In the album Intro Busy refers to the music as "Conscious Real, Positive Music" and starts with "Run Weh" a reality for tune, in Jamaica much discussed, Bleeching topic. The second track "Modern Day Slavery" he reminds us of the speeches of freedom fighters Marcus Garvey, in original style Dubwise. "Kingston Town" shows the dark side of Kingston. Of course what the female audience, "Come over" and "Royal Night" will make every woman's heart faster. The dancehall fans will get their money. In "Fireball" there's Busy typical tight Rymeflow. With Anthony Red Rose and Joe Lickshot he combines two real dancehall veterans and with "119" on track Real Dancehall original Rub a Dub style. Reggae Music Again showing how versatile the genre is and goes from Roots to Dub. The album closes with the very harmonious Accousticversion of "Comfort Zone", accompanied by the legend Dean Fraser on saxophone.
For me personally, the best album of 2012. Once again real music that mixed into the 70s and 80s back and the whole mixed by Shane Brown, the son of Engineer legend Errol Brown. The LP shows the versatility of the genre; Roots on original dancehall to dub. The disk makes the heart beat again in real Reggae Lover One Drop. 100% reggae Music Again!