Baba Boom!: Musically Intensified Festival Songs
Various Artists Main Performer
See full product detailsChoose a format:
| 1 | Bam Bam | Hibbert | 3:10 |
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| 2 | Our Time fe Celebrate | Harriott | 3:09 |
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| 3 | Baba Boom | Cowan | 3:19 |
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| 4 | Unity | Dacres | 2:23 |
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| 5 | Move Up (Festival Time) | Martin | 3:22 |
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| 6 | I'm a Big Man | Nasralla/Gordon/McC | 2:49 |
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| 7 | Intensified '68 (Music Like Dirt) | Kong/Dacres | 2:44 |
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| 8 | Tang! Tang! Festival Song | Harriott | 3:01 |
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| 9 | Golden Festival | Shirley | 2:30 |
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| 10 | Bim Today (Bam Tomorrow) | Hibbert | 2:53 |
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| 11 | Run Come Celebrate (Festival '68) | Ruffin | 2:14 |
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| 12 | The Time Has Come | Lee/Smith | 2:04 |
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| 13 | Great '68 | Pottinger | 2:38 |
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| 14 | Festival '68 | Eccles | 3:04 |
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| 15 | Sweet and Dandy | Hibbert | 3:08 |
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| 16 | Feel the Festive Spirit | Weir/Cowan | 3:12 |
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| 17 | Wailing Festival | Scott/Pottinger | 2:26 |
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| 18 | Festival Time | Kelly | 3:08 |
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| 19 | Intensified Change | Reid | 2:41 |
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| 20 | National Dish | Bailey/Campbell | 2:28 |
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| 21 | Freedom Festival | Shirley | 3:40 |
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| 22 | Boss Festival | Robinson/Agard/Croo | 2:39 |
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| 23 | Lick It Back (Festival '69) | Eccles | 2:58 |
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| 24 | Yaba Yah (Festival Song) | Dixon/Rowe/Harriott | 3:45 |
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| 25 | Festival Knocks | Murphy | 2:38 |
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| 26 | Bangarang Festival | Ashbourne | 3:38 |
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| 27 | Pound Get a Blow | Perry | 2:37 |
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| 28 | Boom Shaka Laka | Lewis | 2:46 |
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| 29 | Sing Freedom | Weir/Cowan | 2:47 |
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| 30 | (Shu Be Do) You Can Do It Too | Grant | 3:14 |
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| 31 | Hopeful Village | Murphy | 2:29 |
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| 32 | Feel All Right | Johnson | 2:48 |
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| 33 | Another Festival | Ranglin | 2:37 |
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| 34 | Cherry Oh Baby | Donaldson | 3:02 |
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| 35 | Don't Be Prejudice | Riley/Romeo | 2:40 |
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| 36 | Pomps and Pride | Hibbert | 4:31 |
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| 37 | (Festival) Da Da | Byles | 3:33 |
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| 38 | Festival 10 | Morgan | 3:04 |
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| 39 | Unity Is Love | Whyte | 2:59 |
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| 40 | Peace (In Jamaica) | Perry | 2:41 |
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| 41 | Blue Boot | Donaldson | 2:47 |
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| 42 | Festival Wise | Donaldson | 2:47 |
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| 43 | The King Man Is Back | Hemmings/Linton | 3:35 |
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| 44 | Festival Power | Hudson | 2:32 |
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| 45 | (Jump in Line) Festival Time | Brooks | 2:38 |
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| 46 | What a Festival | Donaldson | 2:42 |
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| 47 | Version Festival | Donaldson | 2:51 |
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| 48 | Love I Festival | Edwards | 2:28 |
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| 49 | Festival Rock | Romeo/Bullock | 2:37 |
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| 50 | Play de Music | Smith | 3:11 |
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| 51 | Irie Festival | McCormack | 3:09 |
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| 52 | Hooray Festival | Stewart | 2:42 |
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| 53 | This Is Another Festival | Dobson | 2:58 |
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| 54 | Joyful Festival | Whyte | 2:28 |
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Overview
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Production Details
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Editorial Reviews
Baba Boom!: Musically Intensified Festival Songs
Audio Compact Disc
Label: Sanctuary
Category: International
Baba Boom!: Musically Intensified Festival Songs
UPC: 060768046825
Release Date: 07/13/2004
Original Release Date: 07/13/2004
Number of Discs: 2
- Various Artists
Main Performer
Wade Kergan
Arts competitions have always been a part of Jamaica's history, dating back to the late 1800s, but they took on special meaning after 1962, the year that the island nation became independent. A sudden swell in national pride and Jamaican identity swept the country, an electricity that is captured on Baba Boom!, a collection of festival songs from the contest's inception in 1966 until 1974, the latter date probably chosen more out of necessity due to the running time -- both discs are jam-packed with 27 cuts each! Baba Boom! includes the winners from each year, with a handful of runner-ups as well. There are certified classics here, including the Maytals with the 1962 winner, "Bam Bam," the Jamaicans with the 1967 title cut winner, "Baba Boom," and the 1971 champion, "Cherry Oh Baby," which is probably the ultimate festival song, from Eric Donaldson. Donaldson was a recording veteran with little success going into the competition; the vicious Kingston crowd reportedly chanted "Go home country man!" before he began and erupted into an ecstatic frenzy after hearing his song, making him a folk hero throughout the nation. Of the 54 cuts on Baba Boom!, only eight are actual winners and the other 46 tracks are runner-up songs that are more revealing about the festival and Jamaica than their better-known counterparts. Reggae and rocksteady may have been the order of the day as dominant styles, but there are examples of calypso, mento, and even some nyahbinghi drums during some of the numbers, proving that Jamaicans and their musical tastes are far more complex than some outside the island would think. If there's any problem with these festival songs, it's that the songs were largely written exclusively for the festival and the constant stream of references to the festival, 25 in the titles alone, can be tiring. Still, there's a giddy energy to the proceedings, even in the most pedantic of the entries, that shines through in these recordings and makes for an enjoyable listen. ~ Wade Kergan, Rovi
