Dave Barker (left) and Ansel Collins—

IT was reggae with a slice of James Brown funk. Double Barrel, the uptempo song by Dave Barker and Ansell Collins that topped the British national chart in 1971 turns 50 this year.

To celebrate its golden anniversary, Trojan Records has planned a slate of activities in the United Kingdom. Trojan distributed the song in that country.

Caeshia St Paul, the company’s marketing manager, told the Jamaica Observer that a special orange-vinyl edition of Double Barrel will be released in March by Dutch company Music On Vinyl. The single, produced by Winston Riley, entered the British chart in March 1971.

It went number one for two weeks in May. Barker, who lives in London, and Kingston-based Collins will also receive the Number One Award from The Official UK Charts Company, an accolade which is presented to artiste(s) who top the British national chart. Barker and Collins did not receive an award 50 years ago.

Double Barrel was the first number one song for Trojan Records, which was launched in London in 1968 by Jamaican Lee Gopthal and Chris Blackwell.

Collins claims to have created the song, which features a teenaged Sly Dunbar on drums and a James Brown-inspired intro by Barker.

Lee Gopthal

Double Barrel opened the floodgates for Trojan. In 1973 the company released John Holt’s 1000 Volts of Holt album to great acclaim in the UK; the following year, Trojan had a second number one with Ken Boothe’s Everything I Own.

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