Errol Dunkley
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Errol Dunkley (born 6 February 1951),[1] sometimes spelled Erroll Dunkley, is a Jamaican reggae musician, born in Kingston, Jamaica.
Biography
Dunkley's recording career began in 1965, when he was 14, with "Gypsy" (a duet with Roy Shirley) for Linden Pottinger's Gaydisc label, "My Queen" (with Junior English) for Prince Buster, and "Love Me Forever" on the Rio label.[2] From 1967 to 1968, he recorded several singles for Joe Gibbs, including "Please Stop Your Lying" (1967) and "Love Brother" (1968), before switching to Coxsone Dodd in 1969.[2]
In the early 1970s, with Gregory Isaacs, he formed the African Museum record label.[2] Isaacs soon took sole control of the label, and Dunkley formed Silver Ring, a new label.[2] In 1972, he teamed up with producer Jimmy Radway for two of his most popular singles, "Keep the Pressure Down" and "Black Cinderella". Both tunes were re-released on Radway's Fi Me Time label in 2000, on a conscious roots-rock-revive album titled Keep the Pressure Down, with versions by Augustus Pablo, Vin Gordon, Desmond "Desi-Roots" Young, Leroy Smart, Bobby Ellis, Hortense Ellis and Big Youth.[2] The same year saw the release of Dunkley's debut album, Presenting Errol Dunkley, produced by Sonia Pottinger, which included the track "A Little Way Different".[2]
Dunkley continued to record throughout the 1970s and toward the end of the decade his popularity in the UK grew, resulting in a breakthrough UK Singles Chart hit in 1979 with "OK Fred",[2] a cover version of a song written by John Holt, that reached number 11.[3] His 1980 release "Sit Down And Cry" also reached the chart.
Dunkley re-recorded "OK Fred", his biggest hit, in 1996 with Queen Sister *N*.
Influence on Other Genres
Kenny Ken, British jungle and drum and bass DJ and producer rose to prominence with his first big track "Everyman",which was built on a version of Willi Williams' and Coxsone Dodd's foundation one drop Armagideon Time Real Rock riddim, sampling the vocal from Errol Dunkley's song, Little Way Different.[4]
Albums
- Darling Ooh (Gay Feet, 1972), also released as Presenting Errol Dunkley – (a four star AMG recommendation)[2]
- Sit and Cry Over You (Third World, 1976)
- Militant Man (Lovella International, 1980)
- Profile of Errol Dunkley aka OK Fred (Third World, 1980)
- In a Different, Different Style (Easy Street Records, 1984)
- Special Request (Carousel, 1987)[2]
- Aquarius (1989)[2]
- The Early Years (Rhino, 1995)
- Please Stop Your Lying (early Joe Gibbs recordings) (Rocky One, 1996)
- Continually (2000)
- OK Fred (The Best Of) (Trojan 2004)
- Love Is Amazing (Studio One)
- Moodie Meets Errol Dunkley (Moodie Music)
- OK Fred - Storybook Revisited - Errol Dunkley (Burning Sounds ) 2020
See also
References
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- ↑ "Errol Dunkley b'day bash on February 6", Jamaica Observer, 6 January 2018. Retrieved 17 January 2018
- ↑ a b c d e f g h i j Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Guinness Book of British Hit Singles – 16th Edition – Template:ISBN
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External links
- Errol Dunkley at AllMusic
- Reggae and Dancehall Artist Information – mini biography and discography
- Discogs website discography
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