Sunday, 27 September 2015

Reggaeville Premiere - Mr Williamz Meets Dirty Dubsters ''Special Request''




This week, there’s big news in the world of Irish Moss Records. Our label heads the Dirty Dubsters have begun previewing more tracks from their full-length stunner, Special Request, available October 12, 2015.

Sharing the same name as the album, this single sees Bazza and Jay team up with vocalist extraordinaire: Mr Williamz. Our friends over at reggaeville.com have been kind enough to shine the spotlight on this gem, and will be featuring the official preview of this fiyah track “Special Request”.


Follow the link, and get ready to pull up pull up, as this one has high probabilities of rewinds in da place!

Signing off,
Kayla!

LISTEN: Mr Williamz meets Dirty Dubsters - Special Request

www.mrwilliamz.com

www.dirtydubsters.com

Tuesday, 1 September 2015

VIDEO: ''Back 2 Boom City'' Dirty Dubsters Ft. Ri Ra & Blackout JA.

Dirty Dubsters and the ''Celtic Funkster'' known as Rí Rá from Ireland's original Hip Hop crew Scary Eire link up on a Hip Hop / Reggae riddim and call up on Dancehall don Blackout JA to provide one of his signature chorus lines. This is the second official single from the forth coming Dirty Dubsters album titled ''Special Request'' .

Ri Ra's slick lyrical flow is backed up by Blackouts power hooks to devastating effect. Remixes come in from Adam Faz and DJ Maars who both opt for skanking hip hop drum breaks while Dirty Dubsters add an additional Dubwise DnB mix.

Video produced and edited by Mat jazz. Photography by Eoin Holland.


VIDEO 



Single Release Date: 11th September 2015

Album Release "Special Request" release date: 9th October 2015

Buy link:

Thursday, 28 May 2015

Big Sound, Big Tings! First Single From Dirty Dubsters' New Album





Just a few weeks ago, our fearless leaders at Irish Moss made an exciting announcement. The Dirty Dubsters are all done their full-length album, Special Request! Barry and Jay have been locked in the lab for months now, perfecting the sounds that showcase everything Irish Moss is all about, and the results are nothing short of FIYAH! Their first single "Big Sound" has been making the rounds for a while, and it's time they opened up about it. Always shining the spotlight on everyone else, I nailed down Bazza and Jay to give me all the details on "Big Sound", from their partnership with Chip Fu and Screechy Dan to what it was like to finally finish Special Request. Big tings agwan! 



Irish Moss Kayla: You guys have just completed a full-length album. Must be an amazing feeling! How long have you been working on it for?


DD: Yeah it’s been good to finish this one. we’ve been here before in 2012 for our Fire it up album but this one was a lot less stressful, it just kind of came together as a result of us sidelining our projects for 2014 to focus on our Irish Moss Records label. We signed lots of music and have over 30 releases on the label now. We were also swapping projects and collabs back and forth and realised one day that we had about 8 tracks finished with some really good artists. We had a kind of Eureka moment and thought yeah ‘let's put another album together', and here we are.

IMK: You guys chose “Big Sound”, your track with Chip Fu and Screechy Dan as your first single from the album. Is there a reason you selected this one in particular?

DD: We both really liked the track. We have worked with the two guys before on a single that went out on NICE UP records a few years back. This was a kind of follow up tune. It took a while to get together, it was recorded in Dublin and two different sessions in Brooklyn and prob took the guts of a year to complete. The two guys did a top job on it and it just came together really nicely, We’ve been playing this one at our at our gigs for about a year now and always get a great reaction to it so it just felt like the likely candidate for the first single.

IMK: You’ve worked with Chip and Screechy in the past. It must have been a rock solid team since you wanted to work together again. Is that the case?

DD: Yeah, they’ve always delivered on the projects we've done together. Things take more time in general when you're working with two very busy guys based in Brooklyn. You have to send them the right beat and be patient. 

IMK: How did you get linked up with those two anyways?

DD: We hooked up with Screechy via a mutual friend, Whandah, who we had a track with before. We have been big fans of Screechy since we heard him on the Kenny Dope classic "Boomin in ya Jeep" ... and Chip Fu from the 90’s hip-hop group the  Fu Schnickens. I don’t think the pair had collaborated on a project till we got them both on our tune "Chant Down Babylon". Both are legends in their own right and they work wicked together. We're looking forward to continued works with these two and maybe even a tour at some point.

IMK: How long until we hear the next single?

The next single is out in July and Features Irish HipHop MC legend Ri Ra from the group Scary Eire. Blackout JA provides the hooks. Our good buddy Matjazz is producing an animated video to accompany this one along with remixes from MAARS and Adam Faz. We’ve also flipped a jungle remix to feature on  this one. 

So stay tuned, Dirty Dubsters aren't done yet. Next up, single number two! Special Request is full of bangers (TRUST ME), so watch for the album's full release. This thing is worthy of daily play, and has been getting rinsed hard everywhere I go for the last couple months. Big ups Barry and Jay! 









Friday, 13 March 2015

RubaDublin Profile: A Quick Word With Live Dub Crew: ArubDub.









Greetings Guys,

You are a threesome of foreign nationals that seem to have combined in Dublin City while in different bands/collectives. Can you expand a little on this for those who are not familiar.

1) Who is is in the collective? Where are you from originally and how did you meet up to become ArubDub

 Arubdub is a 3-piece band formed by Chris, Arek and Monica.Originally from Poland but connected here in Ireland by the love for dub and reggae vibes.

2) Who does what within the group - Producer, singers, writers, players of instruments ect? 

Arek met Chris after one of Joyful Noiz concert and thats how it all started.
"I remember it well, they asked me to record vocals for  two  songs and we ended up doing whole album". 

The person who's behind all Arubdub production is Chris. He is the brain of all operation although nothing gets pass by without agreement from two other members. Arek is the man behind guitars and bass for Arubdub and Monika is writing lyrics and getting ideas for vocal melodies."Each song is different so it brings different emotions.Based on that we know which direction exactly we want to lead it.Most of the times we all agree in process of making our music and any disagreements  are often solved with a snickers bar so none of us would turn into diva. 

3) How much material have you put out so far? Can you tell us a bit about the forthcoming album ?

We're at the final stage of releasing our first album called" Eternal fire"even though were already playing gigs wherever we can to put ourselves out there and let the people get familiar with our music.

4) How do you find the crowds in Dublin - are they all receptive to the sounds you are pushing? 

I think reggae,dub music is still bit neglected in here but over the years  we've all been here in Ireland I can see big improvement.

5)  Where can people find you guys online?

To get familiar with our music you can like us on facebook www.facebook.com/Arubdub or check our tunes on www.soundcloud.com/Arubdub


Catch ArubDub Live at the Paddy's Day Skank on the live stage at 10:30pm. 


Wednesday, 4 March 2015

DJ Ram - Dealing Dubs to Dubliners for 15 Years



We caught up with the one and only DJ Ram, the owner of Ireland's first and only independent Reggae Music store: InDub for a chat ahead of the Paddy's Day Skank in the Twisted Pepper. Ram will officially celebrate 15 years this St. Patrick's Day. Yes 15 years in operations, supplying the music of the Caribbean to the people of Dublin & Ireland.

Greetings Ram,  So the obvious question is how has a Libyan national ended up flogging 7'' vinyl to most of the selectas in Dublin since way back when?

Greetings. Let me start by saying greetings and salutations to all the reggae fans out there, one love & respect.

As some of you know, I started DJing in 1994 at Andrews Lane Theatre, and we did run lots of reggae nights throughout Dublin venues, but for years it was very hard for me and a lot of DJs to find reggae vinyl in Ireland. People had to go England to buy them, so it was a dream for me to open a reggae shop that provide good reggae music(CD's&vinyl) at reasonable prices. After four years of planing the dream became true and I opened my first store at Mother Red Caps Market in November 1999, and we are still here, and we are bigger and stronger.  


You've been involved with the reggae music scene in Ireland since the early 1990s. How have things changed in this time? 

Ya man, I have been involved with reggae since the 90's , DJing and bringing bands and sound systems, and to be honest with you, reggae has gone a long way from the old days. Back then there  was only one reggae night on Wednesday at Fire House Skank, now we have reggae almost every night of the week, plus live bands playing like Bionic Rats and others. More and more reggae bands have come and played in Ireland ...  I have seen so many great bands, who played at Tripod for example, and that venue wasn't normally a reggae place, but great gigs they were. So reggae was accepted and embraced in Ireland, and I feel now I am part of a big reggae family, so that's great to see.

With record stores shutting up shop left and right in the recent past, how has your store inDub managed to survive?

Ya man a lot of records stores have had to shut down over the past couple of years, but we managed to survive the recession but first it was a very hard work just to stay open. We struggled like everybody else, but we had great customers, the majority of them who still had jobs kept coming and buying reggae from InDub to keep us open and support us. We also we kept our rent small by subletting (even if it's meant to be underground), like I did under coffee Irie in the basement so the high rent is a killer, and what was the main reason to stay open is that our shop is unique. Being the only reggae store everybody comes by the shop. They like what they see. We have the best reggae selection, but we are also the only suppliers of Riddim Driven clothing,which is a big seller for us... and also may be my big circle of friends. Being well known helps too - being a DJ and also always out promoting my shop, seven days a week.

What do you sell most these days? Vinyl, CDs or Merchandise? 

These days we sell almost the same amount of reggae CDs and vinyl, but we do sell a lot of riddim driven merchandise at the shop and especially when we do reggae festivals, t-shirts will be the best sellers, and the rasta hats are good seller too, as we are the only shop who sell them.

You've become a staple at the RubaDublin Reggae Festivals. How have these gone for you so far, and what is it that makes your area so appealing to the punters?

Well the Rubadublin Festivals have been great for us, to showcase our music and clothes to the people at the Rubadublin Festival. To show them what we have, and to do that and enjoy it and make some money is a great feeling. It's a great idea and a lot of people wished it was once every month, so its great to be there with all these wonderful people who all they want is good vibration.
Our area is vibrant because when the punters come in, they can see how colourful the place is, with all the reggae t-shirts which add to the atmosphere, and we have got such great DJs who love to play reggae and do play great music ( Natasha, Atan, Catt, Ian, Dibo) so we like to party, and punters can see that and they love it.

Any plans for the future of the store? 

Ya man my plan for the future is to keep working hard and enjoy it, things are getting a bit better than the past few years, so we hope to see the store getting bigger and more and more music will be coming. We know success is not a destination but a journey, so we are gonna enjoy the journey.
One love and guidance, thanks to the Dirty Dubsters and the organisers of the fest, thanks to Twisted Pepper, but most of all, big thanks to all the reggae fans who have supported us over the years. We could not have done it without you, big up.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY INDUB RECORDS! A teenage reggae store in the beating heart of Dublin City. Big up and MAXIMUM Respect Sir. 


Thursday, 11 December 2014

Chatting with Russia's Reggae Don Steppa Style



Irish Moss' newest release is an 18 track full-length effort straight outta Russia.  See the World is full of reggae riddims, good vibes and more than nuff love. Most people probably don't think of Russia as a reggae mecca, but our man Steppa is keeping it alive and well in the cold zone. We chatted with Steppa about life in Russia, the album experience, his rass class collaborators and the blessings of life. Here's what he had to say:

See the World is an 18 track full-length album, a huge undertaking for any artist … especially in this day and age of digital music, where music comes out so quickly at times it’s almost disposable. You must have been sitting on some of this material for quite a while. How long have you been working on this project?

Actually its my first album and some of the tunes I recorded a while ago, “See The World” tune, for example, was recorded around 2010 and had never been released. So I have some old and new stuff on my album and I never been sitting on some tunes, its comes out of me in mystical mood and condition which is a definite  blessing.



IMR: Obviously, it must have been important to you to some degree to have what I refer to as “the album experience.” Bob Marley’s Legend comes to mind when I think of “the album experience.” Why did you choose to go the full-length route as opposed to splitting everything up into singles and EPs?

STEPPA STYLE: Every artist should have a preview of his work in one place and vibe. I mean I wanted to show my love to different types of music on my album. From roots reggae to dancehall to jungle. And when you listen to the album from first to the last track, hopefully, you gonna get the feeling, that I wanted to convey. Also it’s my progress – I mean some tunes are older and my voice is not as fat as it is now, so you can see the changes, and I think that it's interesting too.



IMR: You’ve got some pretty great collaborators on this album. How did you choose them?

SS: Yes – most of  the artists that I collaborated with are my friends, that I met in living colors. “Digital”  for example, which is a banger for me and many people loving it, was recorded in Moscow when we booked Solo for a show. I run a soundsystem and the promo group named Trudebwoys Sound. We make parties in Moscow since 2005.

Same thing was with Skarra & Deadly Hunta, we just caught some vibes and made tunes, simple. Kris Kelly I never met, I just wrote her on Facebook and we made everything through internet.  But I love this tune “My Time” hopefully it inspired some people to make it inna life and not waste the time given to them ... same message I have in the tune “Work Hard” with Deadly Hunta. Music, from my point of view, should have a message; it should touch something in people. 



IMR: For those readers that don’t know, you hail from Russia. I don’t think most people would assume Russia has a huge scene when it comes to reggae, dub, ragga jungle etc. Tell us Steppa, what’s the scene like in Russia?

SS: I think it started in late 80s over here, when Soviet Union collapsed, and iron curtain fell down. We had some hippie reggae groups but I think it was never a strong movement not in reggae neither in hippie ways. Then in 90s jungle came. First I heard jungle from a radio show called  “Storm” in the late 90s – it was a jungle &  breakbeat radio show, that smashed my child brains badly. So I started to record this program on tape and exchange them and share in school with my friends. So in 00 years there were many dnb parties with some ragga jungle too, but it was all mixed. For reggae in that period there were some groups that were playing hippie reggae and no soundsystems or sounds. So I started with hip-hop first, but still was listening to reggae and jungle, these two styles never were separate. I'm talking about ragga jungle of course,  not about techno drum and bass. So my promo started to make ragga jungle and reggae/dancehall parties from 2005, and jungle was on the main dancefloor and reggae in chillout. These two styles were,  and they still are together like Yin and Yang . So we started  to bring artists from 2007 – 08, such as General Levy, Top Cat, Demolition Man, UK Apache to name a few,  mostly UK based, so we had the most influence from the UK. Also we started to make a small venue reggae and dancehall event and were bringing sounds and artists like Supersonic Sound, Sentinel Sound, Debuzz and Skarra, Solo Banton etc. It was with another guy called Ladjack and Likedat sound. Through the years there were many promoters who tried to make reggae and jungle but most of them are gone.  Now we have my promo group Trudebwoys Sound, Clockwork Heads and some roots reggae guys who are active at the moment. We don’t have massive festivals like I performed in Europe. The biggest events here are maximum of 1000 people and you're lucky if you have them ( Beenie man was here and had less). Russia is very big, and I traveled all over, we have some places where people love our types of music but its not massive (around 100 people in the gig). Soundsytem culture is poor still, just a few sounds for all Russia.  We live in the cold zone, and coldness is not only the weather, but we still perform and promote the music and vibes that we love, and hopefully some day more people will be involved in this.



IMR: Once See the World comes out, you must be planning a tour to support the album. Where can the rudeboys and rudegirls see you play?

SS: Yes, I have some gigs in Russia supporting my album, I hope to get some gigs in Ireland with Dirty Dubsters, also a little tour in Austria gonna happened in March, Some gigs in Finland and hopefully Asian tour with Skank di Tank Sound from Vietnam. Another idea was to jump in the car and make a European tour in june. I have many promoters and sounds interested. Just have to work, be respectful to people and spread the vibes!

Big ups to Steppa, and thanks for taking the time to chat! See the World has been on constant replay on our official Irish Moss sound systems for the last couple months (read: cars, studios, laptops,offices, headphones), because essentially, it's fiyah! See the World is available now on iTunes. Get a copy to bring some fiyah to your day!


Sunday, 26 October 2014

Cian Finn Interview

Ahead of his performance at RubADublin with Radikal Guru. Cian Finn found a few minutes in his hectic tour schedule to talk to the Irish Moss Blog.

On a global scale your music has reached listeners far & wide, an artist synonymous with Reggae/Dub coming out of Ireland. Where & how did your musical journey begin?

In Galway when I was 12 years old I found an Island Records reggae compilation CD that a friend of my folks left in our house after a party. I was hooked. 


Following your many summer festival appearances you have just returned from shows in Kenya & Japan. How was your experience?

Japan was beautiful and the people there were really good to me. Its somewhere I've always wanted to visit. The promoters were amazing and brought me to the temples, mountains and cities. The main show was on Mount Fuji at a festival. Kyoto and Osaka were epic. Bumped into James Blake backstage and had an interesting conversation about his first album. 2nd festival was cancelled due to Typhoon so the show was moved to a reggae club with Mungo's Hifi and Part2Style from Tokyo. Class trip. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9KcJmeOtx24


Billed to join Radikal Guru at RubADublin you have collaborated & performed together before, what might the RubADublin-ites expect from your collective live PA?

Yes, we've worked together for the last 3 years, released 5 singles together and played all over the shop ... Russia, Romania, Finland, Croatia, Poland, Germany, France, South Africa … The show is uptempo sub bass sound system culture inspired dub with conscious lyrics… 


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=opbKuMWMs8I

How do you find the reggae/dub scene in Ireland right now, and how important from an artists perspective are events like RubADublin and areas like Trenchtown within major festivals such as Electric Picnic?

I've been playing reggae and dub in Ireland for the last 10 years and right now I think is a really interesting time. I've always been inspired by the Irish sound system culture. Rootical Sound System, Revelation Sound System, Firehouse Skank to name a few. Right now its great to see the Revelation Sound running their own area at Trenchtown in the Electric Picnic. They were amazing this year and the area was rammed. Explosion Sound System in Belfast now run a reggae area at Wickerman Fest in Scotland every year. There's a lot going on but there has always been an issue finding the right venue to host big bass events to showcase the authentic sound system vibe properly.  There's a lot of different sides this music and genres that have evolved from it like jungle and dubstep so I think its important for sound system events encompassed the different angles of the scene like RubADublin event is doing. I'd love to see more daytime outdoor events that roll into late night sessions.

Your performances encompass acoustic, dub & spoken word. What can we expect from your forthcoming release and when can we get our hands on it?

My next release will be an 11 track album produced by Prince Fatty. It's being sent for mastering next week so its coming soon. Its has the 1970s Jamaican sound. All live musicians with a dub version of the album to follow down the line.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8T91Wcew8Ic

For all tour dates and further info visit
Cian Finn 
Website | Facebook  | Twitter

 

Full Line up: 


CIAN FINN & RADIKAL GURU | REVELATION SOUND SYSTEM | DIRTY DUBSTERS ft. POA | RÍ 



RA | TOM BEARY | LEX WOO | SIM SIMMA DJs | DJ RAM & GUESTS 


Advance Tickets available from



Sunday October 26th

Twisted Pepper

Middle Abbey St

Dublin 1

4pm – til late


FREE Admission for the first 100 through the doors B4 6pm!

€12/€10 thereafter.

Visit Facebook & Twitter for further info.