REGGAE R.I.P.s

Gone but never forgotten


WILLIE "HAGGART" MOORE, Don of Black Roses Crew

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2005 DANCEHALL QUEEN, SHANIQUE TAYLOR

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LUCKY DUBE, REGGAE LEGEND

3 August 1964 - 18 October 2007


SPRAGGA BENZ SON ALLEGEDLY MURDERED BY POLICE

(Brittany Somerset, Intrepid Reporter)

The teenage son of the legendary singer Spragga Benz, 17-year old Carlton Grant Jr., was murdered in Kingston on August 23rd (2008). He was shot, by police. There are conflicting opinions as to whether or not he was armed at the time of the shooting. All reports claim that he was shot once, while his hands were in the air, after he had surrendered to police. Allegedly he was shot a second time, execution style, after he was already down on the ground. 

Police claim the teen was carrying a pistol, and they had to give chase. Upset residents refute that claim. Whether or not he was carrying a weapon, or initially ran away from the police, once he surrendered, (stopped running, wasn't firing) he should  not have been killed in their custody.

Spragga Benz, whose real name is Carlton Grant Sr., partnered with soca starKevin Lyttle with thedancehall remix of Lyttle's track, 'Turn Me On'. Turn Me On reached #1 on the Billboard Single Chart on August 12th, 2004.

Spragga Benz was in New York at the time of his son was murdered, while his son's mother was with him in the hospital. He was driven to the hospital by police, and pronounced dead on arrival.


'Godfather of rocksteady' Alton Ellis dies

bigtings2k8/altonellisRIP.jpgReggae music pioneer Alton Ellis, known as the godfather of rocksteady, has died at the age of 70 in London, England.

Officials at Hammersmith Hospital announced Sunday morning that Ellis, who had cancer, died peacefully Friday night after he had been hospitalized for several weeks.

"His life was the music and the stage," said his manager Trish De Rosa.

"He was getting a tremendous amount of work right up to the end — it was very difficult to get him to slow down."

Ellis collapsed during a club performance in London in August and never recovered his health, according to his record company, Trojan Records.

"He was a genuinely lovely man and his songs were heartfelt," noted Laurence Cane-Honeysett, Jamaican music consultant for Trojan Records

"He was a seminal figure in terms of popularizing Jamaican reggae music.… His death is a terrible loss."

Cane-Honeysett said there's talk of Jamaica providing a state funeral, but no details have been released by Ellis's family.

Jump-started the rocksteady genre

Ellis had a string of hits in Jamaica. At the start of his career, he fronted the Flames, which had several chart toppers including Dance Crasher, I'm Just a Guy and Sunday Coming.

The performer was popular in the early days of reggae, during the late 1950s and early 1960s, recording for many Jamaican producers before launching his own All-tone label.

Ellis popularized the rocksteady genre in the mid-1960s with his song Rock Steady. Rocksteady relies on vocal harmonies and has a slower tempo and heavier bass. The style is seen as a successor to Jamaican ska, which has a quicker backbeat.

Ellis moved to Canada and then to England in the 1970s. In the past 15 years, with the revival of the rocksteady trend in Europe, he began performing again.

In 1994, he was awarded the Order of Distinction by Jamaica.

Fellow Jamaican singer Delroy Williams, a friend since the 1960s, described Ellis's voice as "the sweetest in the reggae world."

"He was very humble," he said.

"His music is the reason for a lot of babies — that's how sweet and warm and loving it is."

Ellis, who lived in the London suburb of Northolt, is survived by his wife and more than 20 children.

With files from the Associated Press