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Horace Andy
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One of Jamaica's most distinguished and beloved vocalists,
Horace Andy
is blessed with one of the most distinctive voices on the island and his emotive delivery just adds further weight to his reputation. His classic recordings from the '70s remain crucial listening, while his more recent work with trip-hop heroes
Massive Attack
has introduced the singer to an entire new generation of devoted fans. Indeed,
Andy
's work has been of such consistently high caliber over the years that there's never
been a time when he wasn't releasing exceptional records.
Born
Horace Hinds
in the Allman Town neighborhood of Kingston, Jamaica, on February 19, 1951, the young star-to-be watched in awe as his elder cousin
Justin Hinds
cut a swathe across the Jamaican music scene.
Justin Hinds & the Dominoes
notched up hit after hit across the '60s, most memorably with the smash
"Carry Go Bring Come,"
later covered by Two Tone heroes
the Selector
. It was inevitable then that the younger
Hinds
would attempt to follow his cousin's meteoric path, although intriguingly he chose not to approach
Justin
's own producer,
Duke Reid
. Instead, at the age of 16 he cut his debut single for
George "Phil" Pratt
. Unfortunately,
"This Is a Black Man's Country"
did not light up the charts and the teenager spent the next few years in the shadows. In January 1970,
Hinds
showed up at Studio One to audition for labelhead
Coxsone Dodd
, this time as a duo with friend
Frank Melody
.
Dodd
wasn't keen on the pairing, but later that week,
Hinds
tried again on his own with the self-composed ballad
"Got to Be Sure,"
and this time the producer was sold. That song was cut as the singer's debut single. However, the producer was wary of releasing it under
Hinds
' own name, concerned that the family relation with
Justin
and
Horace
's similar singing style might count against the teen.
Dodd
insisted on a name change and decided to throw out a red herring by rechristening him
Horace Andy
, a tribute to the equally legendary former
Paragon
-turned-solo star
Bob Andy
.
"Got to Be Sure"
was followed up with several more singles during 1971 --
"See a Man's Face"
and
"Night Owl"
included -- with
"Fever"
and the evocative
"Mr Bassie"
arriving the next year.
Andy
was on the ascendant, but it was another recording,
"Skylarking,"
which sealed his stardom. The song was placed on the
Jamaica Today
compilation and caused such a fevered reaction at the Lord Tippertone sound system that
Dodd
quickly released it as a single, where it rocketed to the top of the Jamaican chart. From that point on, the hits rained down:
"Love of a Woman,"
"Every Tongue Shall Tell,"
a cover of
Cat Steven
's
"Where Do the Children Play,"
and the deeply devotional
"Oh Lord Why Lord,"
amongst the number. In 1972, Studio One released
Skylarking
, rounding up a clutch of
Andy
's singles and other crucial recordings from this period. Two years later, the follow-up,
Best of Horace Andy
, appeared, heavily weighted with covers but still crucial nonetheless. The Heartbeat label compiled the
Mr Bassie
album much later, which again trawls through the Studio One material but unearths a pair of previously released recordings alongside all the crucial singles.
Having reached such heady heights,
Andy
now departed Studio One, linked back up with
Phil Pratt
, and proceeded to cut such seminal songs as
"Money Is the Root of All Evil"
and
"Get Wise."
Now a fervent freelancer,
Andy
recorded with many of the island's other producers as well. He cut
"Love You to Want Me"
and
"Delilah"
with
Gussie Clarke
, the deeply dubby
"Girl I Love You"
with
Ernest and JoJo Hookim
,
"Jah Jah Children"
for
Count Shelly
,
"Lonely Woman"
for
Derrick Harriott
,
"God Is Displeased"
for
Harry J
, and covered
Tony Orlando
's
"Bless You"
for
Robbie Shakespeare
's Bar-Bell label.
Leonard Chin
was the producer responsible for
Andy
's second Jamaican number one, 1973's the infectious
"Children of Israel,"
and the singles just kept coming. He joined forces with
Niney Holness
in 1975 to cut
"Nice and Easy"
and
"I'm in Love,"
paired up with
Freddie McKay
for the duet
"Talking Love,"
and also returned to
JoJo Hookim
's side for
"Beware of a Smiling Face."
Arguably, however, some of his best work was in conjunction with producer
Bunny Lee
. The two men inaugurated their partnership with a superb re-recording of
"Skylarking"
and
"Just Say Who,"
the latter fueled by a mighty mix courtesy of
King Tubby
. The pair would create several more seminal versions of
Andy
's earlier works including
"Love of a Woman,"
"Something on My Mind,"
and
"Money Is the Root of All Evil"
(aka
"Money Money"
).
Across his career,
Andy
would revisit old songs time and time again, a practice typical of Jamaican vocalists. Almost uniquely, however, the singer's later versions invariably stand up against the originals, and no matter how many times he recuts a song,
Andy
always brings something new to it. For collectors, this is a major headache, especially when perusing compilations in search of a specific recording. But as there's no "definitive" version, for fans this is a godsend, for no matter which version one ends up with, it's never an inferior one. He's one of the only artists around that will never record a truly definitive version of any song, each, like a prism, will be another exquisite reflection. Of course,
Andy
was also recording new songs as well with
Lee
, including such classics as
"Zion Gate,"
"You Are My Angel,"
"Don't Try to Use Me,"
and
"Rasta Saw Them Coming,"
as well as equally crucial covers including
John Holt
's
"I've Got to Get Away"
and
"Serious Thing"
and
Tapper Zukie
's
"Better Collie."
The Trojan label bundled up much of the best of these cuts for
You Are My Angel
, many of which are also featured on
The Prime of Horace Andy
, released by the Music Club label in 1998. The Cleopatra label's
The Wonderful WorldoOf Horace Andy
features rarities cut with
Lee
, as well as with
Niney Holness
, amongst a handful of modern remixes and an oddly chosen cover song from the early '80s. Meanwhile, in 1974,
Andy
paired up with
Winston Jarrett
, singer with
Alton Ellis
' backing group
the Flames
, for the fabulous
Earth Must Be Hell
album.
Andy
also joined forces with a number of DJs during this period, including
Doctor Alimantado
for the classic
"Poison Flour"
single.
In 1977,
Andy
emigrated to Connecticut and immediately linked up with Hungry Town labelhead
Everton DaSilva
. The end result was the classic
In the Light
album and its equally seminal dub companion remixed by
Prince Jammy
. The pair also released a stream of excellent singles including
"Youths of Today,"
the fabulous re-recorded
"Fever,"
the guitar-laced
"Do You Love My Music,"
and
"Government Land."
Andy
next set up his own label, Rhythm, and inaugurated it with a new version of
"Don't Let Problems Get You Down."
The singer continued recording under
DaSilva
's aegis for other Rhythm singles, including
"Ital Vital,"
"Control Yourself,"
and
"Ital Vibe."
Their partnership was abruptly ended in 1979 when the producer was murdered. However,
Andy
had not been working exclusively with
DaSilva
. In 1978, he had recorded the
Pure Ranking
album for
Brad Osbourne
's Clocktower label. This seminal album not only foreshadowed the rise of raggamuffin with its title-track, but also laid the groundwork for modern dancehall.
Andy
now hooked up with the production duo
Morwells
and recorded the
"Black Cinderella"
single.
In 1980, he joined with singer
Bim Sherman
and DJ
U Black
for the
Bim Sherman Meets Horace Andy & U Black
album. That same year brought the arrival of
Andy
's
Natty Dread a Weh She Want
, brilliantly overseen by
Tappa Zukie
, which boasts such classic cuts as
"Raggamuffin,"
"Run Babylon,"
and the sweet as sugar title-track. The pair also unleashed the singles
"Revolution"
and a re-recorded
"Earth Must Be Hell
. Meanwhile,
Andy
was also working with producer
Ossie Hibbert
, for whom he cut
"Sitting on a Hillside"
that same year,
"Have You Ever Been in Love"
the next, and carried on with
"Cool and Deadly,"
"Eternal Love,"
"You Are My Angel,"
and
"Ain't No Love"
across 1983-1984.
Previous to those last singles, however, the singer went into the studio with fellow expatriate
Lloyd Barnes
for the classic
Dance Hall Style
album, which proved that
Pure Ranking
was no fluke and that
Andy
was perfectly capable of making crucial albums aimed at the dancehalls. Amongst its excellent recreations of old songs are a clutch of new numbers, including the trancey
"Spying Glass."
And just to prove the point, in 1984 he appeared on the
Prince Jammy & the Striker Lee Posse Presents Music Maker Live at the Halfway Tree Jamaica
album, which is filled with dancehall delights. The singer also released two of his own albums this same year, the
Ted Dawkins
-produced
Showcase
, which was true to its title, and
Confusion
, overseen by
Sonny Peddie
and
Jackal
.
Andy
had cut his first singles for this production duo the year before and had continued recording with them across such excellent singles as
"Walking on Ice,"
"Sweet Music,"
and the album's title-track. Come the new year, he paired with DJ
Patrick Andy
for the wittily titled
Clash of the Andys
.
Soon after,
Andy
emigrated once again, this time to London. There he signed to the Rough Trade label and released the dancehall-flavored
"Elementary."
The single titled his next album, on which he was joined by
Rhythm Queen
. The singer obviously had quickly taken the pulse of the local scene and the record reflected the country's fascination with lovers rock, but wed it to a throbbing electro beat.
Andy
dabbled in production for the first time on the single
"User,"
where he was again joined by
Rhythm Queen
. However, the singer reunited with
Prince Jammy
in 1986 and, accompanied by
Steely & Clevie
and
the Firehouse Crew
, unleashed a clutch of singles over the next couple of years including
"Come in a This,"
"Must Have to Get It,"
and
"Do Your Thing."
In 1987,
Jammy
oversaw the
Haul & Jack Up
album, absolutely sizzling with
Steely & Clevie
's rhythms.
Andy
also returned to
Bunny Lee
's side for 1986's
Reggae Superstars Meet
, an album that paired him with the equally legendary
Dennis Brown
. And, appropriately enough, he also linked with
John Holt
this same year for the
From One Extreme to Another
set. Both albums were excellent showcases for all three of the vocalists involved.
Garnet Silk
's success with his own version of
"Skylarking"
this same time was merely icing on the cake. In 1988, two new exciting albums appeared:
Everyday People
and
Shame and Scandal
.
Andy
was now regularly jetting forth between London, New York, and Kingston, with the former album recorded in the States, and the latter in Jamaica. Meanwhile, back in London, the singer had now joined forced with
DJ Tonto Irie
on the
"Bangarang"
single.
As the new decade dawned,
Andy
was contacted by a little-known Bristol band, with all of one single to their credit. Still, audacity counts for something and the rhythm the group had mailed
Andy
was so intriguing that the singer was swayed and delivered up a vocal to accompany it.
"One Love"
would hold pride of place on
Massive Attack
's
Blue Lines
debut album.
Andy
's relationship with
Massive Attack
didn't end there, of course. The group's dreamier, deeply atmospheric, and dubby songs seemed tailor-made for the singer and from then on,
Andy
has guest-starred on all of the band's albums. As
Massive Attack
's reputation quickly spread throughout the U.K. and U.S. electro-scene, so the singer was introduced to a whole new audience, many of whom were totally unaware of his recordings previous to his collaborations with the band. This is particularly ironic, especially as several of
Massive Attack
's tracks were originally
Andy
's own, including
"Spy Glass"
(aka
"Spying Glass"
from the
Protection
album) and a new, even more ominous reworking of his cover of
John Holt
's
"Man Next Door"
(aka
"I've Got to Get Away,"
found on
Mezzanine
. However,
Andy
's solo album from this time, 1993's
Rude Boy
, was notable only for the appearances of
Bunny Clarke
and
Ricky General
.
The following year found the singer cutting the
"Seek and You Will Find"
single for British producer
Dennis "Mixman" Bedeau
. That song titled his next full-length record the following year, with
Bedeau
creating an album's worth of simmering rhythms that made this set one of the most crucial U.K. reggae albums of the decade. Unfortunately, a collaboration with
Jah Shaka
,
Jah Shaka Meets Horace Andy
, was nowhere near as strong, and its dub companion
Dub Salute 1 Featuring Horace Andy
was merely unnecessary. Inevitably,
Andy
's work with
Massive Attack
brought him into the sphere of the group's sometime-collaborator
Neil "Mad Professor" Fraser
. He and
Andy
entered the studio in 1995 as well and emerged with the
"Life Is for Living"
single and an album of the same name. The pair followed through with a re-recording of
"Zion"
the next year and the
Roots and Branches
album in 1997.
Bunny Gemini
would oversee
Andy
's next set,
See and Blind
, a stunning mix of new songs and old favorites accompanied by
the Firehouse Crew
. That same year, a new recording of
"I May Never See My Baby"
arrived. 1998 was further enhanced with a new album for Bushwackies, the sublime
Horace Andy Sings Bob Marley
album. Meanwhile,
Massive Attack
had launched their own label, Melankolic, and released
Skylarking
, a compilation of
Andy
's more difficult to find hits from across his long career. This was followed at the end of the decade with an album of new material, the seminal
In the Light
.
Clive Hunt
's exceptional production, a supple bass intertwining through the ever more claustrophobic atmospheres, is the perfect backing for one of
Andy
's own most powerful performances in ages.
In 2001, the singer guest-starred on the British group
Dub Pistols
' sophomore album
"Six Million Ways to Live,"
bringing more acclaim from electro-mavens and trip-hop fans.
Andy
's seminal work has continued. ~ Jo-Ann Greene, All Music Guide
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Fan Comments
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Transonic Frequencies
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Apr 13th, 6:06am
Beautiful voice.
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Albums (30)
Download
Natty Dread A Weh She Want
(18 songs)
Download
From The Roots
(14 songs)
Download
Inspiration Information, Vol. 2
(11 songs)
Download
Feel Good All Over: Anthology 1970-1976
(46 songs)
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