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Adex Records & Distribution | |
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| Reggae Hip Hop Blast
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And, many others! |
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| Artists:
| Marketing
& Promotions: Selection: Radio 12" singles will be serviced to specialty and college radio stations, and a music video.
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Selection: | |
| Producers:
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Record pools will be serviced with singles from the album.
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| Target Markets: Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, Miami, New York, Atlanta, Hawaii, Washington DC, Philadelphia, Houston, Texas, Oakland, Las Vegas, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, and Detroit, Seattle, Denver, Orlando, Cincinnati, Oklahoma City, Louisville, Albuquerque, Shreveport-Texarcana, Austin, Omaha, Davenport-RockIsland-Molin (Il.), Jackson, Chattanooga, Ft. Myers-Naples, and other regions. |
Featured Track:
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Public Relations: Double Xposure will now be working with Adex records on project it’s projects. "We bring it from the grass Root to the main Streets".
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Radio Format: Reggae/Hip-Hop |
Publicity: Vibe, Source, Now Magazines, XXL, Smooth, King Stuff, Maxim, Ebony, etc… |
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| File under: Reggae/Hip-Hop |
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| Biographies | |||
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Sean Paul Born Sean Paul Henriques on January 8, 1973, the multi-ethnic Paul (his parents had Portuguese, Chinese, and Jamaican blood) grew up comfortably in St. Andrew, Jamaica, his mother a renowned painter. He was a skilled athlete, excelling in swimming and especially water polo, playing for the Jamaican national team in the latter. Although his education was enough to land a prosperous career, dancehall music remained Paul's first love, particularly crafting rhythm tracks. | ||
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Capleton 'I-Testament' was one of the hottest selling albums on the market. The derivation of its name is from the fact that it protrudes some of the highest messages of the natural aspects of life. It features 16 tracks, a few of which are produced by some the top producers in Jamaica like Sly and Robbie. It varies from hardcore dancehall to hip-hop with a touch of R&B. The words of righteousness which echoes over the rhythms and throughout the interludes will allow your mind undergo a mental therapy and at the same time it will be open with new thoughts and ideas. | ||
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Lady Saw - The First Lady Of Dancehall Marion
Hall aka Lady Saw, voted First Lady of Dancehall, was born in a small village
in St. Mary, Jamaica. Someone has payed a lot of money for studio time and of course time is money so if you know what you're doing everybody will be happy and you'll get more chances to record with the producer again, and most likely with others too. Artists that can't deliver will quite soon be out in the cold as producers have plenty of other artistes to spend money on. Lady Saw is one of the artists
with the ability to really deliver and she does it all the time. | ||
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Shabba Ranks Shabba Ranks was arguably the most popular dancehall toaster in the world. He was a massive crossover success in the U.S., thanks to an openly commercial hybrid of reggae and hip-hop, and also to prominent duet partners like Maxi Priest, Johnny Gill, and KRS-One. All of this brought him several hit singles and albums on the R&B charts in the early '90s, and made him the first dancehall artist to win a Grammy. Ranks' distinctive, booming growl of a voice earned him many imitators, and his sex-obsessed lyrics -- while drawing criticism for their unrelenting "slackness" -- made him one of dancehall's hottest sex symbols. Ranks' early success also helped pave the way for even bigger crossovers by artists like Shaggy and Sean Paul. Ranks'
burgeoning popularity led to a major-label deal with Epic in 1991, and it was
clear from the start that he aspired to crossover stardom. His Epic debut, "As
Raw as Ever", featured a high-profile duet with the then-hot Maxi
Priest, "Housecall." "Housecall" made the Top Five on the R&B charts,
sending "As Raw as Ever" all the way to #1 on the R&B album
listings. | ||
