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Byron Lee

 
Artist: Byron Lee
  • Born: 1935
  • Died: November 04, 2008
  • Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Reggae
  • Instrument: Producer
  • Representative Albums: "Jamaica Ska & Other Jamaican Party Anthems," "Wine Miss Tiny," "Tiney Winey"
  • Representative Songs: "Jamaica Ska," "007 (Shanty Town)," "Sammy Dead"

Biography

In the years before reggae or even ska was known outside of the Caribean, Byron Lee was the first band leader to achieve an international following playing Jamaican music, and played a vital role in popularizing it around the world. And when Bob Marley was a struggling young musician and of the little-known Wailers, Byron Lee was probably the most well-known Jamaican band leader in the world.

Lee was 20 years old when he formed his band the Dragonaires in 1956. They began making a name for themselves almost immediate, as a kind of big-band equivalent to the solo Calypso singing that Harry Belafonte (and Sir Lancelot before him) brought to enormous popularity in the late 1950's. Touring behind Belafonte, they became internationally famous, and justifiably so-they played Calypso and the ska, but their musicianship was impeccable in any idiom, with a trumpet and sax section that could've passed muster with any big band, and Lee's bass playing itself was extraordinarily distinctive. With Lee leading and manager Ronnie Nasralla co-producing and handling the business arrangements, the Dragonaires made all of the right moves.

They were also lucky enough to be signed to Edward Seaga's WIRL (West Indies Recording Limited) label, which was not only a new and powerful label, but notably honest in paying its artists. Lee had a hit in 1959 with his WIRL debut, "Dumplings," which also became the first release of the British-based Bluebeat label.

One of their other shrewd moves was getting featured in the debut James Bond movie, Dr. No (1962). Largely shot in and around Kingston, the film was filled with local Jamaican color, right down to the Calypso number that closed the credits and opened the action, but Lee and the Dragonaires had the choicest spot of all as a musical showcase, playing the song "Jump Up" in the scene at Pussfeller's club where Bond and his allies discuss the mystery before them, and confront an agent of the opposition wielding a lively camera. Millions of people saw the movie, either in its initial release or on its re-release to theaters in 1964, after the success of Goldfinger, and they saw and heard Byron Lee and the Dragonaires, who were also all over the Dr. No soundtrack from United Artists, which sold in the hundreds of thousands. (The scene in which Lee and his band appear is doubly interesting from the standpoint of cultural happenstance; among the extras dancing to the band's music is a white Jamaican named Chris Blackwell, who formed Island Records about a year later-in that one scene are two of the biggest and most important entrepreneurs in Jamaican music crossing paths).

One of the first ska bands, the Dragonaires-a 14-piece outfit whose line-up was always changing (and sometimes worked under the name the Ska Kings)--toured throughout the Caribbean and into North America, spreading the ska sound. Lee opened a concert booking and promotion agency in the early 1960's, Lee Enterprises Limited, as well as his own label, Dragon's Breath. He brought American acts like the Drifters, Chuck Berry, Sam Cooke, and Fats Domino into Jamaica, booking them into the Carib and Regal Theaters, with local Jamaican acts opening for them.

Lee's big year was 1964, when he and the Dragonaires played the New York World's Fair, in their own set and backing Prince Buster, Eric Morris, and Peter Tosh. They were all a sensation at the fair, and even managed to work in some major gigs at some of Manhattan's best nightclubs. It spread their names into the gossip columns (there weren't any music columns as we know them today) and newspaper entertainment sections, and did wonders to boost Jamaica's tourism to even higher levels.

That same year, Lee made his biggest business move, buying WIRL from Edward Seaga (now a government minister, in fact the very one who had booked Lee into the World's Fair) and renaming it Dynamic Sounds Recording, Inc. He also began establishing a relationship with Ahmet Ertegun at Atlantic Records, which resulted in his first release on an American label, the multi-artist compilation Jamaican Ska, and a follow-up, Jump Up, that was all Lee and his band, and gave him the distribution rights to Atlantic's r&b releases in the Carribean.

Amid all of those business activities, Lee maintained a full performing and recording schedule, cutting singles regularly and albums at least once a year after the mid-1960's. In addition to his own singles, these frequently contained covers of other artists' ska hits of the period.

Lee was eminently successful, although in later years, he would incur the editorial wrath of writers who regarded his dance band as a pale, watered down version of ska, compared to outfits like the Skatalites, the Maytals, or the Wailers. Lee and his band, however, did more to popularize ska and Jamaican music than any performer of the 1960's. Coupled with the success in 1964 of Millie Small's Island Records single "My Boy Lollipop," which sold upwards of six million copies worldwide, it was the opening of a booming musical era for Jamaican music.

By 1969, Lee was owner of the best recording studio in Kingston, and Dynamic Sounds became the most popular recording venue in the entire Caribean. By the early 1970's, the biggest American and English rock stars had discovered its appeal, including the Rolling Stones, Paul Simon and Eric Clapton. Paul Simon's "Mother And Child Reunion," in particular, became a showcase for Lee's studio. Meanwhile, he continued making his own music, having evolved from ska to reggae and, by the late 1970s, to the soca style. For all of their supposed watered-down nature, Lee and the Dragonaires have maintained a following right into the end of the twentieth century, their Jamaican dancehall-influenced sound delighting crowds at the annual Carnival celebration. Lee and his band also cut annual collections of covers of the year's most popular Carnival hits, an extension of his early- and mid-1960's covers of ska hits. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
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Discography: Byron Lee
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Dance Party

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Christmas Party Time in the Tropics

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Christmas Party Time in the Tropics

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Jamaica's Golden Hits, Vol. 3

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Jamaica Ska & Other Jamaican Party Anthems

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Reggay Eyes

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Only a Fool

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Soca Fire Inna Jamdown Stylee

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Soca Butterfly

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Soca Bacchanal

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Dancehall Soca

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Reggae and Ska Twin Pack: Byron Lee & the Dragonaires/Ethiopians

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Reggae and Ska Twin Pack: Byron Lee and Mighty Sparrow/Black Uhuru

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Caribbean Sty-Lee

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Soft Lee, Vol. 5

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Soca Vibes

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Soca Engine

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Sexy Body

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Socarobics

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Soca Tremor

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Soca Tremor

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Carnival Fever

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No Money No Love

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Sweet Music

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Songs from Shanty Town

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Jamaica's Golden Hits, Vol. 1

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Rock Rock Steady

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Soft Lee, Vol. 4

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Ska Reggae Soca Style 1964-1996

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Dragonaires

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Soft Lee, Vol. 6

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Best of Ska: Rock Steady & Reggae, Vol. 2

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Best of Rock Steady, Vol. 3

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Best of Ska: Rock Steady & Reggae, Vol. 1

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Pop a Top Reggae

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Rock Steady Beat '67

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Jump and Wave for Jesus, Vol. 2

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Soft Lee, Vol. 8

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Jump and Wave for Jesus

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Essential

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Reggae Hot Shots 1971-1973

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Rock Steady Intensified

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Soca Royal

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Soca Thriller

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Soca Tatie

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Soca Greatest Hits

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Plays Dynamite Ska with the Jamaican All-Stars

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Soca Frenzy

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Byron Lee and Mighty Sparrow

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Byron Lee and the Dragonaires [Dressed to Kill]

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Great Jamaica Ska

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Soft Lee

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Soft Lee, Vol. 3 [Reissue]

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Soft Lee, Vol. 2

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Space Fever

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Wine Down

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Jamaica's Golden Hits, Vol. 2

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Reggae Blast Off

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Wikipedia: Byron Lee
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Byron Lee
Birth name Byron Aloysius St. Elmo Lee
Also known as The Dragon
Born 27 June 1935(1935-06-27)
Origin Christiana, Manchester, Jamaica
Died 4 November 2008 (aged 73)
Kingston, Jamaica
Genres Ska, rocksteady, reggae, calypso, soca, mas
Instruments Bass guitar
Associated acts Byron Lee and the Dragonaires
Website http://byronleemusic.com

Byron Lee OD, OJ[1] (born Byron Aloysius St. Elmo Lee, 27 June 1935, Christiana, Manchester, Jamaica, died 4 November 2008, Kingston, Jamaica) was a musician, record producer, and entrepreneur, best known for his work as leader of Byron Lee and the Dragonaires.[2]

Biography

Lee was born in Christiana in Manchester Parish to an Afro-Jamaican mother and a Chinese father (a language teacher) originally from Kowloon, Hong Kong.[2] His mother was from Auchtembeddie, where mento and junkanoo were popular musical forms, and his family actively upheld the cultural and musical traditions of their African ancestors.[2] The family moved to the Mountain View Gardens area of Kingston when Lee was around 8 or 9.[2] He learned to play piano at a convent school in Mandeville, but put music on hold when he became a member of the Jamaican national football team.[2] He taught himself to play bass on a homemade instrument, and around 1950, along with his friend Carl Brady, he formed the first incarnation of the Dragonaires, named after the college football team that they played for, at that time concentrating on mento.[3] The band turned professional in 1956 and went on to become one of Jamaica's leading ska bands, continuing since and taking in other genres such as calypso, Soca, and Mas.[3]

In late 1959 or 1960 Byron Lee is known to have introduced the electric bass to Jamaica. However, the reason Lee began to use the electric bass as opposed to its stand-up counterpart had nothing to do with sound. Rather, it was a way for Lee to avoid carrying the large and heavy stand-up bass to the truck to move from gig to gig. The bass guitar soon gained popularity throughout the country and soon became the standard. The electric bass' louder, clearer, and more in your face sound soon changed the entire sound of Jamaican music entirely, especially after Skatalites bassist Lloyd Brevett took a liking to it.

Lee also worked as a producer, producing many of the ska singles by The Maytals, and his entrepreneurial skills led to him setting up the Byron Lee's Spectacular Show tour, which involved several Jamaican acts (including The Maytals) touring the Caribbean. He also became the head of distribution in Jamaica for Atlantic Records.[3] Lee purchased the West Indies Records Limited (WIRL) recording studios from Edward Seaga after fire had destroyed the pressing plant on the same site, and renamed it Dynamic Sounds, soon having a new pressing facility built on the site. It soon became one of the best-equipped studios in the Caribbean, attracting both local and international recording artists, including Paul Simon and The Rolling Stones.[3] Lee's productions included Boris Gardiner's Reggae Happening, Hopeton Lewis's Grooving Out on Life, and The Slickers' "Johnny Too Bad".[3] Dynamic also acts as one of Jamaica's leading record distributors.

In 1990, Lee inaugurated what became an annual event, the Byron Lee Jamaica Carnival, held on Constant Spring Road, and attended by hundreds of thousands of people that united the "uptown" and "downtown" residents of Kingston, an event that Lee calls "the happiest moment in my life".[3][4][5] Lee had performed with the Dragonaires at carnivals around the Caribbean since the mid-1970s, and chose the location for the carnival to attract revellers from all of Jamaica's classes, stating "The biggest problem was that most Jamaicans said it wouldn't work, that it isn't a carnival country, but I persisted 'cause I believed in it. I wanted carnival to go to the public. You always had other carnivals that were held mostly indoor, where persons had to pay to get in. I went to the people and choose Half-Way Tree where uptown and downtown meet. That is where the route will remain".[6] While in the early days of ska, Lee was credited in taking it from the ghettos and giving it appeal among Jamaica's "uptown" middle- and upper-classes, he has been credited with taking soca in the opposite direction, popularising a genre that had previously only been enjoyed in Jamaica among the upper classes, with the island's working class.[4]

Lee missed the Jamaica Carnival in 2007 as he was receiving treatment for bladder cancer after having surgery in Florida, and no longer appeared on stage with the Dragonaires, although he was still involved in the band's management, and was involved with the festival again in 2008.[7][8] A concert was held in his honour on June 30, 2007, to celebrate his 50 years in the music industry, with artists performing including fellow cancer-survivors Myrna Hague and Pluto Shervington.[7] Proceeds went to the Jamaica Cancer Society.[5]

Lee was awarded the Order of Distinction in 1982, upgraded to Commander level on 15 October 2007, in recognition of his "contribution in the fields of Music and Entertainment both locally and internationally".[9][10]

In October 2008, after receiving treatment for several weeks in Florida, Lee returned to spend his final days in Jamaica. In a ceremony at the University Hospital of the West Indies on October 26, 2008, he was awarded the Order of Jamaica (OJ).[11] Lee died on the 4th of November 2008, aged 73.[12] In a statement on the day of Lee's death, the Prime Minister of Jamaica, Bruce Golding, said "Jamaica, and indeed the world, has lost another great music pioneer with the passing this morning of Byron Lee, one of the greatest band leaders ever to grace the entertainment stages of the world".[13]

References

  1. ^ http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20081027/lead/lead2.html
  2. ^ a b c d e Katz, David (2003) "Solid Foundation: an Oral History of Reggae", Bloomsbury, ISBN 0 7475 6847 2
  3. ^ a b c d e f Thompson, Dave (2002) "Reggae & Caribbean Music", Backbeat Books, ISBN 0-87930-655-6
  4. ^ a b O'Brien Chang, Kevin, & Chen, Wayne (1998) "Reggae Routes", Ian Randle Publishers, Jamaica, ISBN 976-8100-67-2
  5. ^ a b Ellington, Barbara (2007) "The Dragon dances for God", Jamaica Gleaner, June 24, 2007
  6. ^ Henry, Krista (2008) "Carnival has its day in the sun", Jamaica Gleaner, March 30, 2008
  7. ^ a b Edwards, Michael A. (2007) "Byron 'the Dragon' Lee's new fire", Jamaica Observer, June 22, 2007
  8. ^ Henry, Krista (2008) "The Dragon comes out of retirement", Jamaica Gleaner, February 28, 2008
  9. ^ "Byron Lee gets OJ in hospital", Jamaica Gleaner, October 27, 2008
  10. ^ http://www.jis.gov.jm/special_sections/Independence/Honours%20%20Awards1.pdf
  11. ^ "OJ For Byron Lee", Jamaica Observer, October 27, 2008
  12. ^ "Jamaica bandleader Byron Lee, 73, dies from cancer", International Herald Tribune
  13. ^ "Jamaica Has Lost Another Great Music Pioneer With the Passing of Byron Lee... Says PM Golding", Office of the Prime Minister, November 4, 2008

External links


 
 
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