DUB REGGAE

 ALL MUSIC IN REGGAE MUSIC IS BELOW THAT HAVE BEEN IN THE MUSICFLOWS INTO DUB ARRANGEMENT

Dub is a music genre which grew out of reggae music in the 1960s, and is generally considered a subgenre, although it has been developed to extend beyond the scope of reggae. Music in this genre consists largely of instrumental remixes of existing recordings  and is achieved by significantly manipulating and reshaping the recordings, usually by removing the vocals from an existing musical work, emphasizing the drum and bass parts (these songs stripped down sometimes referred to as the 'riddim'). Other techniques include wide dynamic adding echo, reverb, delay panorama, and dubbing occasional vocal or instrumental pieces from the original version or the other works. Dub is also sometimes produced electronic features sound effects, or the use of specialized instruments like the melodica. [Citation needed]

Dub spearheaded by Osbourne "King fat" Ruddock, Lee "Scratch" Perry, Errol Thompson and others  at the end of 1960. Similar experiments with recording on the mixing desk is also done by producers Clive Chin and Herman Chin Loy. Manufacturers, especially Ruddock and Perry, looking at the mixing desk as an instrument, to manipulate the track to come up with something new and different.



Dub has influenced many musical genres, including rock (most significant sub-genre of post-punk and other types of punk , pop, hip hop, [5 disco], and, later, the house , techno , ambient , and trip-hop ; it has been the basis for the jungle / drum 'n'bass and dubstep.  Currently, the word 'dub' is used broadly to describe the re-formatting of music of various genres into typically instrumental, rhythm-centric dub adaptations.The verb is defined as making a copy of one tape to another. The process used by manufacturers when making dubs Jamaica used to previously recorded material, changing materials, and then record it to a new master mix, which apply to transfer or "dubbing" material.  The term dub some meaning in Jamaica around the time of the origin of music. The meaning most often called good form of erotic dancing or sexual relations;  such use is often present in the name of reggae song, for example, "The Silvertones' Dub the PUM PUM" (where PUM PUM is Jamaican slang for female genitalia), Big Joe and "Dub a Dawta Fay" (Jamaican slang for dawta is the girlfriend). "I-Roy's Sister Maggie Breast" features several references to sex:

I am a man-dub on side
Let's say your little sister can run but you can not hide
You have to slide the slip you have to open wide your crothes
Peace and love abide

Some musicians, such as Bob Marley and The Wailers, has long promoted its own meaning. In concert, the command "rank on this one!" means "placing the emphasis on bass and drums". Drummer Sly Dunbar pointed to a similar interpretation, linking the term to use only dubwise drum and bass.  Another possible source is the term dub plates, as suggested by Augustus Pablo  John Corbett. It has been suggested that the rank can be derived from duppie, Jamaican patois word for ghost, as illustrated by the dub version of Burning Spear has named Marcus Garvey Garvey's Ghost album, and by Lee Perry dub that is "the ghost in me out."
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Jamaican music

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