Sister Carol: Call Mi Sister Carol - 1994

This was another impressive offering from DJ-toaster-singer Sister Carol. 

Not only does she get to show off her facility with standard bouncy dancehall grooves, as on the superb and beautifully bassy Jamaican People and Call Mi Sister Carol, but she also toasts in a more rootsy context, such as on the one-drop-ish Ital Jacuzzi, which appears to be extolling the pleasures of skinny-dipping, displaying that saucy sense of humour again. She sings in Spanish at one point too. 

The afore-mentioned opener, Call Mi Sister Carol, has an intoxicating keyboard and subtle, melodic saxophone backing and Carol raps gently and appealingly. She has a soft voice (a bit like lovers rock's Janet Lee-Davis and Girlie Girlie's Sophia George) that adds an attraction to the material. 

Even on something militant like Prince Far I's Blackman Time there is a softness to the delivery that a male DJ, for example, would not be able to produce. I love the melodious feel to this album - despite its reggae-rap-dj basis, it has a cool- summery feel to it that renders it pretty irresistible. The digital drums are never speaker-shaking, for example.

Also recommended from Sister Carol are - 

Liberation For Africa -  1983 
Black Cinderella - 1984 
Lyrically Potent - 1996 and its partner 
Potent Dub - 1997
  

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