Reggae / Ragga
Reggae and Ragga are much more than just a musical style: they are the reflection of a culture born in Jamaica in the 60s, which became a voice of emancipation and spirituality. From its origins, reggae imposed its swaying rhythm and deep bass lines, carried by legendary figures such as Bob Marley, Peter Tosh or Burning Spear.
Over time, it diversified into various currents: roots reggae with spiritual messages, hypnotic and experimental dub, energetic dancehall, or ragga, which fuses electronic sounds and powerful flows. These variations have allowed the movement to remain vibrant and inspire new generations of artists, from French-speaking reggae with Tiken Jah Fakoly or Dub Inc to international reggae represented by Alpha Blondy or Groundation.
Reggae and ragga are not limited to a sonic aesthetic: they embody a philosophy and cultural resistance. Every vinyl record bears witness to this, whether classics or more confidential gems. Let's live and relive the history of a genre that has maintained its authenticity while opening up to the world.
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Reggae & Ragga: vinyl, the authentic reflection of Jamaican sound systems
Why vinyl is a natural fit for reggae and ragga
Reggae was born for vinyl. In the 1960s and 70s, Jamaican sound systems, true mobile temples of bass, battled each other using dubplates and 45s pressed in Kingston. The LP format, meanwhile, allowed visionary producers like Lee « Scratch » Perry and King Tubby to sculpt soundscapes where bass, drums, and dub echoes could unfold in their full glory. Spinning Bob Marley & The Wailers' Catch a Fire or Culture's Two Sevens Clash on a well-pressed record means experiencing the analogue warmth that streaming will never replicate.
From ska to dancehall: historical milestones and landmark albums
Reggae's history unfolds in the grooves. It all begins with ska (The Skatalites, Prince Buster), then rocksteady (Alton Ellis, The Paragons), before roots reggae exploded in the 1970s. Bob Marley became its global ambassador with albums like Natty Dread (1974) and Exodus (1977), but the Jamaican scene is overflowing with treasures: Burning Spear's Marcus Garvey, Peter Tosh's Legalize It, The Abyssinians' anthem Satta Massagana, or Jimmy Cliff's soundtrack for The Harder They Come. In the 1980s, digital production gave birth to ragga (dancehall): Yellowman, Shabba Ranks, and labels like Greensleeves and VP Records propelled the genre to new rhythmic heights.
Legendary labels, pressings and editions: choosing your vinyl wisely
For the collector, the label is a compass. Studio One, Clement « Coxsone » Dodd's « Jamaican Motown », shaped reggae's identity. Trojan Records, based in London, compiled the genre's golden age on sought-after UK pressings. Island Records took Marley to the world. For dancehall and ragga, Greensleeves and VP Records remain essential. Original Jamaican pressings are often rare and coveted, while modern reissues, notably through labels like Music On Vinyl or VP, sometimes offer superior pressing quality. This is where a price comparator proves invaluable: Vinyles.com lets you scan offers from partner merchants in a single glance, helping you track down the edition that matches both your budget and your collector's standards, whether that's an original pressing or a carefully remastered reissue.
