Keith Hudson: Flesh Of My Skin, Blood Of My Blood
Mid 70s reggae album
| Listen | 01 | Hunting |
| Listen | 02 | Flesh Of My Skin |
| Listen | 03 | Blood Of My Blood |
| Listen | 04 | Testing Of My Faith |
| Listen | 05 | Fight Your Revolution |
| Listen | 06 | Darkest Night |
| Listen | 07 | Talk Some Sense (Gamma Ray) |
| Listen | 08 | Treasures Of The World |
| Listen | 09 | My Nocturne |
| Listen | 10 | I Shall Be Released |
| Listen | 11 | No Friend Of Mine |
| Listen | 12 | Stabiliser |
Flesh Of My Skin is the most hallowed of all those reggae albums which remain unavailable, and Keith Hudson's key achievement in a career launched when as a fourteen-year-old he recorded members of The Skatalites on his Shades Of Hudson rhythm. Originally released in 1974, after a series of solid-gold productions for Ken Boothe, Delroy Wilson, John Holt, U-Roy and the rest, it projects Hudson's removal from JA to London and New York studios and transatlantic audiences, and inaugurates a sequence of albums - classics like Pick A Dub, Brand, Playing It Cool - which show his troubled experimentalism better suited to the LP than the cardinal 7" reggae format. Anchored here by Santa Davis and George Fullwood from the Soul Syndicate - alongside musicians like Augustus Pablo, Count Ossie and Leroy Sibbles - Hudson's mood is tormented and dazed, as on titles like Darkest Night, My Nocturne and Testing My Faith he struggles for Black senses of commitment - political, existential, religious - at its breaking point. Magnificently and deadly serious, hauntingly unique, unmissable and
unforgettable.