Ewart Beckford OD (21 September 1942 – 17 February 2021), known by the stage name U-Roy, was a Jamaican vocalist and pioneer of toasting. U-Roy was known for a melodic style of toasting applied with a highly developed sense of timing.
Of the many innovations Jamaican music has offered to the world over the past 50 years, the lyrical art of “toasting” has had perhaps the most profound and long-lasting impact. A stylised, poetical form of chatting and scatting, it was brought to prominence in the early 1970s by the reggae deejay U-Roy and has fed into many musical forms, from hip-hop to grime.
U-Roy did not actually invent toasting: that distinction is usually given to his fellow deejay Count Machuki, who began talking over songs at Jamaican sound system dances in the late 50s. But U-Roy took it on by leaps and bounds, and it was he who successfully brought it into the recording studio, popularising the artform first in Jamaica and then around the globe.
U-Roy was born into a Seventh-Day Adventist family in the Jonestown area of the Jamaican capital, Kingston, and got his nickname from a young family member who found it difficult to pronounce “Ewart”. His musical education centred around the church, but as a teenager at Denham Town high school he was also an admirer of the jive-talking American musician Louis Jordan, and as a young amateur deejay he came under the influence of Machuki.
He began as a professional deejay in 1961 with the Dickies Dynamic sound system, before moving in 1965 to the rival Sir George the Atomic sound system, and then becoming the No 2 deejay to another pioneering toaster, King Stitt, with Sir Coxsone Dodd. By 1968 he was the main deejay on King Tubby’s Hometown Hi Fi, where Tubby and Reid supplied him with exclusive “dub plate” recordings over which he could toast at dances.
It was with Reid that U-Roy recorded the three groundbreaking singles that took the country by storm in 1970. Wake the Town, Rule the Nation and Wear You to the Ball – stood at Nos 1, 2 and 3 in the Jamaican charts for six weeks running. In short order word of his talent spread to the UK, the US and beyond. “It was like a new Jamaica was born,” said Dennis Alcapone, one of the toasters who followed in U-Roy’s wake. “All of a sudden they were treating us deejays like gods.”
There were many more Jamaican hit singles for U-Roy on Reid’s Treasure Isle label, while his debut album, Version Galore (1971), created a stir not just at home but in the UK, where he was signed up by Virgin. Thereafter he produced a steady stream of critically acclaimed albums during the 70s, most of them, including Dread in a Babylon (1975), Natty Rebel (1976), Rasta Ambassador (1977) and Jah Son of Africa (1978), reflecting his Rastafarian beliefs.
After a period living in Britain, in 1978 U-Roy set up his own sound system, Stur Gav, in Jamaica, helping to launch a new generation of toasters and fuelling the coming dancehall revolution that saw deejays move into the ascendancy at the expense of roots reggae singers and bands. From there the deejay culture dripped into the various nooks and crannies of contemporary music, most notably in the Bronx area of New York, where the influence of a sizeable expat Jamaican population informed the methods of some of the early rappers and hip-hop pioneers, including the DJ Kool Herc, who later suggested that “the whole chemistry of [hip-hop] came from Jamaica”.
In the 80s U-Roy relocated to California, and his recorded output began to slow. He made just three LPs in that decade – one of them, Line Up and Come (1986), in collaboration with Tappa Zukie, his fellow deejay. In the 90s he teamed up with the British dub producer Mad Professor for three albums, and he continued to make records on a regular, if sedate, basis well into the new millennium. Well known for his even temper, laid-back disposition and general humility, U-Roy was awarded the Order of Distinction by the Jamaican government in 2007.
Beckford's death was confirmed on 17 February 2021 when his partner, Marcia Smikle, told the Jamaican newspaper The Gleaner. Trojan Records was also informed about his death. While no cause of death was made public at the time, he suffered from diabetes, hypertension, and problems with his kidneys prior to his death, and had been undergoing surgery at the hospital in Kingston, Jamaica.
(Edited from The Guardian & Wikipedia)
For “U-Roy - Greatest Hits Anthology (2018 SHRKLW mp3 album)” go here:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.imagenetz.de/kTdJw
1. Reggae Party (Live) 03:05
2. Dub Yourself 04:04
3. Dub Who I Am 04:12
4. She's a Rasta Woman (Live) 04:03
5. Bury the Razor 02:49
6. Crashie Sweep 02:59
7. Ital Vital 03:40
8. Swell Head Skank 03:23
9. Truthful Dub 03:10
10. Border Line 03:54
11. Power of Love 04:10
12. War Question 04:02
13. Chalice in the Palace 03:29
14. Lagos Rock 04:31
15. Half Me Get 03:37
16. Money 03:54
17. Same Vibe 03:58
18. Serious Matter 03:56
19. Ok Fred 03:36
20. I'm Still in Love 04:19
21. Nyahbingi Chant 13:36
22. Small Axe 02:31
23. You Keep on Running (feat. Delroy Wilson) 02:29
24. Love I Tender 02:27
25. Medley Train (feat. Ken Boothe) 02:47
26. On Top of the Peak 02:41
27. Earthquake (Alternate Version) 03:07
28. Yama Khy 03:31
29. Joyful Locks 03:11
30. Rightful Ruler 02:34
31. Tide is High DJ Style 04:21
32. 006 02:45
33. Train from the West 02:39
34. Wake the Town 02:43
35. Rule the Nation 02:36
36. Wear You to the Ball 02:31
37. Drive Her Home 01:58
38. Double Six 02:22
39. Stick Together 02:48
40. On the Beach 02:40
41. Happy Go Lucky Girl 03:08
42. Ain't That Loving You 02:37
43. The Tide is High 02:43
44. Wear You to the Ball Organ (feat. Earl "Wya" Lindo) 02:32
45. I Shall Be Released (Live) 03:44
A big thank you goes to Denis for suggesting today’s birthday Jamaican vocalist and for the loan of above mp3 album.
Here’s my little contribution..
For “U-Roy – Talking Roots (2018 Ariwa) (@192)” go here:
https://www.imagenetz.de/cKsat
1 Repatriation
2 Teacher Morris
3 3 Minutes Of Talk
4 Bitter Nut
5 Mother Of Civilisation
6 Jamaica
7 Black Man
8 Dog And The Bone
9 Brimstone & Fire
10 Follow Me
11 Tide Is High
Toasting pioneer U-Roy has united with the Ariwa production team to record and release his 21st studio album Talking Roots which features production from Mad Professor and contributions from Sly & Robbie, Lloyd Parks, Black Steel, Leroy Mafia, Nadine Sutherland, Carroll T and Aisha. The King of DJ reggae broadcasts his social commentary as for example Donald Trump's immigration ("Repatriation"), and “Brimstone and Fire” over Jah Vengeance’s Riddim !
Thanks for some Reggae!
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