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Judge Dread - Not Guilty '1985 / 2024

24bit
Not Guilty
ArtistJudge Dread Related artists
Album name Not Guilty
Country
Date 1985 / 2024
GenreReggae,Ska
Play time 36:02
Format / Bitrate 24 BIT Stereo 1420 Kbps / 44.1 kHz
Media CD
Size 408 / 227 MB
PriceDownload $3.95
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Tracks list

Tracklist:

1. Not Guilty (03:14)
2. Relax (04:15)
3. It's A Foolish Way (04:52)
4. My Name's Dick (03:03)
5. Lost In Rudeness (04:49)
6. Merry Christmas Mr Dread (03:09)
7. The Lincolnshire Peeper (03:05)
8. Blow Your Whistle (04:22)
9. The Ten Commandments (05:08)


 moreJudge Dread was born Alex Hughes in Kent, England, in 1945. In his
teens, he moved into a West Indian household in the Caribbean neighborhood of
Brixton. Hughes was a large man, which helped determine his early career as a
bouncer at the Brixton's Ram Jam club. He also acted as a bodyguard for the
likes of Prince Buster, Coxsone Dodd, and Duke Reid. There was a spell as a
professional wrestler, under the mighty moniker the Masked Executioner, and even
a job as muscle for Trojan Records, collecting debts.

By the end of the '60s, Hughes was working as a DJ with a local radio station
and running his own sound system. It was Prince Buster who provided the impetus
for Hughes' metamorphosis into a recording artist. The DJ was so taken by
Buster's seminal "Big Five" that he went into Trojan's studio to record his own
follow-up. Over the rhythm of Verne & Son's "Little Boy Blue," Hughes recited a
slew of hilariously rude nursery rhymes. It was by sheer chance that Trojan
label head Lee Gopthal walked by during the recording; impressed, he immediately
signed the DJ. His song was titled "Big Six" and Hughes chose the name Judge
Dread in honor of Buster. The single was released, aptly enough, on the Trojan
label imprint Big Shot. Initially an underground hit, once Trojan signed a
distribution deal with EMI later in 1972, the single rocketed up the charts,
even though the distributors refused to carry the record. The song was also a
hit with a radio ban as well, and Trojan's disingenuous cries that it wasn't
about sex were met with the same scorn as Max Romeo's "Wet Dream," the first of
the rude reggae hits. The ban was no more effective this time either, and the
single rocketed to number 11, spending six months on the chart. "Big Six" was
just as enormous in Jamaica, and before the year was out Dread was in Kingston
performing before an excited crowd. Those nearest the stage assumed the white
man milling around was Dread's bodyguard or perhaps his manager, at least until
he stepped up to the mic. An audible gasp arose from the crowd as no one in
Jamaica had considered the possibility that the Judge was white.

Back in Britain, "Big Seven" was even bigger than its predecessor, thrusting its
way up to number eight. It too was an innuendo-laced nursery rhyme, toasted over
a perfect rocksteady rhythm and reggae beat. In the new year, "Big Eight" shot
up the chart as well. Amazingly though, Judge Dread's debut album, Dreadmania,
failed to even scrape the bottom reaches of the chart. However, the British
continued to have an insatiable desire for his singles. In the midst of all this
rudeness, in faraway Ethiopia people were dying, so he helped organize a benefit
concert starring the Wailers and Desmond Dekker, and also released the benefit
single "Molly." The single was the first of Dread's releases not to boast a
single sexual innuendo, but radio stations banned it anyway and the charity
record failed to chart. In an attempt to receive some airplay, Dread released
singles under the pseudonym JD Alex and Jason Sinclair, but the BBC wasn't
fooled and banned them regardless of content.

The artist's second album, Working Class 'Ero, which arrived in 1974, also
failed to chart. "Big Nine," released that June, and "Grandad's Flannelette
Nightshirt," which arrived in December, turned out to be just as limp. Judge
Dread seemed to have lost his potency and both singles lacked the thrusting
naughtiness of their predecessors. However, the DJ shot back up the chart the
following year with "Je T'aime," a cover which managed to be even more
suggestive than the original. The ever-enlarging "Big Ten" took the artist back
into the Top Ten that autumn; and the "Big" series eventually ended at a
ruler-defying 12. A new album, Bedtime Stories, just missed the Top 25, while
the double A-sided single "Christmas in Dreadland"/"Come Outside" proved to be
the perfect holiday offering. The hits kept coming, although none would again
break into the Top 25. In the spring, The Winkle Man sidled its way up Number
35. The Latin flair of "Y'Viva Suspenders" proved more popular in August 1976,
but failed to give a leg up to the Last of the Skinheads album.

Britain was now in the grips of punk, but Judge Dread was bemoaning the lack of
reggae in clubs, and wishing to "Bring Back the Skins," one of a quartet of
songs on his February 1977 5th Anniversary EP. However, the artist was capable
of writing more than rude hits. One of his songs, "A Child's Prayer," was picked
out by Elvis Presley, who intended on recording it as a Christmas present for
his daughter. However, he died before he had the chance. In the autumn, the
delightfully daft barnyard mayhem of "Up With the Cock" scraped into the Top 50.
Dread's raging affair with the charts ended in December 1978, with the holiday
flavored "Hokey Cokey"/"Jingle Bells." It had been quite a run and 1980's 40 Big
Ones summed it all up. Dread sporadically continued releasing albums, which were
still bought by hardcore fans. He also continued touring, playing to small, but
avid audiences. His last show was at a Canterbury club, on March 13, 1998. As
the set finished, the consummate performer turned to the audience and said,
"Let's hear it for the band." They were his final words. As the mighty Judge
walked offstage, he suffered a fatal heart attack. © Jo-Ann Greene



Judge Dread - Not Guilty Hi-Res.rar - 408.5 MB
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Judge Dread


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