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The Gladiators

 
Artist: The Gladiators
The Gladiators

Group Members:

Albert Griffiths, Clinton Fearon, Gallimore Sutherland, David Webber, Errol Grandison

Similar Artists:

Performed Songs By:

Formal Connection With:

Gallimore Sutherland
  • Formed: 1967
  • Genres: Reggae
  • Representative Albums: "Trench Town Mix Up," "Dreadlocks, The Time Is Now," "Bongo Red"
  • Representative Songs: "Hello Carol," "Bongo Red," "Looks Is Deceiving"

Biography

For over three decades, Albert Griffiths and his Gladiators have been a major force within Jamaican music. Born in 1946, in St. Elizabeth parish, he grew up in poverty in Trench Town, and trained as a mason. However, music beckoned, and linking with David Webber, brother of the popular Webber Sisters, the pair auditioned around the studios, but to no avail. Thus it was back to masonry, where Griffiths was now working alongside the Ethiopians' Leonard Dillon under a foreman, Leebert Robinson, also looking to enter the music industry. Griffiths convinced Robinson to fund a recording session; with the Supersonics providing accompaniment, the Ethiopians cut "Train to Skaville," backed by Griffiths' "You Are the Girl," credited to Al & the Ethiopians. "Train" was a smash, while "Girl" confirmed Griffiths' own potential.

The following year, in 1968, Griffiths and Webber joined forces with Errol Grandison, and the Gladiators were born. The trio continued recording for Robinson, whilst also branching out to cut singles for Clive Chin and Duke Reid. But it was with Coxsone Dodd that the group first tasted success, when "Hello Carol" topped the Jamaican chart in late 1968. Unfortunately, it was at this point, that Webber began exhibiting signs of serious mental illness, and while the Gladiators continued sporadically recording, it was evident that Webber was becoming increasingly incapacitated. In his stead would come country boy Clinton Fearon. Fearon had arrived in Kingston at 16, and formed the short-lived vocal group the Brothers with two friends. The Brothers went nowhere, but Fearon was serious about music, and began lessons at the music school that Griffiths was now running. By this time, the elder man was also employed as a guitarist at Studio One, where Fearon would soon join him, first as rhythm guitarist, before switching to bass. However, family commitments drew Grandison away around this same time, and the Gladiators were now reduced to a duo. During this period, at the tail end of the '60s, the pair backed the likes of Burning Spear and Stranger Cole. Eventually, however, Griffiths picked Gallimore Sutherland out of his pool of students, a youth the Gladiator had first met back during his masonry days, and the group were a trio again.

As the '70s dawned, the Gladiators continued notching up hits, including "Freedom Train" and "Rock a Man Soul," both cut for Lloyd Daley, and "The Race" for Randy's. However, across the first half of the decade, it was Studio One that released the bulk of the trio's recordings. Classic followed classic, as the trio unleashed a stream of roots masterpieces. "Roots Natty," "Bongo Red," "Jah Jah Go Before Us," and "Mr. Baldwin" were all huge hits in Jamaica, as well as storming across the British reggae underground. In 1974, Vivian "Yabby U" Jackson asked Griffiths and Fearon to provided musical backing for "Jah Vengeance," which was recorded at Lee "Scratch" Perry's Black Ark studios. Impressed, Perry employed the pair on a number of his own productions, while also producing a handful of the Gladiators' own songs, including "Time" and "Untrue Girl." Sadly, Perry and Griffiths' equally strong personalities clashed in the studio, and their partnership came to a rather abrupt end.

In 1976, the Gladiators inked a deal with Virgin Records in Britain, and began work on their label debut with producer Prince Tony Robinson. The end result was the glorious Trenchtown Mix Up album, a set stuffed with hits, phenomenal revisions of earlier Studio One numbers including "Mix Up," a re-cut of "Bongo Red," and a couple of mighty Bob Marley covers thrown in for good measure. The trio followed this masterpiece up with the equally essential Proverbial Reggae in 1978 and completed the triptych of classic albums with Naturality the following year. Sweet So Til, which arrived in 1980, was almost as good. Meanwhile, Coxsone Dodd was busily digging into the vaults, unleashing a stream of Gladiators' singles, before finally disappointing just about everyone with Presenting the Gladiators, a compilation of the group's Studio One recordings which infuriatingly omitted a clutch of crucial numbers.

Still, even as the Gladiators were virtually untouchable in Jamaica, they'd yet to really break out abroad, and thus in 1980, the trio joined with the king of crossover Eddy Grant, who oversaw the group's eponymous album. It was a major mistake, and won the group few fans, and lost them many of their older followers. Interest in reggae was fading, and back home DJs ruled the roost. Virgin soon closed the door of their reggae subsidiary Front Line, and turned their attention back to homegrown talent. By the early '80s, roots bands were expiring faster than journalists could write their obits. But the Gladiators weren't willing to call it a day yet. Now working with the U.S. reggae label Nighthawk, they unleashed two fabulous albums, 1982's Symbol of Reality, followed by Serious Thing in 1984. In 1993, Nighthawk released the equally crucial Full Time, bundling up an album's worth of recordings from this period. In 1985, the group moved to Heartbeat, where over the last half of the decade they unleashed a trio of excellent albums; Country Life arrived in 1985, In Store for You followed three years later, while their final set for the label, On the Right Track appeared in 1989. The first two albums were later reissued on CD under the title A Whole Heap.

The Gladiators continued recording high-quality albums throughout the '90s, including Valley of Decision and A True Rastaman. Even the departure of Fearon during this period could not quell the Gladiators' spirit or Griffiths' drive. The group kicked off the new millennium with the Something a Gwaan!, for the RAS label. Like the Wailers, the Gladiators vocal abilities are matched by their musical talent, making them one of the rare Jamaican groups that actually are a band in the true sense of the word. Thus, while every vocal group has its own unique sound, the Gladiators created a distinct style, one that shone forth regardless of producer. Griffiths lyrics, filled with Biblical passages and parables, is equally notable, as is his astonishing ability to take inspiration from other artists' songs. The album Father and Sons, released in 2005 on Ras/Sanctuary, finds Griffiths working with his sons, singer Al Griffiths and drummer Anthony Griffiths, and has been represented as Griffiths' farewell to his fans, with his sons taking over and continuing the Gladiators name in the future. ~ Jo-Ann Greene, All Music Guide
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The Gladiators

The Gladiators in concert in Rockstore, Montpellier, France, 20/11/06
Background information
Origin Kingston, Jamaica
Genres Roots reggae
Years active 1968 - present
Members
Albert Griffiths
Dallimore Sutherland
Alan Griffiths
Anthony Griffiths
Former members
Clinton Fearon
Errol Grandison
David Webber

The Gladiators are a Jamaican roots reggae band, most popular during the 1970s in the reggae genre later known as roots reggae. The core was Albert Griffiths (guitarist and singer)[1], Clinton Fearon (guitarist and singer) and Dallimore Sutherland bass guitar and singer. The two most famous albums are Trenchtown Mix Up (1976) and Proverbial Reggae (1978) with songs as "Hearsay", "Jah Works", "Dreadlocks the Times is Now". "Mix Up", "Music Makers from Jamaica", and "Soul Rebel" – a song written by The Wailers. Gladiators also cooperated with the famous toaster U-Roy.

Contents

Overview

Albert Griffiths, singer and guitar player was the founder of the reggae group The Gladiators. After some success with the singles "You Are The Girl" (a b-side to The Ethiopians hit record "Train to Skaville") in 1966, he recruited his childhood friends David Webber and Errol Grandison in 1968 to form the original Gladiators vocal group. The group's name was allegedly suggested by a fellow bus passenger during the time of their first recordings.[2]

The group's first major success was with the single "Hello Carol" in 1968, for producer Coxsone Dodd, which topped the Jamaican music charts. Shortly afterwards, in 1969, Webber was stricken with illness and was replaced by Clinton Fearon, one of Griffiths' proteges. Similarly Grandison left the group in 1973 for family commitments and was replaced by Dallimore Sutherland.[3]

During the early 1970s the Gladiators cut numerous records for various producers such as, Lloyd Daley and Lee Perry, but it was their recordings for Dodd at Studio One that became the biggest hits, both locally and in Britain. During this time at Studio One the Gladiators hits included "Bongo Red", "Jah Jah Go Before Us", "Mr. Baldwin", and "Roots Natty" among others.

The success of these recordings garnered the attention of Britain-based Virgin Records who gave the group their first major recording contract in 1976. Their debut full-length released on Virgin was the Tony Robinson-produced Trenchtown Mix Up (1976), which included revisions of many of their early hits and was a success in both Jamaica and in Britain. They followed this effort with Proverbial Reggae (1978). At the time Gladiators was a band with Albert Griffiths on lead guitar and vocals, Clinton Fearon on rhythm guitar and vocals, Dallimore Sutherland on bass guitar and vocals, Sly Dunbar on drums, Lloyd Parks on bass, Uziah "Sticky" Thompson on percussion, Ansel Collins on keyboards, Earl 'Wire' Lindo on synthesizer, The Mighty Two (Errol Thompson and Joe Gibbs) as engineer and mixer, and "Prince" Tony Robinson as producer.

Dodd and Studio One also released Studio One Presenting the Gladiators, (1978)[4] a compilation of some early Gladiators records released 1968 - 1974. The Gladiators next two albums on Virgins were Naturality (1978) and Sweet So Till (1979). The group's next album Gladiators was recorded at Coach House Studios in Britain with local producer Eddy Grant. It was the first Gladiators album on which no member of the group played any of the instruments, as a few members of the band Aswad were brought in. The album did much worse than their previous work and they were subsequently dropped from their contract with Virgin. Virgin would subsequently release two compilation records Vital Selection in 1981 and Dreadlocks The Time Is Now in 1983.[2]

At the time, the good years for the reggae style, later known as roots reggae, was declining. [3] A new type of reggae – based on drum machine, sampler, synthesizers and organ – occurred in the 80ies: ragga. Ragga occurred at the same time that electronic dance music's popularity was increasing globally. One of the reasons for ragga's swift propagation is that it is generally easier and less expensive to produce than reggae performed on traditional musical instruments.[5] Many of the roots artists couldn't or wouldn't change their style, but the Gladiators nevertheless released eleven studio albums in the 80ies. They soon found a home at U.S.-based Nighthawk Records and released Symbol of Reality in late 1982 followed by Serious Thing in 1984. One year later the Gladiators would change labels again, this time moving to Heartbeat Records, where they would release albums throughout the latter half of the 80's. In 1987 Fearon left the group after 18 years, but Griffiths and Sutherland have continued to release albums on various labels since then.

However, in the 90ies when next sub genre – dancehall – became popular, especially among young people in Jamaica, only few roots reggae artists survived in Jamaica. The Gladiators only released three studio albums during the 90ies. Eventually, Internet and a growing number of reggae festivals around the worrld, created new reggae fans in Europe, USA, Africa and Asia. They asked for the original reggae sound with lyrics loaded with social criticism. Groups and artists like the Gladiators, Culture, Mighty Diamonds, Bunny Wailer,. Heptones and Burning Spear got a renaissance and new reggae bands were created all around the world. The dancehall artists had to change their profile and baptized their new showmanship conscious dancehall.[6]

In 2005 the Gladiators released Fathers and Sons which has been regarded as Albert Griffiths farewell, presumably replacing himself with his sons Alan and Anthony in the future. [3]

Studio Albums

Album Release Year Label
Trenchtown Mix Up 1976 Virgin
Studio One Presenting the Gladiators 1977 Studio One
Proverbial Reggae 1978 Virgin
Naturality 1979 Virgin
Sweet So Till 1979 Virgin
Gladiators 1980 Virgin
Babylon Street 1982 Jam Rock
Back To Roots 1982 Stunt Sounds
Symbol of Reality 1982 Nighthawk
Reggae To Bone 1982 Jam Rock
Serious Thing 1984 Nighthawk
Show Down Vol. 3 w/ Don Carlos & Gold 1984 Empire
Country Living 1985 Heartbeat
Dread Prophesy w/ The Ethiopians 1986 Nighthawk
In Store For You 1988 Heartbeat
On The Right Track 1989 Heartbeat
Valley of Decision 1991 Heartbeat
A True Rastaman 1992 MPO
The Storm 1994 Riddim Mu
Something a Gwaan 2000 RAS
Once Upon A Time In Jamaica 2002 XIII Bis Records
Fathers and Sons 2005 RAS
Continuation 2009 Unknown

Compilations and live albums

Album Release Date Label
Studio One Presenting the Gladiators 1979 Studio One
Vital Selection 1981 Virgin
Gladiators By Bus 1982 Jam Rock
Live at Reggae Sunsplash w/ Israel Vibration 1982 Genes
Dreadlocks The Time Is Now 1983 Virgin
A Whole Heap 1989 Heartbeat
Full Time 1995 Nighthawk
Alive & Fighting 1997 Mediacom
At Studio One: Bongo Red 1998 Heartbeat
Sold Out 2000 M10
Live in San Francisco 2003 2B1
Europe Tour 2006: Live in Paris 2006 Unknown

Notes and references

  1. ^ He is not a relative to the reggae queen Marcia Griffiths
  2. ^ a b The Gladiators - The Story Retrieved on 2008-03-25
  3. ^ a b c allmusic.com Biography Retrieved on 2008-03-25
  4. ^ Last fm: Studion One Presenting the Gladiators
  5. ^ Allmusic: Ragga genre
  6. ^ Jamaica Gleander: Roots Reggae Revival, Jily 7, 2008.

 
 

 

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