Monday, 8 September 2008

Download Cornell Campbell mp3






Cornell Campbell
   

Artist: Cornell Campbell: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Reggae

   







Discography:


Money
   

 Money

   Year: 1983   

Tracks: 8
Ropin
   

 Ropin

   Year: 1980   

Tracks: 11
Yes I Will - Micron 1979
   

 Yes I Will - Micron 1979

   Year: 1979   

Tracks: 10
Sweet Baby
   

 Sweet Baby

   Year: 1978   

Tracks: 10
Gorgon
   

 Gorgon

   Year: 1976   

Tracks: 11
Cornell Campbell
   

 Cornell Campbell

   Year: 1973   

Tracks: 12
Silver Jubilee 25 Classic Cuts
   

 Silver Jubilee 25 Classic Cuts

   Year:    

Tracks: 25
Orignal Blue recording 70-79
   

 Orignal Blue recording 70-79

   Year:    

Tracks: 20
I Shall Not Remove
   

 I Shall Not Remove

   Year:    

Tracks: 11
Follow Instructions
   

 Follow Instructions

   Year:    

Tracks: 10
Boxing Around
   

 Boxing Around

   Year:    

Tracks: 8






Perhaps c. H. Best known for the series of "Gorgon rock" records he cut with legendary producer Bunny Lee, reggae vocalizer Cornell Campbell was born in Jamaica in 1948. As a teen he recorded his commencement material for Studio One, cutting a series of ska sides both as a solo artist and as one half of a duo with Alan Martin; from 1964 to 1967, Campbell on the face of it disappeared from the music business, nevertheless, finally resurfacing as a member of the passing rocksteady concordance trio the Uniques. As the decennary complete, he helmed the Eternals, grading a number of Studio One-generated hits including "Queen of the Minstrels" and "Stars," just in 1971 once more went solo later teaming with Lee, a mating which spotlighted Campbell's typical falsetto to stunning force. Despite earning hail for a self-titled LP issued on Trojan deuce geezerhood later, in 1975 he shifted from the lovers stone aesthesia of recent efforts toward the more explicitly rastafarian coming of records like "Jaunty Dread in a Greenwich Farm" and "Natural Fact," both of which emerged among his biggest hits to date. Later that year Campbell and Lee also launched "The Gorgon," a braggart bang up which yielded a series of hit sequels. While 1977's "The Investigator" heralded a successful deliver to lovers stone, Campbell's commercial-grade punch waned in the years to come, and in 1980 he and Lee parted ways; subsequent pairings with producers including Winston Riley, Niney the Observer and King Tubby failed to embolden the hullabaloo of past tense roger Sessions, however, and during the mid-1980s he slipped into retirement.