GARRISON HAWK feat. SLY & ROBBIE
SURVIVE
1/ Wild (Bromfield) 3.42
2/ Murderer (Down In the Ghetto) (Bromfield,Aliperti,Hanes) 5.55
3/ What She Wants (Bromfield) 3.18
4/ Gangster For Life (Bromfield) 3.40
5/ Survive (Bromfield,Shibabaw,Kassahun) 6.00
6/ Reggae Music (Bromfield) 3.30
7/ Running Red (Bromfield) 4.40
8/ Don't Ya Know (IB,Denton,Aliperti,Hanes) 3.22
9/ Save My Life (Bromfield) 4.23
10/ Apocalypse (Bromfield) 3.32
11/ Remember (Bromfield) 3.42
Created at Orange Music Sound Systems, Orange, New Jersey
Engineering: Robert Musso
Second: James Dellatacoma
Produced and arranged by Bill Laswell
Additional Production by Sly & Robbie
Executive Producer: Giacomo Bruzzo
Package Design by John Brown @ Cloud Chamber
M.O.D. Technologies: John Brown
M.O.D. Japan: Yoko Yamabe
M.O.D. Digital Support: Dave Brunelle (Silently Watching)
Mastered by Michael Fossenkemper at Turtle Tones Studios, New York City
Garrison Hawk: vocals; Sly Dunbar: drums; Robbie Shakespeare: bass; Bill Laswell: efx; Uziah "Sticky"
Thompson: percussion; Dominic James: guitar; Rob Burger: organ; Ejigayehu "Gigi" Shibabaw: vocals (5);
Teddy Afro: vocals (5); Shellean Denton: vocals (8).
2012 - M.O.D. Tecnologies, MODLP0008 (Vinyl)
2012 - M.O.D. Tecnologies, MOD0008 (CD)
REVIEWS :
Jamaican-born and Bronx-raised Garrison Hawk had a well-established career as a reggae-R&B-trip-hop fusionist long before the release of this, his debut full-length.
That fact goes some way toward explaining how he was able to secure the services of the Riddim Twins, Sly Dunbar and Robbie Shakespeare, to provide their
trademarked elephantine grooves in support of the project. It's also likely that Sly & Robbie immediately recognized a kindred spirit: Hawk's crooning baritone
singing voice and his dark, brooding toasting style are a perfect fit with the Sly & Robbie sound. On "Murderer (Down in the Ghetto)," he alternates rootsy
sufferer's anthem lyrics with gruff rockstone-style DJ passages, all of it buoyed in fine style by Sly & Robbie's spare funk-reggae instrumentation. "Wild" is
brooding and heavy, powered by a slow and deliberate three-against-two dancehall lurch, while "Gangster for Life" alternates elements of hip-hop, R&B, and
brilliant reggae-style speed-rap. There are a couple of missteps: "What She Wants" misses the rhythmic mark, plodding heavily where other tracks at similar tempo
sway and dance effortlessly, and not even Gigi's lovely vocal contributions are enough to give the tune any lift. It's also sadly true that on "Reggae Music," a brilliant
melody and booming groove are wasted on lame meta-reggae lyrics. (Note to reggae singers: those who will listen to songs like this are already converted, and those
who need to be convinced aren't going to be swayed by more throwaway lines about "sweet reggae music.") But the high points greatly outnumber the lows on this album,
and at its best -- such as the pitch-perfect reggae-funk fusion of "Apocalypse" -- its quality is nearly transcendent.
4 out of 5 stars
Rick Anderson (courtesy of the All Music website)