Kung Fu Meets the Dragon
Lee Perry and The Upsetters
DIP/Justice League
Lee 'Scratch' Perry is probably the maddest man in music and certainly one of the most prolific. The man also known as Pipecock Jackxon, The Upsetter, Dr On The Go, the Red Ninja, Inspector Gadget, Ringo, Wonder Man and the Duppy Conqueror (not to mention Super Ape) - to name but a few of his many aliases - started his career as a gofer for the Jamaican label Downbeat Sound System, edged his way behind a desk and then in front of a mic, and went on to release at least 60 albums containing some of the strangest and most innovative music ever committed to tape and vinyl.
He has probably smoked more marijuana than any other living human, until about a decade ago when he foreswore his sacred herb 'to see if it was the smoke or Lee Perry making the music'.
By the late 1970s, he would be capturing sounds on his four-track tape recorder at the famed Black Ark studios that would inspire artists from Bob Marley and the Wailers through to The Clash, The Prodigy and The Freestylers, employing delays and loops to create the fuzzy echoing dub sounds that he claimed were being beamed down to him from 'the extraterrestrial gang''.
Back in 1975, however, he was just getting over an obsession with the spaghetti westerns of Clint Eastwood when Perry saw Bruce Lee's Enter the Dragon - and was smitten. The result was Kung Fu Meets the Dragon by Lee Perry and The Upsetters, an album some hold up as a seminal classic, others dismiss as a shambling, rambling and somewhat boring dub dud, and most will simply never have heard of it at all.
Should the album's name not convince you fully of Perry's sudden passion for Bruce Lee, the song titles probably will: Enter the Dragon, Theme from Hong Kong, Heart of the Dragon, Hold Them Kung Fu, Black Belt Jones, Iron Fist, Kung Fu Man and more besides.