RH: How did Earl 16 get into the music business?
ED: Basically, I started out on the street corner, under the light post,
with all the boys, hanging out at night. I started out at Waltham Park Road,
where I grew up, in Kingston, Jamaica. At the age of about 13, I started
getting into like, Chi-Lites music, 'cause in Jamaica we've got a big influence
of American music. I kind of started to listen to a lot of soul American
stuff, Chat Jackson (?), James Brown music, and all this and all that. Usually,
after like doing my... 'cause you know, I lived with my Auntie at the time.
On Saturdays, I used to turn up the radio and do my housework, and listen
to the radio, and in the nights, when we get out on the streets, sometimes
I'd be singing, "Trash man didn't get no trash today," like "People
Makes the World Go Round" The guys kind of liked how my voice kind
of sounded, 'cause I used to try to sing exactly like the actual records.
In those days, the good old days, everybody was into singing like Dennis
Brown. Dennis Brown at that time was like one of the most influential artists,
he was really progressive at that time, he was young still. All the school
boys and kids who liked music, we used to like always try to pack on Dennis
Brown, because he's like a role model for us. So I kind of started out with
that, but I was more like singing falsetto, like Pavoratti kind of stuff.
Afterwards, after that, they had Vere Johns, talent contests going on in
night clubs around Kingston. There was one at the Turntable Club, there
was one at the Vere Johns, and there was one at the Bohemia Club, which
was closer to me in Half Way Tree. One of the guys who used to hang out
with us, Donald Hossack, he used to teach music like keyboards, piano. He
encouraged me to enter one of the talent contests. During that time I was
still going to Church and singing now and again on the choir, and I started
doing solo stuff, out from the choir, just singing songs all on my own,
because I had this really unique kind of voice and all the people liked
my voice. I was in the Church, but I wanted to get involved in some of the
Chi-Lites stuff, some of the soul stuff, because the parties were happening,
you get the girls and all that. I went to try and get an audition for the
talent contest; I was about 14, 15 then, still going to high school. When
I went and did the auditions, it turned out that I got picked in the audition,
then went to the heats and I reached up to the finals. In this final, there
was like Michael Rose, Junior Moore from the Tamlins, there was myself,
there was a girl called Joy White, she's brilliant, I still love her, and
there was another girl, I think it was Sabrina Williams. There was about
six of us in the final, that's a big night. Anyway, I kind of scraped through,
I was biting my nails, but I made sure that I did my homework. I practised
this tune 24 hours a day, "Peek a Boo," one by the Chi-Lites,
it was a big song in Jamaica so a lot of people knew it. When I did it,
I ended up winning the 25 dollars (on) boxing day, I was too small to drink
the beers so I had to give them all away (laughs), but after that I started
getting the buzz, I started getting addicted to it. I like how the crowd
cheers me, so when I left high school, I passed my exams, and I was meant
to go to Commercial High School, which is like a college, St. Andrew Technical.
I started going there, but I was really involved in the music, I wanted
to form a group. I actually had formed a group called the Flaming Phonics.
We were doing school barbecues, school fetes, playing in auditoriums around
the country, like Calabar, mainly the high schools, Holy Child Girl's School.
The Flaming Phonics consisted of Paul Powell, second from me, he did baritone.
Then there was Kenneth Hamilton, who did a semi-baritone, and then there
was a brethren called Alan Polack who is the spitting image of Roy Cousins,
he's got thick lensed glasses and all that, he was a brilliant falsetto.
His falsetto was much higher than mine, a bit like Derrick Lara, really
high pitched and good. We had that group really sowed up, we were doing
a lot of shows. We ended up working with Big Youth, because these were the
top groups at the time, Mighty Diamonds, Burning Spear before he had locks,
and Dennis Brown. We used to do a lot of shows around the country. What
happened now, we didn't really actually get into recording, we couldn't
get it right, the recording stuff. I was going to school, Kenneth was going
to school as well, and Polak was working, and Paul is like the odd one out.
After doing a couple of shows and that, I dropped out of high school, because
this was it, I wanted to be a star. My mum kicked me out, so I was on my
own. I goes, let's go and try to get a recording done. I remember us going
to work with Duke Reid in the early stages, before I left school. We tried,
Sundays was audition days at Treasure Isle, we went down there, Duke kind
of liked one of the songs. We tried to start recording, and Duke started
letting off gun shots, and me and the rest of the guys got kind of worried.
We laid the rhythm track, but we didn't get 'round to voicing it, because
we didn't want to go back to voice it. We ended up working with Herman Chin-Loy
from Aquarius Records. We did that "Hey Baby" track I think that
was the first recording that I actually did as a solo, as an individual;
that was like one of the first recordings I did with a group and then. Jamaica
wasn't really ready for that, they wasn't really ready for four guys like
a Four Tops kind of thing, they were into U Roy stuff and King Stitt. We
kind of split up, Paul went away, Polak went to America, so I went solo.
But just before I went solo, we did a show once, Flaming Phonics, Tyrone
Taylor was on the package, Burning Spear, and Boris Gardner, we did a show
in Spanish Town. Boris Gardner kind of wanted, he was looking for a lead
singer for the band, because Tinga Stewart won the festival that year, which
was '74, and he was planning to leave to do some shows in Canada for the
Jamaican Culture Department, they had festivals they had to go away to.
Boris was really impressed with my lead singing with the group, so after
that show, he said to me, "Would you be interested in..." The
group was kind of faltering at that time anyway, we were getting a bit on
each other's nerves, so I jumped at the idea of getting involved in working
with a road band, getting on the road, I really wanted to do that. With
Boris now, I started going up to Boris, to do my little auditions, Tinga
Stewart gave me a few tips, and it was really strenuous. You had to do all
the current songs in the charts. You had to do the Calypsos, the Soul, the
Reggae, because a road band is like cabaret stuff. I really like it though
because Boris was a proper musician who could write the lyrics, write the
music for the piano the drums, the bass, the guitar... I was really impressed
with him, and I kind of fell in love with the whole scene, the instruments,
equipment, and I suppose he kind of liked the way I ...
I was living in the ghetto at the time. Boris was kind of middle class.
So I used to go up there every day, go up to rehearsals. I was staying with
my Aunt at the time, and then she started locking me out, I had to sleep
around the back sometimes in the fowl coop, but at the end of the day, I
was happy doing it. When I started, like '75, Boris goes, "All right,
good. You sound as if you're ready now. We're going to Canada for 3 months."
I just went with Boris. There was me, Boris Gardner, Errol Walker, who was
like the 3 main singers, apart from Keith Sterling who was playing keyboards,
we had Willie Lindo on guitar, and we had Paul Douglas on drums and Arkus
Bella (?) playing lead, and that was a band. I tell you, that was some of
the best time, I was so thrilled being involved and these guys were like
stalwart musicians. Scratch used to come up to book them to do studio sessions,
they were like regular session musicians as well. I was like a star, I'd
made it. But, with Boris now, I started getting influenced into going into
the Rastafarianism. Boris was playing some of the major balls, we used to
do when the government had campaigns and we used to open, play the music,
like big politic stuff, it was really getting political, and we used to
do Nurse's ball, like police, officer's ball, so Boris wanted a clear image,
because everybody used to dress one suit, big flare bottom pants, no back
pocket, these Cariba suits, really too snobbish kind of thing for me. I
started getting involved in Hugh Mundell, because he lived right next to
Boris Gardner, Hugh, and there was some Twelve Tribes brethren who lived
further down the road who started Jah Love sound system, he was called Jah
Wolf... but he got killed. He was the original one who started Jah Love...
Boris was a couple of doors away, so I used to go over there and hang out
with them, 'cause they had the best fruits, the best herb, and exercise
a lot, it was nice, I liked the atmosphere in there. I started getting involved
in this "chapter a day" stuff, "Gadman" business; Boris
didn't want to know about that, he goes, "We have to keep certain image,
'cause we're working." I started growing my locks. One stage, I think
it was about '78, '79, I met a couple people through Boris like Lee Perry,
and Mikey Dread, I'd met these guys along the way. I thought, well, I might
as well give Boris a break. I didn't really want to leave, but at the end
of the day, he fired me. He paid me off. What happened was, they had a big
ball at the, Oceana Hotel, it was a nurse's ball, and Boris goes to me,
"You have trim your hair, you have to be clean for this gig."
Anyway, I just went up there with my stretch-foot trousers, my Clarke's,
looking good, with my tam on my head, and I left a couple of locks hanging
out. When I went in, I was late as well, so when I went in, the band had
already started, reaching the stage I could see the people going "Huhnnnngh?!"
Because everybody was dressed up, like the gowns, the long floral gowns.
It was a proper formal kind of dance, a formal ball, and I was in my rough-neck
pants, and my cuffs, this plain kind of things. After that gig, Boris went,
"I'm sorry, you have to go, we probably won't get this job again."
Like the promoter think that we're trying to get involved in some Rasta,
some Ras Michael or something. At the end of the day, when I left the band,
I was kind of involved, so I went straight away to Lee Perry, did a couple
tracks with him...
RH: What about Derrick Harriott? Does he fit into the picture before Lee
Perry or after?
ED: Definitely, Derrick Harriott was before... After I did the music with
Flaming Phonics, before I got really involved with Boris, in the space of
about two years or so... we were still going to school, I was still going
to school, and I had this school mate called Winston MacAnuff. He wrote
"Malcolm X", and he wrote a couple of songs like "Dreadlocks
Unite", and "Charmaine", he wrote about five songs. Winston
was actually the one who got involved with Derrick... Before that as well,
the first solo recording that I did was for a guy called Phonso, his label
is called Globe International.
RH: Little Lenny done a tune for him.
ED: That was actually the first recording, solo, called "Leggo Off
of That". I did it over for Roy Cousins, called... I can't remember.
That was my first song. But after that, I got involved with Derrick Harriott,
right after that. Because Winston had laid some rhythm tracks with Derrick.
Winston MacAnuff, we was going to the same school, it was like a Junior
High School. We were in the same class, and he was like a brilliant guy,
he had all his A-levels. He got involved with Derrick, and he laid about
four rhythm tracks with Derrick. He couldn't voice the songs, he wasn't
really a singer. At the time, his voice wasn't really up to standard, so
he asked me to follow him into the studio one day, me, him and Franklyn
Waul, "Bubbler". Winston had already laid some tracks at Joe Gibbs,
so we did "Malcolm X" first there. When we went, Winston was trying
to voice a tune, he was trying to prove to us that he could do it. At the
end of the day, Errol Thompson, the engineer, goes "Winston, I don't
think you're going to make it." (Laughs). So Winston goes, "All
right then, fuck it, Earl, go on and try it." I went and, Errol liked
how I did it. We told him that we'd like Franklyn to get in on the action,
so that was the first song that Franklyn actually recorded, the overdubs
(hums keyboard line). We kind of made it like a little group together. After
we did that recording for Joe Gibbs, a couple months, years afterwards,
we didn't hear it come out. So, we went to Derrick Harriott, we said, well
Derrick, we've got this tune and it's a good tune, we want to get it out,
and he liked it, the "Malcolm X", so we did it for him as well.
When we did it for Derrick, we did a couple of other songs. I did "Charmaine"
and "Dreadlocks Unite", you now, they all came out. When Derrick
went to press "Malcolm X" now, we find out that Joe Gibbs actually
was pressing "Malcolm X" on a white label, only for export, so
it kind of cramped out thing, and Derrick got upset with us, so we never
got any money from either of them. Derrick went ahead and pressed his anyway,
'cause he was doing the harmonies, there was Sly and Robbie playing on it,
it was more updated compared to Joe Gibbs' one. Derrick's song came out,
got a couple of air plays, sold a couple thousand copies of it. That was
my first royalty I got for a record, which was 30 dollars. I was grateful
for it, my first record I could take home to my mother and go "Yeah!"
It was a fairly good stuff, but from Derrick now, I kind of got involved
with the Boris Gardner Happening. Then, I started working for Scratch.
DK: Because of the Boris Gardner connection, you ended up...
ED: Getting involved, meeting Scratch and all that, and knowing him.
DK: You said you did a few tunes for him?
ED: Yeah, I did a couple. I did one called "What's Happening in the
World"..."Do Good," it's called. I did "Cheating",
I did "Bird in the Hand", and I did "Freedom", four
songs I did.
DK: "Bird in Hand", is that the same...?
ED: He's got the rhythm on the Ape, "Return of the Super Ape",
that's my rhythm track on those, the vocal never came out. "Do Good",
I don't know what he did with that track, it never came out either. I voiced
one called "White Belly Rats" as well. I voiced that, and then
Perry went a voiced it (himself), but he's got a cut of my voice on it as
well.
DK: Did he write the lyrics, or did you have a hand in the lyrics?
ED: I think it was actually done by Max Romeo originally, but he and Max
kind of... after the "War in a Babylon" album, they had a big
conflict between each other, so he wanted to get rid of all the stuff that
he had left. So, he just called in people to do the songs that he had done
with Max.
RH: What about the other tracks, did you write them?
ED: Well, "Bird in the Hand", I wrote that, but "Black People's
Freedom" was written by a friend called Criter Free (?), he's working
in Japan now, and "Bird in the Hand" was written by Fitzroy Martin,
he plays saxophone, and he wrote another song that I did on the Boris Gardner
album called "Sledgehammer", called "I Need Some One To Love".
He wrote a couple songs for me because he used to be in the band as well
with Boris. But "Bird in the Hand", unfortunately I can't really
remember the lyrics. We actually laid the track with Dalton Browne, that
was actually the first time that Steelie came to the studio as well, we
first brought him, Steelie, Albert Malawi who, he used to play in sound
system, but he's a drummer, and Dalton Browne, that's the musicians that
we used for that session, and we did four songs all at once. We did "Cheatin"
(?) was played by Boris Gardener, and "Bird in the Hand", those
two were played by Boris Gardner, but "Give Black People Freedom"
and "Do Good and Good Will Follow You" was played by Albert and
them lot.
DK: "Cheating" was issued with two different mixes.
ED: Well, I don't know about the mixes, but I know it was released on two
different labels. It was released by Federal first, when it first came out
it was on the Wild Flower label which was being controlled by Federal, and
then when I went to Belgium last year, I got a copy of it from Tropical
Sounds who has closed down now, Robert (Kuypers) gave me a copy with a different
label on it, but I think the mixes might have been different, I think the
original blue label, the Wild Flower label, was a different mix.
DK: When you were working with Scratch, how did you find him to be at this
time?
ED: Well, at the time I was working with Scratch, it was like working with
Studio One, because after that, I ended up at Studio One (but we'll get
to that...) There was like so much people wanted to work with Perry at the
time so I had to be waiting around for days and weeks. I met so much people
there, like the Congos was doing their album at the same time, and we had
the African group, some guys from Africa who wanted Lee Perry to produce
their album, there was Bunny Ruggs who had just come back, Bunny Clarke
as we know him, he just came back from America before he started to get
dreadlocks, and he wanted to do some work, he did a couple of songs. We
ended up doing backing tracks for a lot of Yabby You stuff, people used
to book the studio otherwise. Because I was there night and day, practically
lived in the place, when there was a session going on, I probably ended
up doing backing vocals. The tracks that I can remember that we actually
did was "Chant Down Babylon Kingdom" which was done by Yabby You,
that was me and Bunny Ruggs when he just came back, at Black Ark studio,
in Washington Gardens. There was one called "Travelling", it was
done by Debra (Keese), "Travelling to Mount Zion", I did the...
I've re-voiced that for (Black ) Scorpio because, I was there when she was
doing it. I was supposed to do it, but, Scratch kind of fancied her and
thing, he wanted to sweet this girl when he seen her...
DK: So who wrote the lyrics for that?
ED: It was us, it was Perry and her and me, Bunny, we just kind of pitched
in and did it but she actually did it so fucking... it was like an orthodox,
really mystical how she did it. I haven't really heard that... I heard it
once, Bob Brookes has a copy it, I know that because I heard him play it,
but I did it on Scorpio label, a long time ago. I just hung out in the studio
all the time, Heptones come and did "Party Time" album, and "Black
Man Redemption", Bob Marley, but I was there working with Perry, kind
of like a part of the family, I was really happy to just be around, because
I knew that something great was happening, until Perry started drinking
too much rum, and smoking at the same time. And then there was this old,
elder dreadlocks who used to come across and preach a lot, and he used to
get on top of Perry's nerves. I don't know what happened, Perry kind of
chipped out and tripped, he went on this trip, like he was getting like
focally rich, he was getting really rich, like companies used to come from
America, and would want to film the studio and Perry would take their money
and kick them out, literally. Then there was the bad boys called Spanglers,
who was coming up for money every day, they wanted weekly paid protection
money, and Perry didn't need that, so at the end of the day, Perry just...
He was just building up the studio, because we just had a guy called Jah
Wise who did artwork, he does artwork, he came and painted up the studio,
painted it all nice, did some nice stuff, leading right into the Ark; Perry
just tripped out and started making x on all the a's and e's... and they
just burnt the place down. But that was a great loss, Black Ark was a great
loss, because it could have been like another Studio One, the sound, it
was new and it was happening, reggae. We had, when "Police and Thief"
went to number 1 in England, and sold a million copies, it was like, boy,
yeah! That's it.
RH: There was Earl George around at the time, wasn't there?
ED: Yeah, Earl George, George Faith was working, there was like Meditations
came and did a couple of stuff, it was like buzzing, and I was there all
the time. I never had anything else to do.
RH: What about Augustus Pablo? He was in an out a lot around that time as
well.
ED: Yeah, well Pablo, I met Pablo through Hugh Mundell. Everything that
I did was through Boris, Boris Gardner's like, he's really like a great
person. Because where we lived at the time, Mundell and all these guys lived
around him, and there was all these producers coming up to get him to do
sessions, because he was one of like the best. Apart from Lloyd Parks, Boris
could write the music, and he could read it, so he had no problem. You just
hum the note to him and he could play it, he could go to the rest of the
guys "It's a C to D" or whatever, so he was like essential, he
was needed for most of the sessions, so he was getting a lot of jobs, and
I was there. He used to introduce me to the guys because he wasn't producing
for himself. He was writing mostly, him and his brother, because they had
"Everyday Living Style" a very big track. Boris first sung it,
and then Big Youth took it up. After working with Perry, I kind of got really
into smoking the raw weed, going really ital, that's when I starting hanging
out with Pablo, 'cause Pablo was really into the ital stuff, but he was
busy working with Hugh Mundell, Delroy Williams, he was working with Norris
Reid, Tetrac, so I had to wait again, but I wanted to do it, so I didn't
mind. Up 'til now, I've only done two songs for Augustus Pablo, "Changing
World" and "Rastaman is a Peaceful Man" which was produced
by Pablo, but we did it for a guy called Maxwell Lynch, which was a various
artists album released in America. It was my song but Pablo arranged it.
RH: What was the other song that come out on a Cha Cha album, done at Channel
One around '79 or '80?
ED: I think that was "Children Lies", I did that with Heptones.
The original track was done, produced by Earl Morgan. I met Heptones through
Perry as well at the studio, he got some rhythms which he'd acquired from
Lloyd Parkes and a couple people, and he was coming to England and he said,
"If we do a couple songs, we could try to get a deal for you and make
some money". I did that "Children Lies", then I did an album
for them as well, which was released by Vista Sounds, "Shining Star",
that was done by Earl Morgan as well. Between the time when I left Boris
just before I got involved with Mikey Dread, Heptones, Coxsone and all that...
DK: I want to ask you about the Mikey Dread connection.
ED: I got involved with Mikey about 1980. Mikey was on the radio, he was
working from 12 til 2 (AM), he was playing "Right Now" (aka "Black
People Freedom") which was a big song, it got a lot a airplay in Jamaica,
ET-there's a guy called ET, used to work on Saturday mornings, he died,
he was a DJ, and he used to play it every Saturday morning. Mikey was playing
it a lot as well, so Mikey kind of found me, 'cause I used to hang out at
Aquarius during the day in Half Way Tree, and I think the first track I
did with Mikey was, it was a song that Mikey was DJing and I was singing,
I think it was about some airplane stuff or something... I can't remember
it. Anyway, the song came out, and Mikey liked the feedback that he got,
so he goes, he's got a label in England, he told me it was Rough Trade.
He goes to me, if I did the album he could get a deal for the album and
I'd obviously get some money so we started working and I did "Reggae
Sounds", and I did "Jah Jah..." I started working on an album,
some tracks. He put out a couple singles off the album in Jamaica which
didn't really come out too good because they weren't really ready for Mikey
Dread's stuff. He was working at Tubbys, and Tubbys stuff was like, Mikey
was trying to update it, using soul with a lot of guitars, it was heavy.
It wasn't really ready for Jamaica but it was working in England. Because
he was an engineer on the radio station, he used to help Tubbs to mix as
well, putting his ideas as well, so it was totally DATC stuff, Dread at
the Controls stuff, it was different. It was kind of working so I thought,
yeah, I might as well do the album. I did the album, and then at the end
of the day, I don't think he actually got a deal with, he got a deal with
some company called Stick Records, which was I think affiliated with Fashion,
so the album was actually released through Fashion. He wanted to take me
to England in '83; after the album I came up, but because I never got enough
money from him, I told him I didn't want to go, so he came up with Edi Fitzroy,
because at the time he working with Edi Fitzroy as well.
RH: He did a little tour, didn't he?
ED: I was supposed to come on that but, I took my passport back from him,
because he had my passport for ages. I just took it back and goes, "Nuh,
I don't want to go to England". In the end, Edi never talked to him
from that. When Edi came back to Jamaica, he never spoke to Mikey ever since,
so I kind of felt chuffed that I didn't go. They had problems on the road.
After I did the album with Mikey, I started hanging out with Junjo Lawes;
I was with Yabby You and all that...
RH: Did you do any work with Youth Promotion?
ED: I think I did do a song with Sugar (Minott), I don't think it was ever
released though. I did some songs for Sugar, but they weren't released,
they never came out.
He did put out a couple on various artists stuff, I did about 3 or 4 songs
with Sugar, that was about it. But before I got involved with Sugar, that
was a later stage. After the Mikey Dread stuff, I started working with Pablo,
between Pablo and Yabby You, because I was doing backing vocals for Yabby.
Through I used to hang out at Tubbys with Mikey Dread I met Yabby You again,
so I used to do backing vocals, 'til I ended up, I did a vocal for him on
a song called "Keep on Coming", it's an old time song, but just
we changed the lyrics, and a couple more tracks but they've not been released.
He goes to be that he's got a couple on DAT's and two tracks, so he's going
to try to work out, see if we can finish up an album which I really want
to do, because Yabby's a good producer. But I mainly did backing vocals
for Yabby in those days. With Yabby we did "Deliver Me", the whole
of that album, there was me and Tony Tuff, and Richard MacDonald that did
the backing vocals for that album. Then there were some tracks we did at
Aquarius which he hasn't put out yet.
RH: You've got a credit on Richie MacDonald's album.
ED: Yeah, he did that for, Alvin Ranglin was it, GG's? Oh, Aquarius... yeah
that was me and Berris Hammond I think on that for Richie. It was actually
me and Berris. Going back to that time, we were the first, me and Berris
Hammond, when Carlene Davis first came back to Jamaica, because she was
living in Canada, when she came back and started getting involved in music,
me and Berris were actually the first ones who took her like, teaching her.
She had the voice, but she didn't have the know how to sing on reggae, she
was more like doing night club stuff in Canada, and she wasn't really a
reggae singer, but she was doing some songs for Herman, and me and Berris
took about a week to get her really toned up, really tune her into like
singing on the reggae tracks, I can't really remember the songs.
RH: Did you do any songs for Herman Chin-Loy at the time?
ED: No, not solo stuff, I can't really remember recording for Herman, solo
stuff. I did songs for Carl Pitterson who was actually the engineer during
that time, there was Carl and there was Stanley, he's working with Island
now, he's called... he's an engineer.
RH: Is that the same Carl Patterson who owns the Black and White label?
ED: I don't know if he's got a label like that, but I know that Carl Pitterson,
he was the one who was doing some of the stuff with Bob Marley, he went
to Compass Point to set up the studio, when Chris first built that studio,
Chris Blackwell. I did "Love and Happiness" for Carl, but that
was in Aquarius; I didn't actually do anything for Herman because Herman
wasn't really producing at the time, he had the record shop and he was more
into that than the studio, he was into booking it out. After doing the stuffs
with Yabby, the backing vocals and all of that, then I started hanging out
with Pablo. Because I had to be waiting around to get 'round to doing a
song for Pablo, I just went to Studio One, because, why I had to go to Studio
One, I wanted to do some tunes for Junjo, because Junjo was like, kicking
'82, '83, he was really stinging. I used to go to the studios at night time,
Channel One and all that, I even ended up doing a few songs for Jo Jo Hoo
Kim, the proprietor of Channel One, but I didn't really do any songs for
Junjo, but I was there with him. We kind of grew up together, because I
come from the same place, Waltham Park Road, Junjo comes from the same place.
He used to even ask me to go to the studio to mix off a couple of tracks,
give me the money, and I'd pay the studio time; Barnabas would mix them,
because he knows what Junjo wants. So I just pay him the money, wait around,
when the mix finish, then I'll take... Working with Junjo, then Linval Thompson
came along and I did a few songs for Linval, because he had a bit of a spare
time on his hands, because Junjo was busy. Most of the producers I wanted
to work with, they were too busy for me. So, I did a couple songs with Linval,
"Trial and Crosses", "Black Man Time", I think those
were the two songs I did for him, and they were released, two Cha Cha records
over here.
RH: Linval's a great producer, he knows what he's doing.
ED: Yeah, definitely, I'll give him credit for that, because he did a couple
good Barry Browns as well, and himself. After that, I didn't really feel
satisfied so, I thought well, yeah, I'm going to go and do some work with
Studio One because working with Channel One, I got to find out that all
the tracks that Channel One them do was Studio One's tracks, they made them
over, so I goes, boy, I don't think I should really work on a copy when
I can work on the actual stuff. That same geezer that influenced me to start
doing music, Donald Hussack, my school mate from long time during school
days, Donald wrote a song for me and he goes, "Let's go down to Coxsone
one Sunday and see if he would be interested in it". This song had
about ten verses, it was like a book it was so long. So we waited around
a couple of Sundays, waited around until Coxsone noticed us sitting under
the tree, called us in and says, "What are guys waiting for, what do
you want?" So we goes, "Well, we got this song, and we think it's
a big hit tune, we'd like you to hear it". He goes, "All right,
go into it". So I'm there singing the song out, I reach about three
verses and he goes "All right, all right, where's the chorus in the
song? You haven't got a punch line". I goes "Wait, wait, the chorus
is coming". He goes, "You have to re-write that song, you're wasting
my time. Go back, re-write the song, make it shorter, put some choruses
in it, and I'll tell you what, I like your voice" and he gave me about
ten seven inches. He goes, "What you should do, listen to these versions,
and when you listen to them, you write some songs because you could sing
on the rhythm, I've got the rhythm, I've got the rights to the rhythm and
all that". So I goes, boy, yes, great! I was really happy, after a
couple months of waiting, I got to him, and I got some free records, I could
sell them if I want (laughs). I went home, I practised up. The "Love
is a Feeling" which is the first song that I voiced for him, there
was a controversy going on over that song because that tune, I did the harmonies
with Calvin Scott and Richie MacDonald; Calvin Scott wrote the lyrics, and
he record it for himself at Harry J. He used the Wailers band, which was
really great, I tell you the rhythm track was so good. At the end of the
day, when they finished recording the song, Calvin took the two inch tape,
him and Richie probably must have spent the money, they shared the studio
time, anyway, they had a problem about who's going to release the song,
they wanted Herman to release it or get someone to release it. Richie wanted
his money back, Calvin wanted his money back, I think they must have wiped
the tape, or burnt the tape up, because they had a fight. I goes boy, I'm
not making that tune go to waste, so I just practice it on the rhythm, practice
it and practice it, because "Fight it to the Top" rhythm was one
of the famous rhythms in Jamaica, nobody had really had any other covers
of it at the time. I goes all right, that's the rhythm I'm going to use.
I went back, and I said to Coxsone, "Well look, I have..." what's
this song called? (Hums bass riff)
RH: "Peanut Vendor".
ED: "Peanut Vendor", that one; I had about three of them when
I went back. He goes "Right, so you're ready now?" I goes, "Yeah".
He goes, "All right, show me the tune that you got". So I goes,
"All right then, I've got this one: (sings) I need a love that is real..."
and I was trying to (hums bass line). He goes, "All right man, I know
the rhythm already". I went into the studio same day, straight away,
he says "Go down and sit down and wait", 'cause there were tons
of people waiting, there were always tons of people waiting outside for
Coxsone. I went in and after about couple hours he came and put on the tape,
and I just voiced it, and from I voiced that tune, about two weeks time,
Coxsone presses it. When that happened, when Coxsone pressed that record,
that's one of the greatest things that even happened for me. Guys were there
that did songs for years that never came out, they keep coming back, "Coxsone
a fuckery, old man and thing" and all kind of things like that, and
he just started to deal with me like straight up. He goes like "Here's
six hundred dollars 16, take this little money and keep it, put in your
pocket". I signed a publishing deal for him, I made a mistake. I signed
a contract for him to release, the publishing. I was young, I wanted to
get on the Studio One label, and I'd do anything to get on that label.
RH: That "Peanut Vendor" tune mashed up the dance.
ED: You're telling me! When I came to England first, in '85, I could sing
that tune alone, I didn't have to sing another tune, everybody wanted to
hear that tune, "You just sing that tune and you get any money you
want". When I did that now, well, Coxsone went away. When he comes
back, he goes to me "Earl, I've never told anybody this, but you see
that song, 'Love is a Feeling', I pressed it 'til my hands were weak. I
run out of labels trying to press that tune". I know, man tell me that
Coxsone don't tell no one how much he presses, he don't tell them nothing,
you just get a little money from him and him say, "All right, boy,
there you go, this is my money for my studio time". When he told me
that, he gave me a thousand dollars. I goes, "Yes man, I think I'm
going to make it in the music business". He goes, "Look, go and
pick all the seven inches you want out of there", so each time I go
to Studio One I'm coming out with a couple of dollars in my pocket, sometimes
he'll give me a watch; because in Brentford Road he used to have a shop
beside the studio, and he'd sell records, tapes, cassettes, car stereos,
radios, watches, because he used to travel all the time, so anything I want,
he'd give it to me from I did "Love is a Feeling". I did an album
for him.
RH: There's two sides to him, isn't there? There's a side where he's ruthless
with people, and then there's the other side.
ED: I know that. When I first started going up to the studio, about '81,
'82, I met Roy Cousins at that same studio. Hanging out with Dodd, he was
different to me. All the people said, "Boy, you don't want to get involved
with him, you don't want to work with him". But he was treating me
different, and I couldn't understand it.
DK: Why do think that is? Just because of the tune, or..?
ED: I think it was because of that tune, because he was looking for someone
to really do something on that rhythm. Then, I was bubbling, when I voiced
it, I did all my harmonies, and I did them straight up, solid. When I was
finished with the song, it was a solid song, I did the backing harmonies,
and I made it sound good, because I had so much practice with Richie, I
was working with Boris...
RH: But you must have been a bit disappointed with the album.
ED: Yes, when the album came out, it came out as a showcase. He had about
8 songs on it. There was a couple of versions, and I didn't like the choice
of the songs. The songs that I did, I can't even remember most of them,
but I'm telling you, I know for a fact that he's got a better album. I did
about 21 songs in all for Coxsone. He put out "Musical...", there
was one on a Various Artists.
RH: You did "Dub Street" with Johnny Osbourne.
ED: Yeah, "Dub Street". Then there's the album, I think it's got
about 5 or 6, but I know he's got 17, or between 15 and 16 (unreleased).
RH: He did exactly the same with Willie Williams.
ED: He's got them there now to put out, but what happened is, whenever I
see Dodd, whenever I see Sir D., he'd say to me, "Look, come in. Those
songs that you did, you need to do some building up on them", because
over the years, the sound changes, and he wants to try and keep up with
the times.
RH: Even so, if he'd put out an album of quality at the time...
ED: What happened is, I think he kind of wanted me to be around him every
day, he wanted me to be there all the time, because I went to America in
about '86. I went down to the Studio them times, I went to in do backing
vocals on, he was working with Bagga (Walker) and Cleavie, Cleveland Browne
at the time, they were doing over dubs, drums and bass, on most of the old
stuff, he transferred it from 2 track to 16 track, originally most of those
songs were done on 1 track, with everybody one time, and then the voice
on one track. He was transferring them. Most of those tapes that I voiced
on, he wanted to come in, because he had transferred them, to do backing
vocals, and try and build them up, but he still hasn't done anything with
them, he's still got them there. Each time I see him, he always bring me
to the studio and lets me hear what we've got. I think he really wants to
do another album, but I have to go and look for him, I have to look him
up. I don't think he wants to work without me being there. We've got that
kind of, because we both drink a lot as well, as soon as he sees me he goes,
"What happen, Jackson? Want a taste?" with like a big huge bottle
of vodka.
RH: After that, you worked with Roy Cousins.
ED: Cousins was coming down to Coxsone's, they had an argument, or Cousins
didn't like how Coxsone was administering his music, and he wanted to branch
out on his own. So, I think that's one of the reasons Coxsone never put
out my other album, because I went off with Roy Cousins, he influenced me
and he told me, "Yeah, I can get you 1500 pounds for an album",
at that time it was a lot of money. That was about '82, I goes "Boy,
that sounds good", because apart from Coxsone giving me about 6 or
400 dollars a week, a thousand pounds would have come in handy. So I went
off with Roy, and did a couple of tracks, but at the end of the day, I did
about 14 songs for Roy, Roy put out about 4 albums out of those 14 songs,
I don't know how he did it! He put out four albums out of about 15 songs!
I didn't get any money off of Roy until I came to England, because he did
an album through...
I kind of drifted off with Roy, get involved with Roy Cousins, I was between
two minds, because Roy wanted me to come to England as well, but I didn't
want to come to England because I wanted to hang out, and see if something
would happen for me with Studio One, but I think he got upset with me working
with Roy Cousins.
RH: I think Roy's problem is, when he compiles the album, he doesn't vary
them too much.
ED: He uses the same rhythms, because he did Don Carlos, with the same rhythm
tracks, he did the same thing with Junior Reid and Charlie Chaplin, there
was a couple more guys, and it was the same rhythm track, it kind of made
the thing too local, it wasn't really worth it, apart from Junior, and a
couple of tracks.
RH: He did try hard, because he got deals for Don Carlos with CSA and Kingdom...
ED: It was kind of working but then he kind of went and messed it up, trying
to sell the same record to another company. He's blaming me now, because
I've seen him recently and he's saying "Boy, it's your fault, you should
have stick with me" and all this stuff, but you can't really stick
with a producer if you can't really relate to him. It doesn't work when
you recycle the rhythm tracks.
DK: Can you tell me the inspiration behind "Song For a Reason"?
ED: Of all the songs that I did for Roy, the only one that I recorded live
in the studio was a song, we did it with Flabba Holt, Roots Radics band,
one called "Lively Session", I've done that for Coxsone as well,
I think it's on the album, "Showcase", Studio One. I recorded
that live for Studio One as well, but I recorded it live with Roy Cousins,
with "How Many Rivers", (sings) "How many rivers must I cross
before I am free", that was another one of the songs. But most of the
rhythms, he had the tapes, the rhythm tracks were laid, and usually I'd
sit down and I'd write the songs and I've got a kind of beat in my head,
because working with Boris I kind of picked up making music to the song.
I had those lyrics, "Songs For a Reason", I had "Struggler",
I had "Julia", lots of songs that I wrote without having any specific
rhythm tracks, but I had a beat, or a key or whatever. When Roy came up,
we went to Tubbys and Tubbys has got this vibe where, when I'm at Tubbys
I'm flowing because Tubbys was that kind of thing. "Song For a Reason"
was basically what was happening with me at the time. I wrote it at the
end of the day, when the evening start and you want to have some fun, you
work in the burning sun all day, and songs for a reason to last for all
season. I wanted to make every day, what we were living into a song, then
it was an album I was doing, so that track was one of the album tracks,
but that song is one more than one album as well. But I think I want to
re-record that song. He was a good producer, he was making a good headway...
RH: Out of all them albums, there's really only two tracks that stand out,
"Songs For a Reason" and "Julia".
ED: Yeah, "Julia"'s brilliant. Each time I go to Europe right
now, somebody goes to me, "Can you do that song, do you remember that
song?" I've got a couple boxes of the albums that I did with him, I've
got the "Julia", and he put out one in January last year I think
called "Special Request", I've got a couple of those, each time
I go to Europe I sell them, they're always in demand.
RH: After that, there was a gap, and then the Mad Professor stuff.
ED: Before that, before I left Jamaica again, I started working for a geezer
called Robert Livingston, because the Studio One stuff, between the late
'70s and the early '80s, Coxsone was trying to set up himself in America,
so he wasn't really putting out a lot of songs in Jamaica. "Love is
a Feeling" came out during that time, but it wasn't really promoted
in Jamaica. It might have played now and again, because the DJs used to
come down when they can catch Coxsone, because he used to be in and out
of the country, spend a week in Jamaica, then he's off again. When the DJ's
come, they would only play the name brand artists like Dennis Brown, Bob
Marley, the hot stuff that Coxsone's putting out, so my tune, "Love
is a Feeling" kind of got lost in all that pile in Jamaica, but it
was doing things in America, oversees. Roy Cousins, the same thing, Heptones,
the same, they all put out the songs overseas, so nothing was happening
for me in Jamaica. So I went and started working with this guy called Robert
Livingston, and I did a song called "Mother To Be" for him. When
we recorded it, Roots Radics band again, Dean Fraser and Nambo and another
guy, it was one of the best songs I think I actually recorded in Jamaica,
properly arranged and everything. I did two songs for him, and he gave me
500 dollars, I remember, and he released it through Tuff Gong, on Tuff Gong
label, and the song shooted right up into the charts.
It was getting red hot in the charts. It was really kicking in Jamaica that
song, and I was looking forward to something happening. Then we started
working on an album, because he wrote a couple of tracks and gave them to
me, gave me some rhythm tracks, but he was making the rhythms behind my
back, without me being there, writing the songs. He could sing as well.
But I like to be there with the musicians when the music is actually being
laid down, so I get that feeling, so when we're voicing it, you can put
out everything. He was doing that, and I was waiting around for him to finish
making the rhythms so that I could start voicing, but I had to go away.
Winston MacAnuff told me that Skengdon, this rotten rich geezer in Miami
is starting up this label, building a studio, and he's looking for all the
young artists, and he's got visas for everybody who wants to come up, straight
works, limousines, big things, the proper stuff, so I goes, "yeah man,
shit, why not?" 'Cause in Jamaica, I thought, yeah this tune's going
to go number one, so I went boop! Off to Miami to do a show, I did a show
for Skengdon, and we did the show, and I started to do some songs for him,
because he was building up a studio, a big mega kind of thing, it was taking
all this money. His studio was being built, but we were using Inner Circle's
studio, Fat Man rhythm section, Roger and Ian, they had a studio in Hollywood,
Miami, Florida. I started voicing some songs in that studio, making the
rhythms and voicing them, and I did a couple of songs. Skengdon gave me
some money, about 10,000 dollars US; I went back to Jamaica. When I went
back now, the geezer that I was doing the album with, he goes "Boy,
the man gone a foreign, Rasta, and you go sing for next producer, we never
want you fe do that." I told him "Look, 'Mother To Be' is needed
in America, people can't get it and they want the song. So you'd better
release it, get someone, sublet the song to VP or something". He goes,
"No man, me a go up there meself to put it out, Rasta, me can go America
any time, and me can go a England". So I goes, "Yeah, but you
need to do it now, because the tune is happening now." At the end of
the day, he had a meeting with Tuff Gong, and they goes, "Well, you
have to pay some money to get the tune in the top five", that's how
it goes in Jamaica, that's how it goes everywhere, you have to pay. He goes,
he's not going to pay because the song is good, it can stand on its own,
it's selling. It didn't get in the charts with him paying any money, it
got in the charts by sales, so I goes "Fair enough, I agree with that,
don't pay a cent, whatever happens. If it don't do into the top five, that's
it". He didn't pay the money, and the song still went to number 2,
'cause it was selling that much in Jamaica, everybody was into it. I was
getting shows, I was working at the Little Theatre, I was working at Zinc
Fence, that's the place that Third World's got this office, work shop, but
it's like middle of the road kind of thing, Up Town kind of thing, I was
doing lots of shows from that song, and thing was happening. Then he goes
to me, "Boy, I'm going to work with Ruddy Thomas, 'cause you went and
worked with Skengdon," so the rest of the songs I was supposed to do
on that album, he started working them with Flip Wilson and Ruddy Thomas.
He put out two songs with Ruddy, they never, nothing happened. Then I just
got fed up, I went back to America, I went back to Miami with Skengdon,
I got a month in America and I stayed eight months, I think I can't go back
to America for that, but I just wanted to get away from it, because I could
see that the business in Jamaica was kind of like a rat race kind of thing
where you have to pay out to get your tunes played, you have to buy the
DJs, Barry G. and all these guys, they usually come to Dynamics or they
come to Sonic Sounds every weekend for their groceries, come and pick up
a thousand dollars. I kind of get fed up with it, I stayed in California
for a little while with Mikey Dread, 'cause he was touring a lot, I went
overseas with him.
RH: Somewhere about '86, '87, you done that tune for Blacka Dread, "Batman
and Robin".
ED: That was '85, when I first came to London. When I came up, I came up
with Sassafrass, Edi Fitzroy, Jennifer Lara, Leroy Smart, Anthony Johnson,
and Wondernose, we came up to do that GLC thing, we all came on that same
trip. When I came up that time, when I came to England, that was after "Mother
To Be" came out, and I was really upset because people were coming
to Jamaica and begging to get the song released, and the guy was holding
on to the tape, I goes man, this guy's crazy! All right then, so when I
came up, I got two weeks, and I stayed seven months in England, because
I loved it so much, the only place that I loved so much was Canada, which
was like quiet, there wasn't so much Yardies going about shooting up the
dances and all that, it was nice and genuine in England, so I thought, yeah
, I want to stay in England. I met up with a couple of producers when I
came over here, I met up with Blacka Dread, and I met up with a guy called
Welzeer (?) who was running King Original, and Sassafrass was writing a
lot of songs. He's a DJ, but he writes songs every day, maybe four or five
songs a day. We had a song called "Batman and Robin" which I actually
done for him, but we did it in a studio called Creative Sounds in Jamaica.
At the time Creative Sounds, the sounds wasn't so up to standard, so when
we came over, Blacka wanted to give me some money to voice a tune or two
for him, so I told Sassafrass, I said, "Yeah, let's do 'Batman and
Robin'" so, we went to the studio and we laid the rhythm track, 'cause
that was the original rhythm track that me and Sassafrass did it on in Jamaica.
Sass has got a stream in him that he could really produce, he's wrote a
lot of songs for like Echo Minott, all the General Trees stuff, all the
lyrics is like, Sass just gave it to him, really he was like into the horse
business, he owned a couple of horses, didn't have much time for the studio.
We did that song for Blacka, and Blacka put it out over here. He send the
tape with Fatis to Jammys to put out a song in Jamaica, 'cause I wanted
songs to release in Jamaica. Jammys took the tune and had it for about two
years, sitting on it. When I left England and went back to Jamaica, I went
round to Jammys, because Blacka told me that, I goes, "Blacka you know
if we have this tune in Jamaica?" because it was playing over here,
he had a DJ version which went number one, Screechy, "Walk and Skank"
on the same version. When I went to Jammys back to Jamaica, I said "Jammys,
Blacka tell me that you've got the rhythm track, are you going to put out
the song?" He said "Well, boy, the only way I'm going to put out
this song is if you do another couple of songs for me, 'cause I can't put
out one song with an artist if I haven't got anything else", so I go
"It's not your tune to put out, it's not for you to decide, Blacka
asked you to put out the tune, you have to put it out like that". He
goes, "well, you have to do some more songs, I can't put out the song
until I've got a couple more songs". I don't know how Fatis got back
the tape, but Pinchers did "Lift Up Again", his first song he
did on that rhythm track and it went like wild fire, it just went number
one in Jamaica. What Jammy's did was he cut a dub plate for his sound, and
a couple more sound systems, so they were playing that version of it, and
it was like mashing up the place! Before it was released in Jamaica, Jammys
had it on dub, and it was mashing up the place, every dance that I go to,
I was like a star! Then, instead of him releasing the tune because it was
getting a buzz, the dances, everybody was playing it, guys were rapping
onto it. I think that's how Pinchers kind of wrote his lyrics off of the
rhythm. Then, when Pinchers' one come out, that was it, it didn't come out
again in Jamaica. But I was glad for Pinchers, 'cause Pinchers one really
went big, and that kind of gave him his name, and he started coming up.
Since Screechy, the SLT, since they put out that hip hop one, Blacka's now,
re-released the old one, like he's remixing it, I told him he should have
remixed it, he shouldhave tried to put it out when the first "Batman"
came out, you know, that first, a couple of years ago, the film, "Batman"
film, that's when he should have tried to put it out, like in America, it
was a craze, everybody had Batman hats, and this and that, but he wait until
this time around.
RH: How does Mad Professor fit into the picture?
ED: With Prof. now, I was working, after Blacka, I didn't really like how
Blacka never got my tune released in Jamaica, so I didn't really want to
work with Blacka. I started working with a guy called Mafia Tone, Stafford
Douglas in Birmingham. I did "Love is a Feeling" for him again,
that was '85 I did that, and I did a couple songs for him, but Stafford
wasn't really like into producing, he was into having his record shop and
keeping shows, he had a sound system, so you had to pressure him to put
out the records. He did put out a couple of records for me on the Now Generation
label. I did a couple songs with Stafford, then I started doing some songs
for a guy called Pick a Pow, his name is Philip Powell, he did some songs
with Top Cat. I was doing some songs for him, and he went up to Ariwa to
record the songs, so I was doing (sings) "Behold, I saw you standing
there before me, and now I've found the wonder of my glory", I was
doing it in a reggae, like an up to date kind of thing because I really
like that song, and like Neil (Fraser) was really impressed with it, he
like the way I sing it, and I did a song called "Marcus Garvey"
as well, and it was like, Prof. goes to me, "Boy, 16, I'd like me and
you to do some work, because I really like how you did those two songs for
Pick a Pow." So Pick a Pow had the songs, lack of promotion and all
that, I think the one he did with Top Cat did something good for him, but
with my songs, they never really happened for him. That's how I got involved
working with Neil, and my girlfriend, my baby mother used to do backing
vocals for him some times, she knew him for a long time. When I first came,
'85, when I left, I left about in '86, January, and when I went to Jamaica,
flown back, I'd met this girl over here, when I phoned her back, she told
me she was pregnant, she was like my first baby mother, so I wanted to come
back to England boy, no stops, I wanted to come back any way I can. When
I came back, I came back through America, and she came and get me through
the airport through customs and she brought me up to Neil, that first time,
before I went with Picka, so it was actually Michelle that introduced me,
she was there working, I was there night after night, listening to what's
going on. When I went back with Picka, I did a couple songs with Picka.
I went in, he goes he'd like me to do some songs, I did "Children Rise"
for him, "Marcus Garvey", and "Peaceful Rasta Man".
I said, "Well look, like how I've done these 3 songs, I think we should
try and do a album." I found out that Prof. was like the most serious
person, because before I actually did the work for Prof. I recorded about
6 songs for myself, with the help of a guy called Burt Douglas, Bertie was
into the studio business a lot, he was working with Captain Sinbad, working
with some old guys, Jah Thomas, he's like a pioneer in the reggae scene,
so I did an album with Burt, and me and Burt had some arguments, and he
put the tape under his bed, there was cobwebs growing on it and all that.
About 2 years afterwards, I met a friend of mine from Jamaica, he had wads
of money, he was into making his money, but he wanted to get involved with
music, so I goes to him, "Look, I've got some tunes and I'm not doing
nothing until those tunes come out, 'cause I know that those tunes is the
business," so he goes, "All right then, can you get the tape",
so I goes, "Let's go and check the brother". I went to Burt, and
I says "What you do with the tape?" He says, "You want the
tape, take it! I finish with music, I cannot take it!" Because he was
working with Delton Screechy and Kojak, and Kojak had messed him up a lot,
Kojak did some really weird things to him and Berris Basser. They didn't
want to know anything about music business, Burt was going "Look, take
the fucking tape. Just pay me back my studio time", so I paid him 250
pounds, and took the tape. When we went to the studio to listen to the tape,
what was on the tape? "Holding Back the Years" was on that bloody
tape. I said, I want to press this tune, I want us to remix this tune and
fix it up, we recorded it at Galtree Road where Professor was first, that's
where we record the album but it wasn't to do with him, it was Burt's stuff.
DK: I was surprised that you did a version of that tune.
ED: What happened, when I was in Jamaica, before I came back to England
in '86, when I was leaving the first time, that song, it was playing up
a lot over here, the original version. So, I took the record, 'cause I goes
'This is one of the best songs.' I took the record to Jamaica, and I was
singing the song to everybody, I went to the dances, I hold the mike and
I sing it. People just went like, hm, hm. I goes, "Bloody hell man,
this song is great! What are you waiting for?" You have this producer
called Kango in Jamaica, Kango produced "Blueberry Hill" with
Yellowman, he was the first one that produced Tiger... Major Mackerel. The
guy was spending the money, he had his car, "Kango" on the license
plates, and he was rich. One day, I went to Tuff Gong, he used to use Tuff
Gong all the time. I went to Tuff Gong and I goes to him, "I've got
a tune I want to record, I must record this tune," He goes, "Sing",
so I goes (sings) "Holding back the years I've had so long..."
He goes, "Yeah. I want you to record it, how much you want?" I
goes, "Well, just give me a money, man, give me an advance. I just
want to do the tune". He goes, "Look, I'm going away tonight,
but I'm working, I've booked the studio for the whole night, I have to go
to America. Anthony Red Rose is going to be in charge of the session, record
the song and I'll pay you when I come back". When I went to the studio
on the night Anthony Red goes "Whoa 16, we're busy, we can't deal with
you right now", so I ended up keeping the song until I came back to
England, and I wanted to do it in Jamaica, when I came back now, I did it
for Burt. I tell you now, that tune, I used to sing it in every dance in
Jamaica. When I came and I recorded it for Burt...
What we did in the long run, we took it to Marc Angelo's, took the tape
over there, 'cause we'd just laid the basic rhythm tracks. I overdubbed
some keyboards, 'cause I like doodling around with keyboards, I do some
piano on "Holding Back the Years", and I got my daughter to play
some guitar on it, and me and my baby mother sing harmonies on it, and I
re-voiced it, and we mixed another song called "Come Give Me Some of
Your Love", and we put it on the b-side. We made up that disco there,
and he goes to me, "If you want to money to press it, you've got it,
so what are you going to do?" I said, "All right then, first thing,
I'm going to go to Mr. Pama, see if he likes it", so we made a dub
plate, and I took it to Jet Star and I played it. I said, "Mr. P.,
I want you to listen to this song, tell me if I should press it or not",
and Mr. P. put on the record, he goes, "Start it back again".
I think, "We're pressing tomorrow." Mr. P. goes, "Yeah, it's
not bad you know 16, it's not bad but..." I goes, "All right Mr.
P., thank you very much, I think you got a good opinion there, you give
us a good opinion, it's ok". So we took it straight to press. That
tune, I tell you, up to now, I have to press that tune every once in a while,
because Fat Shadow always got a little order for the 12 inch. That tune
sell so much I had to be using two press. I was pressing it just on my own.
RH: Do you think you're going to pursue self-productions more?
ED: No, no, no.
DK: What about the time you had Upfront Records?
ED: That's it, Upfront I was working with, that was the guy that was really,
I was like just monitoring the money for him. With Upfront, Upfront kind
of got carried away, because we had this album, and I told him "Look,
the tape that we got from Burt, I know there's about six songs on it. Let's
make some other rhythms, and finish up an album, and put out "Holding
Back the Years" the album," because it sold so much, we got thousands
of pounds from Mr. Pama because he put it on his CD. I goes, "Let's
try and make an album now", he goes "Yeah". Next thing I
know, he flies out to Jamaica and he makes an album with Little Kirk. He
comes back, he goes "Boy, I made an album", he had songs with
Jennifer Lara, he did six songs with Cocoa Tea, he did this, he did that.
When he comes back now, he came back with all these tapes, he says "16
come, we're going to the studio". I goes, "What about my album,
man? Aren't you going to finish my album?" He said, he wants to finish
the album with Little Kirk, 'cause he was stinging, he was shocking out
in Jamaica. At the end of the day, we had to send a ticket to Little Kirk
to come and voice the songs, he was just spending money all over the place,
but before we finished the album with Little Kirk, we did a various artists
on the Upfront label, with Jennifer Lara, Johnny Osbourne, a few people,
and myself, but it didn't go down that well because... Then, after "Holding
Back the Years" I tried pressing a follow up to that, "Give Me
the Reasons", he had Jr. Demus on one side and me on one side, and
it never really worked. The vibes that we got from "Holding Back the
Years" is like a once in a lifetime thing, we could never get that
back again. I know music business is a gamble, but I'm not interesting in
lugging around record shops. If I'm going to concentrate on making the records
in the studio, and making sure that we've got the right mix, it's too much.
That's what kind of happened with Upfront, I was spearheading the whole
thing, these guys think like these are the artists, I was trying to make
them look good, and they wanted to do, "Yeah man, let's press this".
Carlene Davis came up, they did one song with Carlene Davis and gave her
1500 pound advance. They paid 1500 pounds for the studio time, it's like
trying to do too much things at once. That's what I learned from. When all
this was happening now, I kind of noticed that the guy that was playing
up my records, the radio DJs, there was too much radio stations to deal
with as well. When you press a record, say you press about 2-300 records,
you end up giving up 200 records to the radio stations! One station wanted
15 records, for each DJ! So I goes, the only thing that I can do right now
is, I could have went to Mr. Pama and said, "Can you help me press
the album" or something, but I'm an artist, I don't want to get involved
in that, it's too much work, because I went through it. So I goes, "I'm
just going to finish doing an album for Professor", and it took me
two years to do that album. I didn't want to do it, then I goes "Yeah,
I might as well do it", then I didn't want to do it. Professor is really
busy as well, so it took us that time to actually get the album done. As
soon as it was finished, it was out, and it started working. Then, me and
Mike Brookes, we've gone back a long time, because I knew Mike Brookes from
African Museum, I met him through Gregory Isaacs' record shop in Jamaica,
in Chancery Lane, and he was part of the Techniques and all that, he was
a regular guy. I met him in London, he was working with Chris Hall, Music
House, so we started hanging out, I went with Mike to do some backing vocals
for him on this ska rhythm that he did for Rhythm Foundation. When I did
the backing vocals on it, the rhythm track it was a ska tune, a cover of
Prince Buster's "Tougher Than Tough", and John (Mason) who was
there, kind of like how we pull together and that, how me and Brookes sound,
he asked me if I'd be interested in listening to a couple of the ska music
he had. I goes, "Yeah, why not?" I listened to a couple of them,
but I didn't really want to do any one-one record. I've been doing one-one
singles all over the place, and it's not really worth it. He sent me some
tapes, and I had the tapes for about 4 or 5 months, listening to the tapes
over and over. He sent me two tapes, one with all the stuff he did with
Devon Russell, and some of Mike Brookes stuff, and one tape with just pure
rhythm tracks. One day, I'm driving along, listening to the tapes, and I
go, yeah, I wonder if these guys would be interested in doing an album,
seeing that the Mad Professor album is out, released, and I know for a fact
the only other person that has got another album with me now is Studio One,
or Sassafrass, which he goes to me that he's waiting until I'm dead or until
I go mad before he puts out the record, but what happened, I think he lost
the tape! Bastard. He must have been coming through the airport or something,
and it got messed around, magnetic stuff. You know how I felt when he told
me that? I goes, "You bitch! You waiting for me to dead, you see what
happen, the tape bloody die!" (Laughs)
DK: What about Riz, do you have any more material with them?
ED: Unfortunately not, man, because Riz, those guys are really great. I
did two singles for them, after I did the Mad Professor album, I went to
do some specials for some sounds, (like) Surfa, and Riz, Mannasseh them,
Nick, I met up with them, and I did two songs for them actually, I did the
"Natural Roots", and then there's "Cheating", they laid
the rhythm track. I tried to voice it, but it still hasn't been voiced or
anything, because the rhythm, they've made the verses different, and they
themselves wanted to get it right, so that's just there, something to come.
Apart from that track for Riz, I can't remember doing any other songs apart
from finishing this album for Otto (Hestness) and John (Mason) of Rhythm
Foundation, with Mike Brookes.
RH: What about Gussie P.?
ED: Before I actually did the album with John, I made an album for myself,
linked up with Burt Douglas again, and this album is called "Boss Man",
it's going to be pressed and released in Jamaica, I think the sleeve's already
finished, I'm trying to get a CD deal for it. He's put out two singles from
it, "Tender Love", that's a cover version of Kenny Thomas, the
rhythm is played by Sly and Robbie, Sly and some guys that Sly's working
with now, and it's really kicking right now, and "She Loves Me".
These two songs are released on seven inch in Jamaica, and every time they've
come up to England on pre, they've sold out the same day. I voiced them
here, but the rhythm was played in Jamaica, they took the tapes back to
mix it in Jamaica. Everybody comes from Jamaica, they tell me that they've
heard the songs, they're big down there. What I need to do, is go down there
and try getting back involved with doing a couple shows which is on the
agenda before this year is finished, I'm really looking forward to doing
that. I don't think I'm going to be doing much more studio work for right
now, until I've picked up a deal, because I think this album, "Not
For Sale" is being looked at by a couple companies, Shanachie, Overheat
in Japan, and my last album "Babylon Walls" is distributed through
Ras Records, and I'm sure there's another album with me, but I don't think
I want to get involved with Ras, because they've got too much irons in the
fire, and I like to have somebody who is working with me who I'm working
with and they're working with me at the same time, close, we can set up
shows, and booking agencies, promoting the artists. Most of the producers,
they don't really cater for the artists, they don't really promote the artists,
they promote the records to make their money back in their pockets. After
they make their money back, then the artists could never do a tour. With
reggae... with big companies, people take up like Shabba Ranks, or whatever,
when the artist is signed, when the album comes out they do promotional
tours, it's all tied in... but with us, reggae, we don't have time to deal
with the artist which is what is really lacking. That's why so many Jamaican
artists come and go, apart from Bob Marley or for me now, I have to say
Burning Spear who's taken up where Bob Marley left off, apart from these
bigger men, older guys, nothing is happening. Guys like Cocoa Tea, guys
like Yami Bolo, Tenor Saw, all this artists who had promise, promising singers,
Echo Minott, Wayne Smith with "Sleng Teng", these artists were
promising, but they weren't really being promoted. That's the major problem
right now. That's why I'm trying to hold onto whatever I've got, try and
get a deal, and I'll try to get every thing into perspective.