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OT: Rise In Power, Bunny "Striker" Lee
Posted by: jbwelda ()
Date: October 7, 2020 18:07

Fabrizio langana wrote: Today is another sad day because the great legendary jamaican producer Edward O'Sullivan Lee, better known in the entire world like BUNNY LEE passed away after battling kidney problems for the past few months has been in and out of hospital.

One of the most influential and prolific producers in reggae history, Bunny "Striker" Lee pioneered the art of the dub, expanding the parameters of studio technology like no Jamaican producer before him, he and his engineer, the equally legendary King Tubby, maximized the creative possibilities of each and every rhythm to generate a seemingly endless series of mixes spread across literally thousands of recordings. Edward O'Sullivan Lee was born in Jamaica on August 23, 1941; he entered the music industry in 1962 via his brother-in-law, the great reggae singer Derrick Morgan, landing a job as a record plugger for Duke Reid's famed Treasure Isle label. By the mid-'60s, Lee was working with Ken Lack's Caltone imprint, producing his first record, Lloyd Jackson & the Groovers' "Listen to the Beat," in 1967. His first significant hit, Roy Shirley's "Music Field," followed later that year on WIRL, and upon founding his own label, he reeled off a series of well-received sides including Morgan's "Hold You Jack," Slim Smith's "My Conversation", and Pat Kelly's "Little Boy Blue".

As the decade drew to its close, Lee was among the most successful producers in reggae, and by 1971 he was working side by side with engineer King Tubby, who almost singlehandedly invented dub by taking existing master tapes and after cutting out vocals, bringing up the basslines, and adding and subtracting other instruments creating new rhythm tracks for sound system DJs to voice over. Later adding delays, fades, and phasing to his sonic arsenal, Tubby was already renowned throughout the Jamaican music industry by the time he began collaborating with Lee, but together, the duo produced the finest music of their respective careers unlike most of his producer peers, Lee recorded his celebrated studio band the Aggrovators with Tubby's remixing skills firmly in mind, crafting deep, dense rhythms strong enough to survive even the most strenuous studio reworking, and together they unleashed some of the most enduring dub versions ever cut. At the peak of his career, essentially the period from 1969 to 1977, Lee produced thousands of records, forging a labyrinthine discography of vocal sides, DJ records, and dub versions, each disc seemingly spun off from another.

Among Lee's most influential projects was a 1974 collaboration with singer Johnny Clarke which yielded a series of roots reggae classics including "None Shall Escape the Judgement" and "Move Out of Babylon"; that same year, he also helmed Owen Grey's smash "Bongo Natty," while the 1975 Cornel Campbell hit "The Gorgon" launched a number of like-minded "Gorgon rock" records. At one time or another, Lee also worked with everyone from Jackie Edwards to Alton Ellis to Ken Boothe, and for all of his experimental instincts, he also possessed a commercial flair equal to any of his contemporaries. By the early '80s, however, Tubby was running his own studio and producing his own records, and although they continued to collaborate on occasion, both the quality and quantity of Lee's recordings began to slide; he later purchased producer Joe Gibbs' former Kingston-area studio, making a few half-hearted attempts at working with digital technology but otherwise easing into retirement as the years passed, his place in reggae history assured.

In 1982 an episode of the Channel 4 documentary series Deep Roots was dedicated to Lee. Filmed in the control room of King Tubby's studio it included a lengthy conversation with him and some of the musicians he has worked with over the years including Delroy Wilson, Johnny Clarke, Prince Jazzbo and Jackie Edwards, it then shows Lee producing a dub while Prince Jammy mixes. The program has been released on DVD in January 2008.

In 1983, Lee produced the first album by future star Beenie Man, titled "The Invincible Beany Man intitled "The 10 Year Old D.J. Wonder".
In 2008 he was awarded the Order of Distinction by the Jamaican government in recognition of his contribution to Jamaican music.
In 2013 a documentary film was released, I Am The Gorgon Bunny 'Striker' Lee and the Roots of Reggae, directed by Diggory Kenrick, telling the story of Lee's life from childhood to the present, featuring U Roy, Dennis Alcapone, Lee "Scratch" Perry, Sly and Robbie, Johnny Clarke, John Holt and others.
In March 2015 a fire at Lee's Gorgon Entertainment Studio destroyed equipment with a value estimated by Lee at JA$100 million.
Bunny Lee has one son, Errol, with singer Marlene Webber. Errol Lee runs a non-profit organisation, Caring Kids' Concerts, which mentors young people using music.

The last pictures was made in Peckings Records Shop London 2012.

Never forgotten & love forever. <3

<3 August 23 1941 <3 October 6 2020 <3


jb

Re: OT: Rise In Power, Bunny "Striker" Lee
Posted by: jbwelda ()
Date: October 8, 2020 01:15

So everyone knows Johnny Nash but no one knows the Gorgon?




He basically created what we know of as reggae and produced almost all the greats.


jb

Re: OT: Rise In Power, Bunny "Striker" Lee
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: October 8, 2020 04:44







ROCKMAN

Re: OT: Rise In Power, Bunny "Striker" Lee
Posted by: jbwelda ()
Date: October 8, 2020 07:37

I knew you would come through, Rockman.

Some of the best Bunny Lee material ever put out was reissued on the now extinct Blood and Fire label, curated by Steve Barrow. Every one was a scorcher.

jb

Re: OT: Rise In Power, Bunny "Striker" Lee
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: October 8, 2020 07:51

Yeah ....still have a lot of that Blood and Fire stuff ....



ROCKMAN

Re: OT: Rise In Power, Bunny "Striker" Lee
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: October 8, 2020 08:00




Produced by Bunny "Striker" Lee ..... classics



ROCKMAN

Re: OT: Rise In Power, Bunny "Striker" Lee
Posted by: Braincapers ()
Date: October 8, 2020 19:55

I've got his autobiography (although I confess I haven't read it yet). One of the greats



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