Yellow Gold? More like fool's gold, and fans will have to dig a bit deeper than this set to find
Yellowman's true gems. This compilation is far from a best-of collection, and instead draws exclusively from two of the DJ's early-'90s sets, both released by Pow Wow -- 1991's
Mi Hot and 1993's
Reggae on Top. In fact, it's the flip of the coin to
Best of Yellowman. That set drew heavily from
Mi Hot, tossing a few of
Reggae on Top's tracks in along the way;
Yellow Gold does the opposite. The mix and match approach works, however, as both albums were produced by
Maurice "Jack Scorpio" Johnson, with the sizzling dancehall riddims provided by
the Firehouse Crew and
Steely & Clevie. Both sets were light on culture, and
Yellow Gold inevitably reflects that, with many of the tracks themed around girls -- they still want the "Sexy Yellowman," and we all know "Woman Important" to him too. The DJ's as demanding as ever, as "Gimme What Me Want" well illustrates, and his boasts have not mellowed with age, but even King Yellow knows better than to be "Too Greedy." "Having a Party" sums up this brash batch, while "Don't Burn It Down" is notable among the limited conscious offerings. Over a decade earlier,
Johnson had produced
Yellowman's magnificent "Eventide Fire," nothing here equals that masterpiece, but both these sets are entertaining, even if neither the producer nor the DJ was any longer at the top of their game.