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  2. Wikipedia : WikiProject Music/Music genres task force/Colours

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject...

    This article may overuse or misuse colour, making it hard to understand for colour-blind users. Please remove or fix instances of distracting or hard-to-read colours or remove coloured links that may impede users' ability to distinguish links from regular text, or links coloured for purely aesthetic reasons.

  3. Colourbox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colourbox

    After a handful of singles, Colourbox's first full-length studio album — also self-titled — followed in August 1985, which further refined the band's diverse palette, mixing sample-splattered power-punk instrumentals with elegiac piano pieces ("Just Give 'em Whiskey" and "Sleepwalker" respectively), commercial pop ("The Moon Is Blue" and ...

  4. Reggae genres - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reggae_genres

    Reggae fusion is a mixture of reggae or dancehall with elements of other genres, such as hip hop, R&B, jazz, rock, drum and bass, punk or polka. [12] Although artists have been mixing reggae with other genres from as early as the early 1970s, it was not until the late 1990s when the term was coined.

  5. List of reggae compilation albums - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_reggae_compilation...

    This is a list of reggae music compilations. It includes LP and CD compilations featuring music from the various styles of reggae, including mento, ska, rocksteady, early/roots reggae, dub, and dancehall, etc.

  6. Corrella - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corrella

    Corrella is an eight-member New Zealand roots reggae band. Formed in 2017 by members of the Royal New Zealand Navy in the North Shore, Auckland, suburb of Belmont, the group came to prominence in New Zealand in 2023 with the single "Blue Eyed Māori".

  7. Negril (album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negril_(album)

    A review on the reggae site Zinc Fence says of Negril that "listeners with tastes limited to heavy dub were never likely to find anything to tickle their palettes here, yet anyone looking for a mellow, superbly-played mid-1970s instrumental reggae album could do far worse than seek this out."

  8. Ites, Gold and Green - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ites,_Gold_and_Green

    In Rastafari, "Ites, gold and green" (often written as Ice, Gold and Green), refers to the colours associated with the Rastafari movement.The colours ites (red), gold (yellow) and green hold symbolic significance for Rastafarians and represent different aspects of their beliefs and identity.

  9. Keith Hudson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keith_Hudson

    Hudson then started a new label of his own, Joint. [5] He resumed working with the Soul Syndicate, who had backed him on many of his best recordings in Jamaica. His album Rasta Communication (1978), which had been preceded by its issue on dub as Brand, was well received by a wider audience and is considered a roots reggae classic. [5]