Various - East Coast ill na na E.P. 2 - Greensleeves Records - Ragga
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Price | £3.00 |
Track ListingA1 Merciless Nuh Tree Nah GrowA2 Scare Dem Crew Girls Dem Man B1 Beenie Man Sister Dawn B2 Mad Cobra Cheap Clothes Media Condition » Very Good Plus (VG+) Sleeve Condition » Generic |
| Artist | Various | ||
| Title | East Coast ill na na E.P. 2 | ||
| Label | Greensleeves Records | ||
| Catalogue | GRED567 | ||
| Format | Vinyl 12 Inch | ||
| Released | 1997 | ||
| Genre | Ragga |
Other Titles by Various
• True Faith The First Phase • Lazy DJs • Fierce Dance Cuts No. 1 • Serious Beats 1 • Vox Populi: First Choice Sampler 1993 Volume 1 • Betta Breaks & Beats Volume 1 • March 88 Previews • Regrooves Volume Two • Soul Daze • The Guitar Dance EP • There's A Movement Underground • Points In Time 007 • 20 Flash Back Greats Of The Sixties • A Perfecto Summer • Action Trax 2 •
Information on the Ragga Genre
Ragga originated in Jamaica during the 1980s, at the same time that electronic dance music's popularity was increasing globally. One of the reasons for ragga's swift propagation is that it is generally easier and less expensive to produce than reggae performed on traditional musical instruments. Ragga evolved first in Jamaica, and later in Europe, North America, and Africa, eventually spreading to Japan, India, and the rest of the world. Ragga heavily influenced early jungle music, and also spawned the syncretistic bhangragga style when fused with bhangra. In the 1990s, ragga and breakcore music fused, creating a style known as raggacore.The term "raggamuffin" is an intentional misspelling of "ragamuffin", a word that entered the Jamaican Patois lexicon after the British Empire colonized Jamaica in the 17th century. Despite the British colonialists' pejorative application of the term, Jamaican youth appropriated it as an ingroup designation. The term "raggamuffin music" describes the music of Jamaica's "ghetto dwellers".
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