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1
Los Angeles
23:00 - 00:00

DJ / Producer Morse Code brings us a monthly all vinyl mix of jazz-funk, jazz fusion, and rare groove in the tradition of his Fusion Batches mixes from the mid 00's, which championed dollar bin heat as well as the rares, all in the name of the hunt for the best grooves!

2
Los Angeles
23:00 - 01:00

Funkmosphere resident Billy Goods heads up a 2 hour slot with Yamagucci - all vinyl, all live and direct from our LA studio.

Stranger & Patsy

Stranger & Patsy

Stranger & Patsy has been played on NTS shows including Questing w/ Zakia, with Down The Trainline first played on 12 August 2014.

Stranger Cole was born Wilburn Theodore Cole in 1945 in Kingston, Jamaica, receiving the nickname "Stranger" because he resembled no one else in his family.

Cole began his recording career with producer Duke Reid, scoring a hit with his 1962 debut, "Rough & Tough," a full-tilt ska number with a wild harmonica solo. His Louis Jordan revival song, "Run Joe," was a hit in 1965, and featured members of the Techniques on harmony vocals.

Stranger frequently used duet partners, most notably Millicent "Patsy" Todd and Ken Boothe, and later in his career, Gladstone Anderson (their version of "Just Like a River" is one of Cole's finest songs), stemming from an apparent shyness in the studio, but Cole developed into a soulful vocalist, and his songs radiate a kid of joyful personality that is rare in most reggae.

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Stranger & Patsy

Stranger & Patsy has been played on NTS shows including Questing w/ Zakia, with Down The Trainline first played on 12 August 2014.

Stranger Cole was born Wilburn Theodore Cole in 1945 in Kingston, Jamaica, receiving the nickname "Stranger" because he resembled no one else in his family.

Cole began his recording career with producer Duke Reid, scoring a hit with his 1962 debut, "Rough & Tough," a full-tilt ska number with a wild harmonica solo. His Louis Jordan revival song, "Run Joe," was a hit in 1965, and featured members of the Techniques on harmony vocals.

Stranger frequently used duet partners, most notably Millicent "Patsy" Todd and Ken Boothe, and later in his career, Gladstone Anderson (their version of "Just Like a River" is one of Cole's finest songs), stemming from an apparent shyness in the studio, but Cole developed into a soulful vocalist, and his songs radiate a kid of joyful personality that is rare in most reggae.

Original source: Last.fm

Tracks featured on

Most played tracks

Don't Want To Be Hurt
Stranger & Patsy
Gay Feet1967
Down The Trainline
Stranger Cole & Patsy Todd
Trojan Records2003
Come Back
Stranger Cole & Patsy Todd
Trojan Records2003