A dub companion to the critically-acclaimed Rainford album that sees the Upsetter and co-producer Adrian Sherwood radically re-version the original tapes with a host of guest musicians including Brian Eno and Vin Gordon.
If Rainford is 2019’s Roast Fish, Collie Weed and Corn Bread then Heavy Rain is it’s Super Ape. As well as highlighting the deft musicianship of the original backing band on the Rainford sessions (which include core On-U luminaries from Creation Rebel, Tackhead and Dub Syndicate) these re-works also invite some further players into the cosmic mix. Brian Eno makes an unexpected right channel entry into Here Come The Warm Dreads, a heavily processed sound system overhaul of Rainford highlight Makumba Rock, cheekily re-titled as a nod to Eno’s own debut solo album. This completes a circle started in 1981 with African Head Charge’s My Life In A Hole In The Ground similarly referencing the contemporary collaboration between Eno and David Byrne, and their “vision of a psychedelic Africa”.
Elsewhere, legendary trombonist Vin Gordon (one of the hornsmen on Bob Marley and The Wailers Exodus amongst many other classic sides) lends his distinctively woozy blowing to tracks such as Rattling Bones And Crowns (a late night flipside to Kill Them Dreams Money Worshippers) and Crickets In Moonlight (Cricket In The Moon refracted through some beautifully louche late summer heat haze lens). On the closest the album has to a title track, Heavy Rainford strips back the narrative from Autobiography Of The Upsetter to ride the rhythm with all sorts of mixing desk tricks, anchored by the killer I Am The Upsetter hook from LSK. It’s important to note that it’s not all Rainford re-works though: Dreams Come True and Above And Beyond are Scratch and Sherwood originals, heard here for the first time and equally strong material for this purple patch in the career of an unstoppable Jamaican maverick and true musical pioneer.