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"Art & Life
is about the way an artist paints a picture - but a picture
also paints an artist," explains Beenie Man. "It's about the
inner man and the outer man."
"Since I was a little kid, I've been in dancehall and
listening to reggae and Beenie Man is one of my favorites,"
says Wyclef. "We're always working together because our
chemistry works so well." Art & Life is a muscular and
sophisticated collection featuring guests like Wyclef and
ghetto diva, Maia, who croons on "Girls Them Sugar," a deft
take on "Who Am I?," the track that brought Beenie Man, born
Moses Davis, to international attention in 1997.
Always present and correct are his signature rough rhythm
riding skills that have made Beenie Man a star since he
turned out ghetto talent contests as a young man. Beenie
Man's spontaneous, rapid-fire toasting and singing skills
are endlessly inventive and commanding. His catchphrases -
"Zim Zimma, who's got the keys to my Bimmer" from "Who Am
I?" among countless others - have made him a folk hero
everywhere they care about dance music.
Describing his gift, Beenie Man says, "I'm a word garden. I
build words, make words. Words are always in my head. All I
need is a beat and that's it. I have a dictionary in my
head, the beats create a melody and once you find the
melody, that's the song." Contradicting his name, which
means "shortie," the long, lean and lanky Beenie Man, with
his melting eyes, is dubbed 'De gal dem sugar,' in tribute
to his magnetic power over female fans.
Lovers of Beenie Man's raunchy lyrics will flock to his
vivid self-advertisements for popularity and athletic
sexuality on "Analyze This" and "Ola." Yet in some respects,
the soul of Art & Life is "Jamaica Way," a lyrical hymn of
praise to his island and its musical heroes, while its heart
is "Ain't Nobody," a strutting mission statement of
self-determination. "What I do in the States is what Beenie
Man does in Jamaica," says Wyclef. "He takes everything and
puts it together and comes up with a sound that, even though
it's dancehall, you can still hear a little bit of rock, a
little bit of reggae harmony singing, opera … a whole bunch
of things."
"You have to get everyone involved in your music," Beenie
Man explains. "You can't be an artist stuck in Jamaica,
America or England; you have to be a universal artist. I'm a
fan of all music."
Known for his eclectic assemblages on Art & Life, songs like
"The Tumble," with its Latin dancehall beat will send a
charge right through from Trinidad's "Port of Spain to
Portland, Maine," as Beenie Man sings.
Flavor enhancement comes from the great Cuban trumpeter,
Arturo Sandoval, and Beenie Man's combo of English singing
and rapping in Spanish. Beenie Man utilizes the tracks of
Art & Life in weaving his own tapestry. "Love Me Now" flows
into the Civil Rights anthem, "We Shall Overcome." He
interlaces lands and legends on "I've Got A Date," which
mixes the Staples Singers' "I'll Take You There" bassline
with the Alton Ellis rock steady classic of the title, a
favorite of Beenie Man's mother when he was a child.
Music surrounded the young Beenie Man. With his mother and
many siblings, he lived in a government 'tenement' yard in
the Waterhouse area of Jamaica, where regular rasta
nyabinghi drum and chant sessions attracted the
neighborhood's many musicians, including Black Uhuru, and
the Wailers' Peter Tosh, Bunny Wailers and Bob Marley.
Improvising at a local talent contest at age six, Beenie Man
was spotted by the controller of the Shocking Vibes label,
Patrick Roberts. "He was talent itself," Roberts recalls.
Beenie Man remembers that night. "I won the concert out of
about fifty artists. I never lost a DJ contest. I have to go
to school and my mother don't have no money. I would win $25
JA and two boxes of beer for a contest; the beer was my
shoes and school uniform money, the $25 JA was my lunch
money. I had to win."
Football (or as we in America call it - soccer) and music
are traditional escape routes from the ghetto. Indeed,
Beenie Man was selected to attend many schools because of
his strength at football. But a broken foot made him
realize, "Music is my only hope."
Much time was spent at King Tubby's Studio with the
engineer, Jammys, who would let the gifted youth sing a
track and then give him a cassette to play for his friends.
Then, during a temporary split with Roberts, Beenie Man cut
"The Invisible Beenie Man, Ten Year Boy Wonder" with
producer Bunny "Striker" Lee. It became a global reggae hit,
though Beenie Man's rewards were in experience, rather than
finance.
Pursuing his dream, Beenie Man often had it rough. He slept
on streets and beaches and went hungry. Escaping the rigors
of Jamaican ghetto life, Beenie Man traveled to England,
America and then Canada, where Roberts tracked him down and
insisted he come home to make music. "I sat there for three
years and nothing happened," Beenie Man recalls ruefully.
Ultimately, collaborations with the production team of Sly
and Robbie and artists like Luciano and Barrington Levy
propelled Beenie Man on until he was voted Jamaica's DJ of
the year in 1994, a position he has since maintained. In
that same year, a collection of remakes of Beenie Man's
local hit, "Blessed," was released in a short-lived deal
with Island.
But it was 1997's autobiographical The Many Moods of Moses
album, boldly mixing dancehall with Zulu Harmonies, that
broke Beenie Man big internationally. "Who Am I?" charted
R&B as well as topping reggae charts for weeks. Its country
track, "Ain't Gonna Figure It Yet," even became a hit in
Nashville. Now, with the powerful production of Art & Life,
Beenie Man has achieved a compelling synthesis that will
ignite listeners everywhere. Concludes Beenie Man, "I'm an
entertainer who entertains all people. I do standup comedy,
I act (he starred in the Jamaican hit, "Dancehall Queen"). I
do everything.
On Art & Life, you not only see me alone, you see the world
through me, like I am your guide. "It's a fullness that we
reached."
http://www.sing365.com/music/lyric.nsf/singerUnid/B514FB3E6CCD94A948256966000C90D0 |
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