
The long-awaited project taken over seven years in Bujus own Gargamel Music Studio has finally been released in the US and Canada on April 21 2009. Now the rudiments have been adapted by many of the younger ones but they do not know what purpose because they do not implement it in the songs they should be.


Buju banton rasta has trouble downloading the soul or another file add it to the comments below and our support team or community member will help you. While I was working on it I stopped and worked at dancehall material because the dancehall scene went in a direction that I was not happy with. The last album Too Bad will satisfy those on the dancehall side of Buju Banton this album is more music that my Reggae-loving fans will love. Beyond recommended, this one is vital.He has worked with a number of international artists including Busta Rhymes Fat Joe Trey Songz Rancid and Bob Marley sons Stephen Marley and Damian Marley. If it's Buju being whimsical, he should really give a wink, but it's a small complaint on an album that makes one wonder what other treasures are locked in the Gargamel vault. That blunder is saved for the cheeseball instrumentation on "Mary," which starts off with a doo wop intro and then goes downhill with a fake, synthetic string section. Anyone spiritually lost at sea will be done right by the comforting "Optimistic Soul," one of the many numbers here that finds an especially positive Buju being sweet but not sugary. "Bedtime Story" is a heart-wrenching story of abandoned children that delivers its message perfectly, while "A Little Bit of Sorry" reclaims ska for the Island of Jamaica as the lyrics deceptively persuade the big-headed masses to tone down their egos.

Rasta Got Soul is mature, almost a throwback effort with plenty of horns, plenty of references to the Rastafarian lifestyle, and songwriting on the level of 'Til Shiloh, his 1995 masterpiece. One listen to 2009's final product and it's obvious the rumors were true, but it also suggests that Banton was hedging his bets after some time off and launched Too Bad instead to make sure the fast-living Jamaican youths came back to the Gargamel fold. While the great "Magic City" single previewed the album during this time, two years later the more contemporary effort, Too Bad, arrived and what was rumored to be an awesome album seemed lost forever. An instant classic released out of order, Rasta Got Soul could have been Buju Banton's 2004 album if an arrest for ganja possession hadn't sent the singer into exile.
