With its four-to-the-floor steppers rhythms and crisp production, their sound initially conjured up England in the early 90s. But there was more — polyrhythms from the place with endless permutations as well as a lot of live instrumentation, which was increasingly scarce in digital productions. Throw in some singers and deejays, and Digitaldubs looked much more like those early Jamaican sound systems that eventually became studios and labels. On this, their first release on ROIR and outside of their native Brazil, Digitaldubs drops a wicked selection featuring singers, deejays, and, of course, killer dubs. They enlist such legendary vocalists as Rankin Joe, Earl Sixteen, and Brinsley Ford of Aswad.