He was nicknamed Busy Signal by his friends because he is constantly busy. His hit tracks for 2007/2008 were "Nah Go A Jail Again", "Smoke Some High Grade", "Tic Toc" and the track entitled "Unknown Number" has made tremendous airplay and dancehall reviews especially in the Caribbean and the US.[3] He has released a hit dancehall album entitled Step Out.

On 22 September 2008, Busy Signal released his second studio album titled Loaded, a 15-track compilation on VP Records of well known dancehall hits such as "Jail", "Whine Pon Di Edge", "These Are the Days", among others, as well as never-heard-before exclusive tracks such as "People So Evil" and "Hustle Hard".


Busy Signal Album Download


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On 21 May 2012, Gordon was arrested at the Norman Manley International Airport in Jamaica due to an extradition warrant from the United States.[5] He was extradited to the US on 19 June where he faced cocaine-related charges.[6] In September 2012 he received a six-month prison sentence.[7] He was released in November, and promptly released the single "Come Shock Out".[8][9] BBC Music ranked Reggae Music Again No. 7 on their Top 25 Albums of 2012 listing.[10] Busy Signal appears on the No Doubt album, Push and Shove, collaborating with the band and the production team Major Lazer on the title track.[11] He also appears on Major Lazer's second album Free the Universe, in the track "Watch Out For This (Bumaye)", which was a hit single in several European countries.[12] In 2014, he made "Sports Day: Everyone Move", however, he pirated music off of Hatsune Miku's cover of the Internet sensation Ievan Polkka. His Parts of the Puzzle album was released on 4 October 2019 on VP Records. It entered the Billboard Reggae Albums chart at number 2.[13]

Now's a perfect time for the new generation to dive in. Iodine Recordings is reissuing their debut album, Busy Signal at the Suicide Hotline on vinyl, in celebration of the record's 25th anniversary. Originally released on Hydra Head Records, the album is a maze of angular riffs, total chaos and everything that makes metallic hardcore an essential genre. This new release also features two bonus tracks, originally from their split with The Dillinger Escape Plan. Nowhere will you hear the roots of metalcore come to fruition than on this album. Be it how Every Time I Die misheard a lyric from the record's title track and making it into their band name, to the countless modern acts indebted to New England's fruitful scene, it's a gem of a record that's hard not to obsess over.

By the time dancehall eminence Reno Gordon AKA Busy Signal finally issued his fourth album 'Reggae Music Again' on 10th April it had already snowballed into a major event. Featuring production from his manager Shane Jukeboxx Brown plus Donovan Germain, with a final mix by Brown and his veteran engineer father Errol, as well as tailor made roots rhythms from Kirk Bennett and members of the C-Sharp Band, 'Reggae Music Again' was being hailed as a game changer long before it hit the streets. Within days of release reviewers were comparing it to Buju Banton's 'Til Shiloh' both favourably and critically - as part of a backlash against the hype (ironically it could be argued that this reaction is as hype driven as getting swept up in the critical groupthink). So United Reggae sent Angus Taylor direct to the source pulling the eclectically minded deejay out of the studio to ask about his album and how it fits into his unique career...

Just me being in the studio, listening to a wide variety of music, sitting down with my engineers and just joking around and saying "I'm going to do a whole album of strictly reggae music". It just came up out of the blue. But then I started to take it very seriously when I saw the feedback to my songs One More Night and Night Shift. Those two songs inspired and triggered the whole thing.

I was just on the road with Christy Barber [VP Vice President of Marketing and Reggae's Gone Country producer] when she told me she was going to do an album of reggae artists singing country songs on a reggae type beat. I asked if I could do one of those tracks and she was like "You're serious?" and I said "Yeah, I grew up listening to all those country songs!" So she said she was going to think about which song she would ask me to cover and she called me back about 4 days later and asked me if I knew The Gambler. I told her I knew the song but I didn't know all the words so I would so some research. It was Christy and Dean Fraser who really helped me there.

Tell me about the process of making your new album. You had Dean, your manager, Shane and his father Errol, who not only was the engineer at Tuff Gong but was also the engineer at Treasure Isle for a while when it was taken over by Mrs Pottinger. You also had Kirk Bennett who is one of the great modern reggae drummers. It sounds like it was all made from the ground up.

Even before you made this album your music has attracted praise from the foundation. I interviewed the Wailing Souls a couple of years back and even though they were critical of modern dancehall music they named you as a good example of an artist working today.

One song in particular on the album is Kingston Town, which bears a resemblance to the track of the same name by Alborosie. Was this an attempt to look at the same topic but from someone who was born and grew in Jamaica?

It's definitely a very important album to me! In terms of how important it is to me I can't really make a comparison. But the people would be the best ones to decide in terms of what they are hearing and what they think. Me, I hate self praise. I respect myself and I respect my music. I don't underestimate what I can do with my flows and styles and things but I would prefer people be the ones to listen and relate to the tracks in their own way. They will be the ones to decide.

I'm glad you mentioned those artists because I wanted to ask you about Snoop Dog's reggae album with Major Lazer. As you've been working with Major Lazer could there be a Busy combination on the new Snoop album?

(laughs) I'm not sure if we're going to have the Busy and the Snoop but I am sure that Major Lazer has produced this track with me and Gwen Stefani of No Doubt. No Doubt's album is supposed to be coming out in August and that's definitely a good thing. Major Lazer, these people are musical producers and these people listen and travel all over the world so they know all the different types of things people want to hear from far outside the box, not just local or stereotype stuff. I'm really looking forward to hearing that track we did for Gwen Stefani. I wrote that track - both her part and my part. It's definitely a good look, looking out to fuse different styles. Gwen Stefani she loves reggae music but she's also a big artist across the world pop-wise and in the alternative with No Doubt so it's definitely a plus for me.

On your second album Loaded you collaborated with two artists - Michael Rose and Marcia Griffiths who have both been going for decades yet still make hits and stay relevant through the ages. Is that the kind of artist you want to be and will be in three decades time?

Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality downloads of Dem A Come, Kingston Journey, Outsider, The Conqueror - Mixtape, Vieux Sage, Hypnotise Me, Tribulation, Family, and 177 more. , and , . Buy Digital Discography 348.80 CHF or more (50% OFF) Send as Gift   Share / Embed   1. Jaye Pro 03:05 buy track credits released August 26, 2021 license all rights reserved tags Tags reggae afro afrobeat busy signal dancehall dub hiphop reggae dub roots Geneva Shopping cart subtotal USD taxes calculated at checkout Check out about Evidence Music Geneva, Switzerland

For music enthusiast Walter Russell, becoming a notable producer has been a lifelong dream. So, when he was introduced to Busy Signal by Romain Virgo, Russell had no idea those dreams would become reality. The 31-year-old is the man behind three of the songs on Busy Signal's latest album, Parts of the Puzzle, and based on the doors the project is expected to open, Russell said being included on the project will be a life changer.

"The experience was great and I really appreciated the opportunity he gave me to work on his album, and not just on one song, but all of three tracks. Busy Signal is internationally renowned, and to know that I was just working and three of the songs out of a pool of more than 50 presented to the label made on to the album. I feel so grateful," he said. "Now I hear it's number two on the Billboard charts, I start changing stuff in my status right away to Billboard-charting producer. Trust me, I can't stop giving thanks."

Originally released in 1998, Busy Signal at the Suicide Hotline is one of the crown jewels of the Hydra Head Records catalog. The album found the Vermont-based band weaving a cacaphony of metallic hardcore, tech-metal, screamo, noise-rock, and sludge.

Did you feel extra pressure going into making the album since you were on a high-profile label at the time in Hydra Head? Also, I think hiring Steve Evetts to mix the sessions at Trax East was a great move. How did that come about? Were you fans of his work with bands like Human Remains already or did the label suggest him?

When the album was finished, and we played it for Aaron from Hydra Head. He was really excited. We haven't done a record that was quite like that since. Daryl and Javin were a great song-writing team. None of it came easy, but there are some people that would argue this was our best record ("I like their early stuff") in this case I wouldn't entirely disagree.

According to Busy's management team, the ten of the songs from the seventeen song album mysteriously surfaced online last week. This is several weeks in advance of the planned release date of April 24. Busy' s management have however said they are not bothered by the leak. e24fc04721

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