The late Roland Alphonso, who died in 1998, made his reputation as a ska sax player, and his instrumental work was a vital ingredient to that era. But his style went beyond the limitations of any genre, whether from the kitschy cover of the James Bond theme, "From Russia with Love," where he smoothed over the jerkiness of the beat with his mellifluous tone, to "Jah Shakey," where his breathy introduction echoes jazzman Lester Young. The 20 tracks here range from pre-ska boogie all the way to the early days of reggae, with heavy emphasis on Alphonso's days with the influential Skatalites and their successors, the Soul Brothers. But all put a very clear focus on Alphonso's inventive playing. Give him the chance to solo and he could produce the unexpected, always making the song more than it was before, and pushing things in a slightly different direction. An album like this shows why he's so deeply revered.
Beautifully conceived and presented project from the House of Chin, the men behind the original Randy's productions. Here, they've convened pretty well everyone important who ever worked with Mittoo to revisit, version and interpret a dozen of his classics. Monty Alexander, Robbie Lyn, Tyrone Downie, Glad Anderson, Glen Brown, Neville Hynds, Sly, Robbie, Sticky, Chinna, Pinckney, the personnel is a who's who of all the great Ja session players in history. Neville shines on the groove of 'Hot Milk' , and there's a wonderful jazzy revisit of the spiritual classic 'Drum Song'. As BB Seaton aptly puts it in the sleeve notes : "A Piano, an Organ, a Teacher, a Creator, an Arranger, a Band Leader, an Inspiration and a Musical Genius".