Just-Pics
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.

Every picture tells a story.


You are not connected. Please login or register

Tenor Saw: Icon of Reggae Dancehall Music

Go down  Message [Page 1 of 1]

cresteb

cresteb

Tenor Saw: Icon of Reggae Dancehall Music Gappy-10

Clive Bright better known as Tenor Saw, was a  dancehall singjay in the 1980s, considered one of the most influential singers of the early digital reggae era. His best-known song was the 1985 hit "Ring the Alarm" on the "Stalag 17" riddim.

Tenor Saw: Icon of Reggae Dancehall Music 51rgia10
Tenor Saw - Ring The Alarm

https://youtu.be/sv8xWW486zs

Bright had a religious upringing and sang in the Seventh-day Adventist Church of God choir in Olympic Gardens.  Seeking to make it as a recording artist, Bright approached several of Kingston's producers. After being rejected by several others, George Phang gave the youngster a chance;
 His first single, "Roll Call" was recorded in 1984 for Phang's Powerhouse label, on the "Queen Majesty" rhythm. 

Tenor Saw: Icon of Reggae Dancehall Music 61znsw10

Tenor Saw - Fever
https://youtu.be/9lq2In2M7Qk
He moved on with his friend Nitty Gritty, to work with Sugar Minott's Youth Promotion sound system and Black Roots Records label, having hits in Jamaica with "Lots of Sign", "Pumpkin Belly", "Run Come Call Me", and "Fever". His most successful single, however, was "Ring the Alarm", voiced over the "Stalag" riddim for Winston Riley's Techniques label.

Tenor Saw: Icon of Reggae Dancehall Music 49961010
Tenor Saw - Shirley Jones

https://youtu.be/sfX6DnOpojI
The singles' success saw Tenor Saw work with King Jammy, recording "Pumpkin Belly" on Jammy's (then) new "Sleng Teng" rhythm. Further hits followed in 1986 with "Golden Hen" (on the Uptempo label), and Minott issued Tenor Saw's debut album, Fever, that year.   In common with most dancehall albums of the period, most of the rhythms were digital adaptions of older tunes from the 1960s and 1970s, usually produced originally by Coxsone Dodd or Duke Reid.


Tenor Saw: Icon of Reggae Dancehall Music Cover10

Tenor Saw - Golden Hen
https://youtu.be/0uKjNLMKpyA

"Shirley Jones" is based on the "Rougher Yet" riddim (named after Keith "Slim" Smith's "Rougher Yet"), and "Eeni Meeni Mini Mo" uses the "Real Rock" riddim from Studio One, while "Roll Call" versions The Techniques' "Queen Majesty" from Duke Reid, and "Lots of Sign" uses the bassline of "Tonight" by Keith & Tex, produced by Derrick Harriott.

Tenor Saw: Icon of Reggae Dancehall Music Tumblr53



By the time the album was released, Tenor Saw had relocated to Miami, joining the Skengdon crew, where he recorded "Dancehall Feeling" and "Bad Boys". He recorded "No Work On a Sunday" for Donovan Germain, before moving to New York, where he recorded with Freddie McGregor ("Victory Train"). His last recording, "Chill Out Chill Out", was a duet with General Doggie.

Tenor Saw: Icon of Reggae Dancehall Music Singer10


In August 1988 he was killed by a motor vehicle in Houston Texas, with the official cause of death determined as a case of hit and run accident, although other sources insist that he was murdered.   He died at 21 years of age. Tenor Saw is regarded as one of the most influential singers of the early digital reggae era of the mid-1980s.

Tenor Saw: Icon of Reggae Dancehall Music Tenor-11



Tenor Saw's friends and colleagues Nitty Gritty ("Who Killed Tenor Saw?") and King Kong ("He was a Friend") both recorded tributes the year after his death.  Super Cat's song "Nuff man a Dead" is about the death of Tenor Saw and other superstars of the time.

Tenor Saw: Icon of Reggae Dancehall Music Tenor_10



The guitar riff at the beginning of Sublime's song "Greatest Hits" is the same as the one at the end of Tenor Saw's song "Golden Hen" which is in itself a version of the Junjo Lawes' riddim Diseases.
The rap group Fu-Schnickens recorded a rap cover of "Ring the Alarm" sampling the original.
Daniel Lanois' Black Dub also covered "Ring the Alarm" on their self-titled debut album.  The song "Fell, Destroyed" by Fugazi from the album Red Medicine includes the line "Ring the alarm or you're sold to dying" and the lyric sheet included with the album pays "respects to Tenor Saw". 

Tenor Saw: Icon of Reggae Dancehall Music Tenor-10


German rap group Dynamite Deluxe produced a track called "Lots of Sign", with guest-appearance Patrice singing the hookline taken of the same titled Tenor Saw song.  Hip hop crew Lifesavas from Portland use the melody and lyrics of "Fever" for a song of the same title on the Spirit in stone LP, released 2003.

Tenor Saw: Icon of Reggae Dancehall Music Hqdefa14

Independent rap artist Brother Ali samples Tenor Saw's "Ring the Alarm" in his song "Champion" from his album Shadows on the Sun.  Brooklyn MC Mos Def references "Ring the Alarm" in his single "Universal Magnetic". Big Audio Dynamite's "Rewind," from their Megatop Phoenix album, quotes "Ring the Alarm".
Tenor Saw - Ring the alarm

https://youtu.be/C4fjGwVpbm0

Back to top  Message [Page 1 of 1]

Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum