Various More Boss Black Rockers 8: Rock & Roll Baby
This is a call to all rock 'n' roll Kats and Kittens! It is time to rejoice and invest time once again with some rock 'n' roll history straight from the vaults of Koko Mojo Records. Lowering its winch into a seemingly endless pit of rock 'n' roll discovery and emerging triumphant with another round of Boss Black Rockers is Koko Mojo Records. After the phenomenal success of its first ten volumes, the attitude, If it ain't broke, don't fix it was soon adopted once the good folks (namely Little Victor Mac, Eamonn Doyle, Sven T. Uhrmann, Blackshack Recordings) at Koko Mojo realised there was a lot more wax in the tank to see another run of this exceptional album series come to fruition. Issued under the rightful title, More Boss Black Rockers, The Mojo Man was charged with the (enviable) task of bringing these albums to life. To achieve such an outcome, More Boss Black Rockers Vol. 8: Rock & Roll Baby continues its exploration of Black African American rock 'n' roll by mining deep into the heart of a traditional rhythm and blues scene of 50's America that eventually became rock 'n' roll, and where you will hear established artists rubbing shoulders with the obscure. More Boss Black Rockers Vol. 8: Rock & Roll Baby serves as a reminder, not to mention an introduction for many of the originators of this wonderful genre of music, who had the creativity and vision to bring these wild and dangerous sounds to life, included within the very grooves of this magnificent artefact which, if you are reading this, you are now the proud recipient of. By containing a thoroughly compelling line-up of rock 'n' roll, and one that also serves as a history lesson, the final words on this chapter are quite simply, Hail, hail More Boss Black Rockers Vol. 8: Rock & Roll Baby!. Nathan Olsen-Haines (Koko Mojo Records)