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A
N D R E W T O S H
"I've
been singing away my heart since basic school," recalls Andrew
Tosh, the slender third son of reggae legend Peter Tosh.
Born
on June 19th, 1967 in Kingston, Jamaica, Andrew seemed preordained
for a life in music, Among his earliest memories are trips to
the countryside of Westmoreland on the rural western end of the
island. There, along there lush banks of a swiftly running river,
he and his father would sing songs together - not just Peter's
militant composition, but also pop classics by the likes of Stevie
Wonder, Ray Charles, and Kenny Rogers. Andrew notes that "Peter
always knew I would do something in the music business, so he
encouraged me to study piano, 'cause he knew I loved it. From
the start it was inside me to sing and play instruments."
The first song he learned was Peter's composition, "You Can't
Blame the Youth," and from that point forward, he says "I
knew that my heartbeat was music and one day it would just be
music out of my mouth, and writing and singing my own songs."
Throughout
his elementary and high school days in Duhaney Park on the outskirt
of Kingston, Andrew was constantly pulled to the forefront of
the class and made to sing lead. At 14, in emulation of his father,
Andrew began to ride a unicycle, too. Although Peter was often
on the road, performing tours that remain to this day reggae's
most legthy and successful ones, Andrew spent much of his childhood
living in Peter's house, especially between the critical ages
of 12 and 15.
His
first recording came in 1985, when he cut a song he wrote called
"Vanity Lover" for Neville Lee's Gorgon label. A keen
observer of the vibrant music scene in Kingston, Andrew was checking
out some of the new talent at that city's famous Skateland dancehall
on the evening his father was murdered - Friday, September 11,
1987. I felt my father's spirit come right there at Skateland
where I was," he says, "and the spirit said leave that
place right now." The impact of the elder Tosh's passing
made an immediate and life-changing impression. "I tell myself
that Peter Tosh is gone and it's my need to carry on. Not for
want, and not for lust of fame and the glamour and want to be
rich. No, for the love of my art and the love of my people, because
love carry no color. Love is love and that's what Jah say, make
a joyful noise unto Me."
Ironically,
the first glimpse the public got of Andrew's nascent talent came
when he sang at his father's funeral in the National Arena in
Kingston. His version of Peter's "Jah Guide" stunned
the moumers. "I was astonished myself on stage," he
recalls. "The other song I did was "Equal Right,"
because everyone is crying our for peace but none is crying our
for justice. When I came down off stage, I couldn't stop crying."
Late
the following year, he tested the international waters with a
pair of memorable performances in Southern California, including
a show-stopping turn on the stage of Burbank's Starlight Amphitheater,
the site of the final appearance together of Bob Marley and Peter
Tosh. Was he nervous? "I felt elevension," he laughs,
engagin in some of the crafty wordplay for which his father was
notorious. "It was way beyond tension."
From
that point, Andrew began working under the guidance of keyboardist
Keith Sterling and his bandmates, Fully Fullwood and Santa Davis,
the bass and drum team from Peter's most ferocious backing group,
Wrod Sound and Power. Andrew began to tour, wowing audiences in
Europe as well as North and South America. He has been especially
successful in Brazil, where he has appeared several times in Sao
Paulo, Rio and Curtiba. His first album, Original Man, was a mixture
of his tracks and those of his father. The follow-up, Make Place
for the Youth, indicated a new maturity to his song-writing, and
was well received, earning him a Grammy nomination. Currently,
he has produced a major tribute to his father, (executive-produced
by Bunny Wailer), called Andrew Sings Tosh, scheduled for an April,
2004 release.
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