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Lee "Scratch" Perry

 
Black Biography: Lee "Scratch" Perry

reggae songer

Personal Information

Born Rainford Hugh Perry, March 20, 1936, in Hanover, Jamaica. First marriage to Paulette Perry ended in 1979; married Mireille Ruegg, c. 1989.

Career

Worked as an assistant, talent scout, and retail manager for the Kingston, Jamaica label "Studio One" before putting out his first solo records for them in the 1960s; later became a producer of other early reggae acts; affiliated with Amalgamated label, late 1960s; began own label, Upsetter Records, c. 1969; signed with Island Records, 1975; collaborated with a number of other artists over the years, including Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, Adrian Sherwood, and the Mad Professor.

Life's Work

Lee "Scratch" Perry is a world-music figure of near-mythic status. He has been credited with inventing the form of music that became known as reggae, its stripped-down offshoot called "dub," and the reincarnations of both decades later as drum-and-bass and other dance-club genres. Perry makes records awash in "echoes and distortions, sudden noises and disorienting absences, and they have influenced not only reggae but hip-hop, rock and all sorts of dance music," wrote Jon Pareles of the New York Times. Since the 1960s he has enjoyed success as a producer and a recording artist, but is probably better known for his wildly eccentric persona and famously bizarre pronouncements to the press. "I am an alien from the other world, from outer space, I don't have no land, no estate, no property, no house. Not on this earth. I live in space--I'm only a visitor here," Perry once reportedly said, according to a website devoted to him. "Some people are only here to collect property. I am here with my suitcase to collect only the good brains."

Perry was born in Hanover, Jamaica, in 1936. Like many rural black Jamaicans of the era, he grew up poor. "I quit school," he recalled, according to the Perry web site. "I learned nothing at all. There was nothing to do except field work, so I started playing dominoes and learned to read the minds of others. This has proved eternally useful to me." As a young man, he moved to the island's capital, Kingston, in the 1950s to find work. He was hired by Clement "Coxsone" Dodd, a well-known figure in the Kingston music scene who ran a label called Studio One. Perry began as an assistant, and worked his way up to a talent scout job. At one point he ran the label's store. Coxsone also made him a "selecter," or disk jockey, at organized ska parties; Perry's style often packed the house. Yet the music scene in Jamaica was a fierce one, and on occasion Perry and his colleagues had to battle thugs employed by Coxsone's rivals who tried to shut down the parties by force.

Perry made his first records for Studio One in the early 1960s. His backing band was the Skatalites, and he had his first hit with "Chicken Scratch" in 1965. Other tracks were done with the Soulettes, a group fronted by Bob Marley's wife, Rita Marley. These first records, which included "Prince in the Pack" and "Mad Head" among others, noted the author of an essay on Perry in the Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music, "featured a bluesy, declamatory vocal style" that became Perry's trademark. His lyrics, moreover, addressed certain issues in Jamaican life, such as political violence and social injustice. They also contained occasional sexual innuendos and scathing diatribes against his competitors in the Jamaican music scene, all themes that reappeared in his music throughout the rest of his career.

Perry left Coxsone and Studio One in 1966 after disagreements over songwriting credits and finances. He began working on his own with a young producer named Joe Gibbs and with him put out his first single, the somewhat threatening "I Am the Upsetter"--a reference to Coxsone. The "Upsetter" tag would become one of Perry's aliases. Gibbs had started a label called Amalgamated, and he hired Perry to run it. As the house producer, Perry engineered a number of hits for Jamaican acts on Amalgamated, including a song by the Pioneers called "Long Shot." "Long Shot," according to website author Mick Sleeper's biography on Perry, which he adapted from the book Reggae, Rasta, Revolution, edited by Christ Potash, "was the first song to use a new rhythm in Jamaican music." "It didn't have a name at the time," Sleeper explained, "but a year later someone christened the beat 'Reggae.'"

Perry's relationship with Gibbs broke down after a few years over questions of rights and royalties, and in 1968 he left Amalgamated and teamed with a backing band called the Hippy Boys. Perry rechristened them the Upsetters, and their first hit, "People Funny Boy," was a lyrical attack on Gibbs. By now a major player in the Jamaican music scene, Perry was able to start his own label, Upsetter Records, and on it issued around a hundred singles with both the Upsetters and other acts in only a few short years. Perry and the band loved to spend afternoons in Kingston movie houses watching spaghetti westerns, and spend all night in the recording studio. His tracks with the Upsetters reflect the on-screen violence in their titles: "Kill Them All," "The Vampire," and "Dig Your Grave," were but a few; another from this era, "Return of Django," became Perry's first top ten hit in England in 1969.

Because of "Return of Django," Perry and the Upsetters became the first reggae act to tour England. Soon, however, Bob Marley lured the Upsetters away from Perry and folded them into the Wailers, his backing band. This ignited a war of words between Marley and Perry, but Perry was mollified when Marley signed a deal for Perry to produce for the band. The resulting work from this period epitomized the reggae sound. "Although it will probably never be known who influenced who, the chemistry between Perry, Marley, the Wailers, and the Upsetters proved to be phenomenal," according to the website biography. It was a short-lived collaboration, however, dissolving in 1971 over issues of songwriting credit and money. Perry and Marley had an alleged deal between themselves to split all profits, but Perry supposedly took off with everything. This resulted in copyright lawsuits and legal problems that persisted well past Marley's death in 1981.

By this time Perry had moved to a nice section of Kingston called Washington Gardens, and at his house there built a recording studio. Finished in 1974, Perry named it "Black Ark," and it quickly became a tour-de-force in the Jamaican music scene. Breaking away from straight reggae, Perry began to head away toward far more unusual creative avenues. Much of this came from his production techniques. "Perry shot pistols, broke glass, ran tapes backwards, and used samples of crying babies, falling rain, and animal sounds," according to his biography. "Innovation and experimentation became Black Ark trademarks.... He used eccentric methods such as cleaning the tape heads with his t-shirt and blowing ganja smoke onto the master tapes as they rolled, ensuring that the music recorded in the Black Ark would have a dirty, magical quality to it that would never be surpassed."

Most astonishing to music afficionados was that much of the Black Art label recordings were done on a simple four-track mixing board (most studios are 32-track). Perry often ran several tapes at once through each one of the tracks. It resulted in "a dense, multi-layered mixing style that is instantly recognizable," noted the Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music. Others recognized its unique style, and Perry was signed to Island Records in 1975, a label founded by Chris Blackwell, a white Jamaican of British descent. Perry recorded for them as a solo artist, but also worked as their house producer. From this came a number of hit singles for other acts, such as Max Romeo's "War in a Babylon," Junior Murvin's "Police And Thieves," and "Party Time" from the Heptones. Later, the English ska/punk band the Clash covered "Police and Thieves," and Perry did some studio work with them. He also began recording with King Tubby, considered the primary force behind the birth of dub music.

Perry also continued his own experiments as a recording artist. Many of his songs from this era reflected the turbulent political situation in Jamaica, such as "City Too Hot" and other explicit anti- violence messages. Some tracks were released by Island in 1976 under aliases such as Jah Lion and Super Ape. Yet Perry's personal life took a turn for the worse in 1979, when his wife Paulette left him and took their children with her. In response, Perry set the Black Ark studio afire, completely destroying it. It was a breakdown from which he never seemed to fully recover, and with it came the onset of his famous eccentric personality. He covered the site with graffiti and small crosses, and "journalists arrived at the Black Ark to find Perry worshipping bananas, eating money, and baptizing visitors with a garden hose," his website biography noted.

Escaping Jamaica, Perry moved to Amsterdam and began recording there. He also began performing live, touring North America in 1981 with a white reggae band, the Terrorists, and the following year with another such act, the Majestics. With the latter he recorded his first album in several years, Mystic Miracle Star, released on Heartbeat in 1982. Returning to Island, Perry put out History, Mystery, and Prophecy, in 1984, but it did not do well.

In 1985 Perry once again split with his employer when he put out "Judgment in Babylon," a recording that accused his boss of various evils. "Perry's already shaky deal with the label crumbled when he swore that Island head Chris Blackwell was a vampire and responsible for Bob Marley's death," declared his biography. The accusations only intensified the legend surrounding Perry, and during these years he became a cult figure across Europe. He signed with the Trojan label, and for them released Battle of Armagideon in 1986. That same year a compilation of his earliest works was released on Heartbeat, Some of the Best (1968-1974). It featured numerous classic reggae tracks and Perry standards that helped connect American rhythm and blues with Jamaican reggae.

In 1987 Perry teamed with English producer Adrian Sherwood to make Time Boom X De Devil Dead, recorded with Sherwood's house band, Dub Syndicate. Sherwood had been greatly influenced by early Perry tracks, and the collaboration was a successful one and produced an avant-garde compilation. Perry relocated to Zurich, Switzerland in 1989 with his new wife, a Swiss woman named Mireille Ruegg who also became his manager. He also began building a studio there that he named Blue Ark. That year Heartbeat released another compilation of his early works, Chicken Scratch. The record contained tracks done with Rita Marley and the Soulettes as well as with the Wailers. Some of them had not been released in over two decades, while others had never been released at all. One track, "Man to Man," featured Perry with the legends Bob Marley and Peter Tosh singing together.

Perry grew increasing eccentric in his middle age. He is known for his unusual pronouncements: he once said that God is black, since the vinyl LP is made of black plastic. "I am the black culture man, super art, super tart, super mind," Perry told Doug Wendt from Beat magazine in one interview. "Didn't you hear the words flying like peas?" he said later. Once, he put a microphone in a palm tree to capture what he said was the "living African heartbeat," according to Pareles in the New York Times. Perry also renewed his ties with Clement Coxsone Dodd and recorded in New York, but the result, The Upsetter & The Beat, was plagued by legal problems.

Perry has continued to make his own records. As a solo artist, "his songs are cagey, cranky rants," wrote the New York Times's Pareles. "They're full of advice, messianic pronouncements, come-ons and doggerel, with lucid nuggets surrounded by malarkey." The one exception to this may be his fruitful collaborations with the English producer known as the Mad Professor, which began in the late 1980s. The Mad Professor, a Briton of Guyanan heritage named Neal Fraser and fellow studio genius, runs the Ariwa label. With him Perry has released three records, beginning with Mystic Warrior in 1989.

Perry remains a legendary figure in music. The Beastie Boys released a Lee Perry retrospective on their Grand Royal label in 1996, and in the spring of 1997 he signed on with the band's Tibetan Freedom Concert to appear in the New York benefit show. Perry's sold-out shows in San Francisco, held just prior to the Tibetan Freedom Concert, were his first American appearances in over a decade. Afterward, he embarked upon an extensive tour. A three-CD compilation released in 1997 on Island, Arkology, featured much of his successful production work for other bands in the 1970s as well as numerous unreleased tracks.

Works

Selective Discography

  • (With the Upsetters) Super Ape, Mango, 1976.
  • Roast Fish Collie Weed and Corn Bread, Jamaican Upsetters, 1976.
  • Cloak and Dagger Dutch Black Art, 1979, Anachron, 1990.
  • Scratch on the Wire, Island, 1979.
  • The Return of Pipecock Jackxon, Dutch Black Art, 1980.
  • The Upsetter Collection, Trojan, 1981.
  • Scratch and Co.: Chapter One, Jamaican Clocktower, 1982.
  • Mystic Miracle Star, Heartbeat, 1982.
  • History, Mystery and Prophecy, Mango, 1984.
  • Reggae Greats, Mango, 1984.
  • The Upsetter Box, Trojan, 1985.
  • Battle of Armagideon, Millionaire Liquidator, Trojan, 1986.
  • Some of the Best (1968-1974), Heartbeat, 1986.
  • Time Boom X De Devil Dead, On-U Sound, 1987.
  • Satan Kicked the Bucket, Bullwackies, 1988, Rohit, 1990.
  • All the Hits, Rohit, 1989.
  • Chicken Scratch, Heartbeat, 1989.
  • Build the Ark, UK Trojan, 1990.
  • From the Secret Laboratory, Mango, 1990.
  • Message from Yard, Rohit, 1990.
  • Lord God Muzick, Heartbeat, 1991.
  • Revolution Dub, Lagoon, 1993.
  • (With Mad Professor) Mystic Warrior, RAS, 1989.
  • Mystic Warrior Dub, ROIR, 1990.
  • Black Ark Experryments, Ariwa/Ras, 1995.
  • Super Ape Inna Jungle, Ariwa, 1995.
  • As Jah Lion Colombia Colly, Mango, 1976.
  • Other "Judgment in Babylon," 12-inch, 1985.
  • Arkology (3-CD set), Island, 1997.

Further Reading

Books

  • Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music, edited by Colin Larkin, Guinness Publishing, 1992.
Periodicals
  • New York Times, November 4, 1997, sec. E, p. 5.
  • People, September 22, 1997, p. 32.
Online
  • http://homepage.oanet.com/sleeper/bio.htm
  • http://www.rollingstone.com
  • Sleeper, Mick, biography of Lee Perry, http://www.leeperry.com
  • http://www.trouserpress.com

— Carol Brennan

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Artist: The Upsetters
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Group Members:

Hux Brown, Lloyd "Tinleg" Adams, Lee "Scratch" Perry, Glen Adams, Boris Gardiner, Clevie, Mikey Boo, Carlton "Carlie" Barrett, Aston Barrett

Similar Artists:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Glen Adams, Grady Gaines, Max Romeo

Formal Connection With:

  • Genres: Reggae
  • Representative Albums: "The Upsetter Collection", "The Upsetter", "Upsetting the Nation: 1969-1970
  • Representative Songs: "Return of Django", "Dollar in the Teeth", "Soulful I

Biography

Producer Lee "Scratch" Perry's longtime house band, the Upsetters appeared on some of the most legendary records in reggae history, including the early hits of the Wailers. The group was named after Perry's 1968 smash "The Upsetter," and the Upsetter tag was also applied to his record label; although the line-up was mercurial -- essentially the roster consisted of whoever was in the studio the minute the tape began to roll -- among the key Jamaican musicians who passed through the Upsetters' ranks were siblings Aston and Carlton Barrett, Sly Dunbar, Glen Adams, Winston Wright and Boris Gardiner. Despite scoring a handful of their own hits, including 1969's "Return of Django," the unit was best known as a support act, enjoying their greatest influence through the records they made during the late 1960s and early 1970s with the Wailers, including the seminal "Duppy Conqueror," "Small Axe" and "Soul Rebel." ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
Wikipedia: Lee "Scratch" Perry
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Lee "Scratch" Perry

Background information
Birth name Rainford Hugh Perry
Also known as Pipecock Jackxon
The Upsetter
Born 20 March 1936 (1936-03-20) (age 73)
Origin Kendal, Jamaica
Genres Reggae, dub, ska, rocksteady, drum and bass

Lee "Scratch" Perry (born Rainford Hugh Perry, on 20 March 1936, in Kendal, Jamaica) is a musician, who has been highly influential in the development and acceptance of reggae and dub music in Jamaica and overseas. He employs numerous pseudonyms, such as Pipecock Jackxon and The Upsetter.

Contents

Biography

Perry's musical career began in the late 1950s as a record seller for Clement Coxsone Dodd's sound system. As his sometimes turbulent relationship with Dodd developed, he found himself performing a variety of important tasks at Dodd's Studio One hit factory, going on to record nearly 30 songs for the label. Disagreements between the pair due to personality and financial conflicts, a recurring theme throughout Perry's career, led him to leave the studio and seek new musical outlets. He soon found a new home at Joe Gibbs's Amalgamated Records.

Working with Joe Gibbs, Perry continued his recording career but, once again, financial problems caused conflict. Perry broke ranks with Gibbs and formed his own label, Upsetter, in 1968. His first single "People Funny Boy", which was an insult directed at Gibbs, sold very well. It is notable for its innovative use of a sample (a crying baby) as well as a fast, chugging beat that would soon become identifiable as "reggae" (the new kind of sound which was given the name "Steppers"). From 1968 until 1972 he worked with his studio band The Upsetters. During the 1970s, Perry released numerous recordings on a variety of record labels that he controlled, and many of his songs were popular in both Jamaica and the UK. He soon became known for his innovative production techniques as well as his eccentric character.

In the early 1970s, Perry was one of the producers whose mixing board experiments resulted in the creation of dub. In 1973, Perry built a studio in his back yard, The Black Ark, to have more control over his productions and continued to produce notable musicians such as Bob Marley & the Wailers, Junior Byles, Junior Murvin, The Heptones, The Congos and Max Romeo. With his own studio at his disposal, Perry's productions became more lavish, as the energetic producer was able to spend as much time as he wanted on the music he produced. Virtually everything Perry recorded in The Black Ark was done using basic recording equipment; through sonic sleight-of-hand, Perry made it sound unique. Perry remained behind the mixing desk for many years, producing songs and albums that stand out as a high point in reggae history.

By 1978, stress and unwanted outside influences began to take their toll: both Perry and The Black Ark quickly fell into a state of disrepair. Eventually, the studio burned to the ground. Perry has constantly insisted that he burned the Black Ark himself in a fit of rage. After the demise of the Black Ark in the early 1980s, Perry spent time in England and the United States, performing live and making erratic records with a variety of collaborators. It was not until the late 1980s, when he began working with British producers Adrian Sherwood and Neil Fraser (who is better known as Mad Professor), that Perry's career began to get back on solid ground again. Perry also has attributed the recent resurgence of his creative muse to his deciding to quit drinking alcohol and smoking cannabis. Perry stated in an interview that he wanted to see if "it was the smoke making the music or Lee Perry making the music. I found out it was me and that I don't need to smoke."[1]

Perry now lives in Switzerland with his wife Mireille and two children. Although he celebrated his 70th birthday in 2006, he continues recording and performing to enthusiastic audiences in Europe and North America. His modern music is a far cry from his reggae days in Jamaica; many now see Perry as more of a performance artist in several respects. In 2003, Perry won a Grammy for Best Reggae Album with the album Jamaican E.T.. In 2004, Rolling Stone Magazine ranked Perry #100 on their list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time.[2] More recently, he teamed up with a group of Swiss musicians and performed under the name Lee Perry and the White Belly Rats, and made a brief visit to the United States using the New York City based group Dub Is A Weapon as his backing band. Currently there are two feature length movies made about his life and work: Volker Schaner's "Vision Of Paradise" and "The Upsetter" by filmmakers Ethan Higbee and Adam Bhala Lough.

After meeting Andrew W.K. at SXSW in 2006, Perry invited him to co-produce his forthcoming album Repentance. The album, released on the 19th of August 2008, on Narnack Records, features several guest artists including Moby, Ari Up of The Slits, producer Don Fleming, drummer Brian Chippendale of Lightning Bolt, bassist Josh Werner of Matisyahu, and adult entertainer Sasha Grey.

In 2008, Perry reunited with producer Adrian Sherwood on an album called The Mighty Upsetter. Unlike the dancehall/pop oriented Repentance, The Mighty Upsetter returned to the dub/reggae styles for which Perry is known. In 2009 he collaborated with Dubblestandart on their Return from Planet Dub album.

Discography

Albums


Black Ark era


Compilations

  • Chicken Scratch (produced by Coxsone Dodd) (1963-1966)
  • Reggae Greats: Lee "Scratch" Perry (1984)
  • Open The Gate (1989)
  • Upsetter Collection (1994)
  • Upsetters A Go Go (1995)
  • Introducing Lee Perry (1996)
  • Words Of My Mouth Vol.1 (The Producer Series) (1996)
  • Voodooism (Pressure Sounds) (1996)
  • Arkology (1997)
  • The Upsetter Shop Vol.1: Upsetter In Dub (1997)
  • Dry Acid (1998)
  • Lee Perry Arkive (1998)
  • Produced and Directed By The Upsetter (Pressure Sounds) (1998)
  • Lost Treasures of The Ark (1999)
  • Upsetter Shop Vol.2 1969-1973 (1999)
  • Words Of My Mouth Vol.2 (The Producer Series) (1999)
  • Words Of My Mouth Vol.3 (Live As One/The Producer Series) (2000)
  • Scratch Walking (2001)
  • Black Ark In Dub (2002)
  • Divine Madness ... Definitely (Pressure Sounds) (2002)
  • Dub Triptych (2000)
  • Trojan Upsetter Box Set (2002)
  • This is Ska and Reggae Roots (2005)
  • The Upsetter Selection - A Lee Perry Jukebox (2007)

Appearances

Films

  • Ich sende aus dem All - 16 mm, 30 min, CH/D, 1995, directed by Peter Braatz
  • The Upsetter - 90 min, 2008, directed by Ethan Higbee and Adam Bhala Lough

Videos

  • Lee Scratch Perry: The Unlimited Destruction, 2002, USA
  • Lee Scratch Perry: In Concert - The Ultimate Alien, 2003, USA
  • Lee Scratch Perry With Mad Professor, 2004, USA
  • Roots Rock Reggae - Inside the Jamaican Music Scene, 1977. Directed by Jeremy Marre.

References

Further reading

  • Katz, David (2000). People Funny Boy: The Genius of Lee Scratch Perry. Payback Press, UK. ISBN 0-86241-854-2. 
  • David Katz & Jeremy Collingwood, Give Me Power: A Complete Discography, Trax On Wax
  • Gary Simons, Super Scratch: The Almost Complete Lee Perry Discography, 1999, Secret History Books

External links


 
 

 

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