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Jimmy
Cliff
With over 20 albums to date, Jimmy Cliff has always
been one of the brightest stars of Jamaica’s thriving musical culture and was
among first to bring reggae to a
worldwide audience. Born in St James, Jamaica, Cliff moved to Kingston as a
teenager and had his first hits, “Hurricane Hattie” and “Dearest
Beverley”, with Lesley Kong in 1963, after impressing the producer with an
impromptu a cappella performance in Kong’s ice-cream parlour. Their working
partnership continued until Kong’s death.
Together they produced some of the best known tunes of the ska era,
including “Miss Jamaica” and “King of Kings”. It was at the recording
sessions for “Miss Jamaica” that Cliff met the young Bob Marley, whom Cliff
helped record his first single “Judge Not”. Over the course of the next
decades the two went on to create modern reggae music. As
Cliff points out: “Today’s reggae music has gone through
many formulations. Originally known as ska, it has evolved to “rock steady”
to modern reggae, in its different forms”.
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1969 was the year that Cliff’s early promise was
confirmed with the international success of “Wonderful World, Beautiful
People”. Along with Jamaican artists such as Max Romeo and Desmond Dekker,
Cliff had enormous success in Britain, where “Wonderful World..” reached
number six in October. In the USA too, Cliff found an enthusiastic audience and
critical acclaim. His second single, the anti-war “Vietnam”, was described
by Bob Dylan as the best protest song he’d ever heard; Praise indeed from the
best ever protest singer. The 1970 album Wonderful World built on those
successes, and his cover of Cat Steven’s “Wild World” saw him back in the
UK top ten in August of that year, sharing chart space with Desmond Dekker’s
version of Cliff’s own “You Can Get It If You Really Want”. |
Sadly, producer Lesley Kong, who had continued to
work closely with Cliff, died of a heart attack the following year.
Before his
death Kong had been working on the soundtrack to The Harder They Come,
starring Jimmy Cliff and featuring several of his songs. Written, directed and
produced by Jamaican Perry Henzell, the film featured Cliff as Ivan, an aspiring
singer turned to a life of crime after mistreatment at the hands of an
unscrupulous record executive. As the gun-toting drug-dealing rudeboy Cliff was
an unlikely folk hero and the undoubted star of the film. The Harder They
Come was the first internationally successful Jamaican film and raised
Cliff’s profile and that of regga
The seventies saw Cliff continue to make world-class
albums, including a blistering greatest hits collection, Live – In Concert,
recorded on tour, a project overseen by Rolling Stones’ producer Andrew Loog
Oldham. By the early eighties he had formed a new band – Oneness – and
performed several US dates with former Wailer Peter Tosh. His 1983 collaboration
with Kool & The Gang resulted in the Grammy-nominated album The Power and
the Glory, an achievement bettered in 1985 when the follow-up, Cliff
Hanger, won Cliff a Grammy. Film work again gave him a huge US/UK hit with
his cover of Johnny Nash’s “I Can See Clearly Now”, featured on the
soundtrack to the 1993 Jamaican bobsleigh comedy Cool Runnings.
His vocals were also featured with Elton John’s in Disney’s
enormously successful The Lion King. He also made a return to acting
taking roles in Club Paradise with Robin Williams and Peter O’Toole,
and Marked For Death with Stephen Segal.
30 years on from The Harder They Come, (Check out the NPR Feature Report on "The Harder They Come" ) Jimmy’s music is still as relevant as ever. It’s not only reggae that bears his influence: Cliff has worked with an incredibly diverse range of artists from Erykah Badu and Elvis Costello to Annie Lennox and Wyclef. August, 2004 sees the release of Black Magic, produced by Dave Stewart. Featuring many legendary and contemporary stars, Black Magic sees appearances from Annie Lennox, Sting, Jools Holland, Kool & The Gang, tennis player Yannick Noah, Wyclef Jean and one of the last ever recordings from Joe Strummer.