Its amazing when you really look into it how wide and how important dub is...what you might think is a fairly minor music genre ..has such a lot of history and diversity.
This is a commendable attempt to show you the many directions that dub and its influences have gone.
Initially I was disappointed that there wasn't that much coverage of what I would think of as dub..yes we get Lee Perry and others..Sly and Robbie and U Roy..not much if any on Mikey Dread who ok has now passed on..but had one of the most popular(I believe) Radio shows in JA..and the recordings I have of some seem to indicate he was a pretty major player and innovator in the art of dub. Also no mention of Joe Gibbs fine African Dub albums...just a couple of names that spring to mind. King Tubby gets the Dub Originator crown..and rightly so.
Back to the DVD...what I'm trying to say that there is such a lot that could be put into a documentary on dub..that I suppose you could never pack it all into and hour or so.It does highlight the influence that dub has had and continues to have on music..but I do find a lot of electronic music a bit cold somehow..i miss the warmth of those bass lines.
There isn't any mention much of "Digi Dub"...and I'm glad in a way about that...because I think technology took dub down the wrong road with that...
If you are a "Student of Dub"..then I guess this is a useful educational aid..there isn't much material available..
so make the most of this and the excellent if a little too academic book
Dub: Soundscapes and Shattered Songs in Jamaican Reggae (Music Culture)