PRE-ORDER. SHIPPING AUGUST 2026! Limited Edition 7" Single Side A: You Don't Love me (No No No) - Donnoya Drake Side B: You Don't Love me pt.2 - Prince Alphonso & The Fever Catalogue number: OGR918 NOTE: All orders for EU customers are shipped from within the EU, ensuring that all applicable customs and import duties are already covered SEE BELOW FOR SOUND / VIDEO PREVIEWS
PRE-ORDER. SHIPPING AUGUST 2026!
Limited Edition 7" Single
Side A: You Don't Love me (No No No) - Donnoya Drake
Side B: You Don't Love me pt.2 - Prince Alphonso & The Fever
Catalogue number: OGR918
NOTE: All orders for EU customers are shipped from within the EU, ensuring that all applicable customs and import duties are already covered.
Some songs are simply too good to leave alone.
Original Gravity Records returns with a fresh take on one of the most enduring songs in Jamaican music as Donnoya Drake breathes new life into "You Don't Love Me (No No No)."
The song's remarkable journey begins with Bo Diddley's 1955 recording "She's Fine, She's Mine," before evolving into Willie Cobbs' blues classic "You Don't Love Me." It was then embraced in Jamaica, where it became a foundation stone of the island's musical heritage through Dawn Penn's original Studio One recording.
Rather than recreating any single version, Donnoya Drake's recording draws together the defining moments in the song's evolution. The unmistakable Bo Diddley-inspired riff, popularised by Willie Cobbs, is reimagined by the horn section, while the middle eight pays tribute to Dawn Penn's original Jamaican arrangement. The result is an infectious ska recording that honours every chapter of the song's evolution while bringing a fresh energy of its own.
On the flip, Prince Alphonso & The Fever present "You Don't Love Me Pt.2", an instrumental version that proved far too good to keep in the vault. Stripping away the vocals allows the arrangement to shine in its own right, creating the kind of infectious ska instrumental that selectors and DJs are always searching for.
Produced by Original Gravity Records founder Neil Anderson, the single continues the label's tradition of creating new recordings inspired by the golden era of Jamaican music—not as museum pieces, but as vibrant records made for today's dancefloors. Respectful of the past while unmistakably original, this is another release that bridges the gap between vintage authenticity and fresh interpretation.