Tuesday, 29 April 2008

Ini Kamoze

Ini Kamoze   
Artist: Ini Kamoze

   Genre(s): 
Reggae
   R&B: Soul
   Rap: Hip-Hop
   



Discography:


Debut   
 Debut

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 34


The Hotsteppers   
 The Hotsteppers

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 1


Lyrical Gangster   
 Lyrical Gangster

   Year: 1995   
Tracks: 16


Here Comes the Hotstepper   
 Here Comes the Hotstepper

   Year: 1995   
Tracks: 1


16 Vibes of Ini Kamoze   
 16 Vibes of Ini Kamoze

   Year: 1992   
Tracks: 16


Shocking Out   
 Shocking Out

   Year: 1987   
Tracks: 10


Pirate   
 Pirate

   Year: 1986   
Tracks: 8


Statement   
 Statement

   Year: 1984   
Tracks: 8


Ini Kamoze   
 Ini Kamoze

   Year: 1984   
Tracks: 6




For Ini Kamoze, the route to success has been arduous and he has undergone many real changes musically and physically since he stand up onto the music scene in 1983 with his highly successful eponymic debut record record album for Island. Known as "The Hotstepper," Kamoze advocates change through what he calls "intelligent and constructive militance" instead than random acts of violence.


Kamoze made his recording debut in the ahead of time '80s with a 12" ace "Worry You a Trouble Me" on Taxi and build immediate success. He then began touring as character of the Taxi Connexion International Term of enlistment with Yellowman and One-half Pint. During this time, Kamoze was 6' tall, reed reduce and appeared besides frail to stop his right microscope stage front. He followed up his first album success with Plagiarizer, but the transcription received mixed reactions and wasn't as successful. Kamoze and so retaliated with various hit singles recorded on his Slekta tag. Ace of the biggest hits from this period was "Lurid Out" which was eventually picked up by the RAS tag in 1988. In 1985, Kamoze had greater success with Settle down with Me, which produced such hits as "C completely the Police" and "Taxi with Me." By 1988, Kamoze's successes became intermittent and his career hg. Kamoze dead disappeared from the music scene. He returned with a fresh, more aggressive mental image in 1994, signing to Sony and exploded weed into the charts with "Here Comes the Hotstepper." The song made its debut on the compilation reggae album Stir It Up from Columbia, and and so showed up on the soundtrack of Henry M. Robert Altman's feature film celluloid Pret-A-Porter. Produced by Salaam Remi, it was released as a individual in 1995 and exhausted 2 weeks at the top of Billboard's Hot Singles Chart, and well-nigh iV months appearing on various other charts. Kamoze made a video for the vocal music and with his eskimo dog, well-muscled flesh and long dreadlocks, no thirster fit the description of the liner notes on his 1983 debut record album that characterized him as a "pencil fragile....disentangled....six-foot vegetarian." With the succeeder of his freshly 1, Kamoze was instantly a gangster and began a series of promotional tours in LA. Kamoze refused to categorise his medicine and remained open to babble a diversity of songs from different sources, simply he took a x longsighted break in front man surfacing over once again. When he did, it was with Debut, a 2006 album that featured rerecordings of his early hits.