So many huge hits has
Beres Hammond unleashed, so many crucial songs has he recorded, that a single-disc compilation can never do justice to this great singer. Thankfully, there are quite a number of collections to choose from, some concentrating on a single producer, others culling from one or two;
Reggae Max, however, is more sweeping in its scope. As this is a budget-priced set, the money went into the music, not the packaging, but at least the set does identify the labels from which the tracks originated, although it eschews dates and producers. Never mind -- the songs themselves are really all that matters. The majority of the compilation is drawn from the mid-'80s through the early '90s. Thus, listeners get
Hammond's debut self-release, 1985's "Groovy Little Thing," the hit that put Harmony House on the map. The
Willie Lindo-produced "What One Dance Can Do" arrived that same year -- another hit, and one of a number of crucial
Lindo cuts featured within. "Settling Down" arrived soon after, another smash for
Hammond's own label. Later in the decade, the singer recorded the
Putting Up Resistance album for
Tapper Zukie; that smash set's title track and the spinoff single "Strange" are also included, and both were huge hits. But as big as they were, his work with
Donovan Germain turned out to be even more groundbreaking. As the '90s dawned, "Tempted to Touch" topped the charts, and became the biggest-selling single of 1990. More hits from Penthouse followed, and another three are included here.
Hammond now began graciously cutting singles for a myriad of other producers, as well as continuing to self-produce and release his own records. From the exceptional
Phillip "Fatis" Burrell-overseen "Preacher Man," through a clutch of magnificent numbers for Richard Bell's Star Trail, to his own self-productions,
Reggae Max rounds up 20 fabulous numbers that all fans should have in their collections. A superb set that encompasses culture and romance with equal delight. ~ Jo-Ann Greene