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Mudies All Stars

Mudies All Stars

Mudies All Stars has been played on NTS over 10 times, featured on 18 episodes and was first played on 27 March 2016.

Harry Agustas Mudie (November 26, 1937) is a Jamaican record producer.

Born in Spanish Town, Jamaica, Harry Mudie attended the St Jago High School. In the mid fifties, he launched his own sound system "Mudies Hi-Fi", before going to the UK to study electronics and photography.

Back in Jamaica in the late 1950s, Mudie began producing, mainly Jamaican R&B records; His first production was "Babylon Gone" (1962) by rasta drummer Count Ossie and saxophonist Wilton Gaynair, released in the UK in 1962 on Blue Beat. He moved away from production in the 1960s, operating his Scaramouch Garden Amusement Center in Spanishtown, opened in 1962. He returned to production in the late 1960s, launching his Moodisc label and working with artists such as Dennis Walks, Winston Wright, Winston Shand, Lloyd Jones, Count Ossie and was the first producer to put I Roy on record. In the early 1970s, Mudie was the first to record the deejay Big Joe. He was the first producer to use string sections in reggae, starting with (John Holt's 1973 album Time is the Master. Also in the 1970s, he produced several dub albums with King Tubby (the Dub Conference series). From the mid to late 1970s he had his greatest success, producing artists such as Gregory Isaacs, The Heptones, Joe White, Cornel Campbell and Prince Heron.

Mudie became based in Florida in the 1980s. He has since reissued much of his back-catalogue of productions.

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Mudies All Stars

Mudies All Stars has been played on NTS over 10 times, featured on 18 episodes and was first played on 27 March 2016.

Harry Agustas Mudie (November 26, 1937) is a Jamaican record producer.

Born in Spanish Town, Jamaica, Harry Mudie attended the St Jago High School. In the mid fifties, he launched his own sound system "Mudies Hi-Fi", before going to the UK to study electronics and photography.

Back in Jamaica in the late 1950s, Mudie began producing, mainly Jamaican R&B records; His first production was "Babylon Gone" (1962) by rasta drummer Count Ossie and saxophonist Wilton Gaynair, released in the UK in 1962 on Blue Beat. He moved away from production in the 1960s, operating his Scaramouch Garden Amusement Center in Spanishtown, opened in 1962. He returned to production in the late 1960s, launching his Moodisc label and working with artists such as Dennis Walks, Winston Wright, Winston Shand, Lloyd Jones, Count Ossie and was the first producer to put I Roy on record. In the early 1970s, Mudie was the first to record the deejay Big Joe. He was the first producer to use string sections in reggae, starting with (John Holt's 1973 album Time is the Master. Also in the 1970s, he produced several dub albums with King Tubby (the Dub Conference series). From the mid to late 1970s he had his greatest success, producing artists such as Gregory Isaacs, The Heptones, Joe White, Cornel Campbell and Prince Heron.

Mudie became based in Florida in the 1980s. He has since reissued much of his back-catalogue of productions.

Original source: Last.fm

Tracks featured on

Most played tracks

Lorna's Dance (Reggae)
MBV, The, Mudies All Stars
HAM Records0
Trick At Midnight (Version)
The M.B.V, Mudie's All Stars
Moodisc Records0
Leaving Rome
Jo Jo Bennett, Mudies All Stars
Moodisc Records0
Heavy Duty Dub
Mudie's All Stars
HAM Records2002
Mudies Serenade (In Dub)
Mudies All Stars
Moodisc Records International1978
Leaving Rome
Gladstone Anderson, Mudies All Stars
Moodisc Records1972
Jungle Feeling
Mudies All Stars
Moodisc Records0
Cantaloupe Rock
Jo Jo Bennett, Mudies All Stars
Moodisc Records International0
Theme From The Gun Court
The M.B.V., Mudie's All Stars
Moodisc Records1974
Loran's Dance
St. Vincent Latinaires, Mudies All Stars
Ximeno Records2017