Back To Artist
Prince Buster : Sings His Hit Song "Ten Commandments"
Log in to add to your wishlist
Classic ska and rock steady from the Jamaican legend Prince Buster.
Genre: Reggae: Ska
Release Date: 2009
Sings His Hit Song "Ten Commandments" Record Label: Reel Music
  • Buy CD - $12.99
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
Ten Commandments 3:20 Album Only
I Won't Let You Cry 2:40 Album Only
Is Life Worth Living 2:40 Album Only
Ain't That Saying A Lot 2:42 Album Only
Here Comes The Bride 2:46 Album Only
Girl, Answer To Your Name 2:48 Album Only
Ten Commandments From Woman To Man 3:02 Album Only
Wings of A Dove 2:24 Album Only
Smart Countryman 2:30 Album Only
Tongue Will Tell 2:23 Album Only
They Got To Come 2:53 Album Only
preview all songs

Album Notes

PRINCE BUSTER is arguably the man who invented ska. He's up there with Bob Marley, The Skatalites and was the man who first introduced Jamaican music to both the US and USA.

This legendary album was originally released in Febraury 1967 to capitalize on Buster's tour that year of the USA. Now released for the first time on CD, it has been remastered from the original stereo masters supplied to RCA by Federal Studios. Tracks 10 and 11, which were originally in electronic stereo, are presented here in their original mono format, from the original mono master. The 16 page full colr booklet features never before seen color photos from the Sony Archives, along with an extensive essay by Roger Steffens, owner of the legendary Bob Marlety Archives in Los Angeles. The recordings span from 1962 through 1966 and include some classic ska titles, through to the early rock steady beat of "Girl Answer To Your Name".

Here's an extract from Roger Steffens' fascinating essay...

A vital argument can be made for Jamaican pioneer Prince Buster’s role as the creator of ska, the island’s first music of its own devising. Born Cecil Bustamente Campbell on May 28, 1938, he adapted his middle name, that of one of Jamaica’s founding father/politicians, twisting it from Busta to Buster, and added the Prince when he began a short boxing career in his teens.

In a lengthy and revealing 2007 interview, he told British author John Masouri “I don’t think I see anyone in Jamaica ever admire another politician like William Alexander Bustamante, because he was for the people. He stood up as a lone white man in a crowd of angry soldiers and police… There were stones being thrown, and people getting killed… It was left just him, and they were going to shoot some people in the park when he stepped forward and said, ‘Shoot me, and save the innocent people of Jamaica.’” This pugnacious attitude took roots in the slender youth, helped along by the discipline of the Boy Scouts, of whom he became an avid member. “Yeah, I was coming out of the Scouts, so along the road coming up, there were some people and institutions I pass through that turned out great for me, principle wise. Because everybody on Orange Street at that time [site of almost all the record shops in Kingston], older than me, big people, discipline and principles were very important to them, and I grow up in that atmosphere, and so some of that is still with me.”

He started singing as a youth in churches while growing up in Back-a-Wall, a slum district that was the site of present day Tivoli Gardens. Lloyd “Bread” MacDonald, co-founder of the Wailing Souls, grew up nearby, and remembers as a little boy getting “shoes boxes and wire and string them up in the yard and play like we had a sound system with Buster’s little brother, Tototo. Because Prince Buster in those days had a little sound inna him yard. But right besides Buster, you had Tom the Great Sebastian, Duke Reid, over ‘pon Bond Street, and coming down from Beverley’s you have Studio One,” all major players in those nascent days of discovery and innovation....

Read more...

REVIEWS

author: Peters at CD Baby
Prince Buster is a legend in the world of ska, and this album shows why. Originally released in 1967, these songs have aged wonderfully and now serve double duty as being both fun, lively songs in a classic genre, and they perfectly capture the mid 60's ska recording style. Take for example the sax solo on, "Is Life Worth Living" - you can practically hear the sax player walking up to the microphone as the sax gets louder and moves from the left speaker to the middle. While the album is full of interesting lyrics, some of which are a little hard to make out due to Buster' thick Jamaican accent, the title track (and the answer song - track 7) are playful, rather sexist commandments between a woman and man, telling each other how to behave if they want to keep their love intact. Another aspect of these recordings which helps solidify them is the interplay between the bass and drums. The drums are rock solid and keep it simple, capturing the room sound perfectly, while the bass guitar is omnipresent and boomy but never muddy. Meanwhile the tasteful electric guitar plays clean and the violin and piano provide a bit of rhythmic countermelody. On the cover art, Prince Buster looks like Muhammad Ali, and Prince Buster is a champ as well. He's one of the most important and influential artists in the world of ska and rocksteady; after hearing this album, you'll know why.
Read more...