 3:10
Give Me 3:05
Old Marcus Garvey 3:59
Tradition 3:28
Jordan River 2:55
Red, Gold & Green 3:10
Resting Place 3:06
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Khamisi
Garvey's Ghost is the fourth album by the reggae artist Burning Spear. Each track is a dub version of its correspondent song on his third album, Marcus Garvey.
The album was fashioned by Island Record engineers John Burns and Dick Cuthell in their Hammersmith studio. It features prominently the backing musicians, whom Lindo named The Black Disciples band, assembled from members of the session group The Soul Syndicate and Bob Marley's touring band, The Wailers.
Track list
"The Ghost" — 3:56
"I and I Survive" — 3:55
"Black Wa-Da-Da" (W. Rodney, C. Paisley, P. Fullwood) — 3:53
"John Burns Skank" (Marcus Rodney, Mackba Rodney, Winston Rodney) — 3:49
"Brain Food" (W. Rodney) — 3:11
"Farther East of Jack" — 4:26
"2000 Years" (D. Hines, R. Willington, W. Rodney) — 3:49
"Dread River" (W. Rodney, M. Lawrence, P. Fullwood) — 3:13
"Workshop" (A. Folkes, W. Rodney, P. Fullwood) — 4:34
"Reggaelation" (W. Rodney) — 3:43
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Khamisi
The Harder They Come is the soundtrack album to the film of the same name. In 2021, the album was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Recording Registry.
The heart of the soundtrack comes from performances by the film's star, reggae singer Jimmy Cliff. Only the title track "The Harder They Come" was recorded by Cliff specifically for the soundtrack, with three earlier songs by Cliff added. The remainder of the album is a compilation of singles released in Jamaica from the period of 1967 through 1972, assembled by The Harder They Come director and co-writer, Perry Henzell, from songs by favored reggae singers. In addition to Cliff, these artists include the Melodians, the Slickers, DJ Scotty, and seminal early reggae stars Desmond Dekker and Toots and the Maytals.
The soundtrack album played a major part in popularizing reggae in the United States and the world beyond, the film itself preventing the genre from remaining an isolated phenomenon in Jamaica. In 2003, the album was ranked number 119 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time, number 122 in a 2012 revision, and number 174 in the 2020 reboot of the list. The album also appears on greatest albums lists from Time and Blender, and was named the 97th best album of the 1970s by Pitchfork Media. In 2024, Rolling Stone named it the 3rd greatest soundtrack of all time.
Track list
"You Can Get It If You Really Want: by Jimmy Cliff (A side)
"Draw Your Brakes: by Scotty (A side)
"Rivers Of Babylon" by The Melodians (A side)
"Many Rivers To Cross" by Jimmy Cliff (A side)
"Sweet And Dandy" by The Maytals (A side)
"The Harder They Come" by Jimmy Cliff (A side)
"Johnny Too Bad" by The Slickers (B side)
"Shanty Town" by Desmond Dekker (B side)
"Pressure Drop" by The Maytals (B side)
"Sitting In Limbo" by Jimmy Cliff (B side)
"You Can Get It If You Really Want" by Jimmy Cliff (B side)
"The Harder They Come" by Jimmy Cliff (B side)

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Khamisi
Skylarking is the debut studio album by Horace Andy. Not to be confused with his later album, also titled Skylarking, released in 1996. The backing band was Sound Dimension - Coxsone Dodd's studio band, led by Leroy Sibbles.
In 2012, Skylarking was placed at number 16 on the "Top 50 Reggae Albums" list, which was compiled by Jamaican disc jockey Clinton Lindsay and his colleague Marlon Burrell in commemoration of Jamaica's 50th anniversary as an independent nation. In 2014, Mojo placed it at number 43 on its list of the "50 Greatest Reggae Albums". In 2016, GQ named it as one of the "10 Classic LPs from Reggae's Golden Era".
Track list
"Where Do the Children Play" 2:52
"Just Say Who" 2:28
"Love of a Woman" 3:23
"Skylarking" 3:09
"Mammie Blue" 4:24
"Please Don't Go" 2:46
"Every Tongue Shall Tell" 2:28
"Something's on My Mind" 2:20
"See a Man's Face" 2:30
"Don't Cry" 2:56
"I'll Be Gone" 2:27
"Got to Be Sure" 2:18
"Oh Youth Man" 2:53 (Reissue edition bonus track)
"Night Owl" 4:03 (Reissue edition bonus track)

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Khamisi
Finding Forever is the seventh studio album by Common. Like Common's previous album, Be (2005), Finding Forever is primarily produced by Kanye West. The album debuted at the number one on the Billboard 200, selling 155,000 units in the first week, becoming Common's first chart-topper. Finding Forever was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Rap Album, losing to West's Graduation at the 50th Grammy Awards.
Track list
Intro 1:17
Start The Show 3:14
The People 3:24
Drivin' Me Wild 3:42
I Want You 4:30
Southside 4:44
The Game 5:01
U, Black Maybe 5:01
So Far To Go 4:27
Break My Heart 3:39
Misunderstood 4:44
Forever Begins 7:36

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Khamisi

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