Bounty Killer: Jamaica's Most Wanted - 1993
Building on the "singjay" DJ rap thing started by Yellowman and Eek-A-Mouse among others, Prince Jammy-produced and very hip/hop-influenced Bounty Killer was, for many, the voice of militant, aggressive young Jamaican manhood in the early/mid nineties.
Over some truly great basslines and programmed horn breaks he delivers confidently on a number of incendiary subjects utilising his deep, gruff voice to the max. He was the one who influenced others in his wake like Beenie Man, Buju Banton and Capleton (whether they liked it or not).
One of his finest cuts was Roots, Reality & Culture, proving that he should not be dismissed as just another gun-toting bigmouth. He was better than that, and many of the tracks on this album prove it. Tracks like Kill For Fun, Coppershot and Gun Thirsty may sound unsubtle and tasteless, but they carry a hard-hitting message. Just check out that "killer" bassline on Disrespect.
Long Donkey Cod leaves nothing to the imagination as Bounty claims (like General Echo also did) to be in possession of 12 God-given inches. Yeah, course you are...