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b.
Ewart Beckford, 1942, Kingston, Jamaica, West Indies. U-Roy
began as a sound system DJ in 1961, spinning records for the
Doctor Dickies set, later known as Dickies Dynamic, in such
well-known Jamaican venues as Victoria Pier, Foresters Hall
and
Emmett Park. His inspiration was the DJ Winston Count
Matchuki, who worked for Coxsone Dodd and subsequently on
Prince Buster's Voice Of The People sound system. By the
mid-60s he was DJ for Sir George The Atomic, based around
Maxfield Avenue in Kingston. Around 1967 he began to work
with King Tubby as DJ for his Home Town Hi-Fi. From this
association developed the whole modern DJ style; Tubby's
work at Duke Reid's studio, where he was disc-cutter, led
him to discover dub. He found that by dropping out the vocal
track and remixing the remaining rhythm tracks, he could
create new "versions" of much-loved tunes. He began to
record a series of special acetate recordings, or dub
plates, for exclusive use on his sound system. The space
left by the absent vocal tracks enabled U-Roy to improvise
his own jive-talk raps or toasts when the sound system
played dances. The effect in the dancehall was immediate and
electrifying. In 1969 U-Roy was invited to play for Dodd's
Down Beat sound system, playing the second set behind King
Stitt. U-Roy became dissatisfied with playing the latest
Coxsone music only after Stitt had first exposed it to dance
patrons, and returned to Tubby's. He then began his
recording career in earnest, recording two discs for Lee
Perry, "Earth's Rightful Ruler" and "OK Corral", before
moving to producer Keith Hudson, for whom he made the
outstanding "Dynamic Fashion Way".
U-Roy then began recording for Duke Reid, using as backing
tracks Reid's rocksteady hits from 1966-67; their success
was unprecedented. His first record for Reid, "Wake The
Town", which used Alton Ellis' "Girl I've Got A Date" as
backing, immediately soared to the top of both Jamaican
radio charts. His next two releases, "Rule The Nation" and
"Wear You To The Ball", soon joined it. These three releases
held the top three positions in the Jamaican charts for 12
weeks during early 1970. Other sound system DJs were quick
to follow U-Roy, including Dennis Alcapone and Scotty. The
radio stations refused to play DJ music in order to give
singers a chance, so big was the demand. U-Roy recorded 32
tracks for Reid, in the process versioning almost every
rocksteady hit issued on the label and releasing two albums.
By 1973 he was recording for other producers, including
Alvin "GG" Ranglin, Bunny Lee, Glen Brown and Lloyd
Charmers, as well as issuing self-productions. However, the
rise of the next DJ generation, including Big Youth,
signalled the partial eclipse of U-Roy. In 1975 he made a
series of albums for producer Prince Tony Robinson that were
leased to Virgin Records in the UK, wherein the DJ revisited
Reid's earlier hits in the then prevalent rockers style. He
appeared at the London Lyceum in August 1976, backed by a
band featuring Channel One stalwarts Sly Dunbar (bass) and
Ansell Collins (organ). He operated his own sound system,
Stur-Gav, featuring Ranking Joe and selector Jah Screw. When
they left after the sound system was broken up during the
turbulent 1980 Jamaican election, it was rebuilt with new
DJs Charlie Chaplin and Josey Wales, and Inspector Willie as
selector.
U-Roy continued to record sporadically throughout the 80s,
recording "Hustling", a single for Gussie Clarke, in 1984,
and two excellent albums for DJs-turned-producers Tapper
Zukie and Prince Jazzbo, in 1986 and 1987, respectively. In
1991 he played a successful "revival" concert at the
Hammersmith Palais, London. U-Roy is the man who is
responsible for putting the DJ on the map, both as a
recording artist in Jamaica and as a major indirect
influence on the US rappers - as such, his importance is
immense.
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