| |
|
Anthony
B

After
blazing on to the international reggae scene in 1996 with the
incendiary single “Fire ‘Pon Rome”, dancehall
reggae artist Anthony B has been an uncompromising voice for
the oppressed and the downtrodden. Released in 1996, “Fire
‘Pon Rome’s” forthright lyrical stance, rebuking
the island’s politicians for their apathy towards the
underprivileged masses, proved too controversial in an election
year and was quickly banned from Jamaica’s airwaves.
Anthony B’s auspicious arrival on the Jamaican music scene
helped revitalized reggae as a potent medium for social agitation.
Clad in African garments with his trademark staff in hand, his
dreadlocks tightly wrapped in a turban signifying his affiliation
with the orthodox Bobo Shanti sect of Rastafari, Anthony B is
one of Jamaica’s most electrifying live performers and
thepresent embodiment of Reggae’s provocative militancy.
Anthony’s current critiques, on his new VP release “That’s
Life” which are delivered in his powerful trademark sing-jay
style (a blend of classic roots singing and modern deejaying)
retain the combustibility of “Fire ‘Pon Rome”
while embracing the struggles waged globally by divere peoples.
“Growing up in Jamaica, that was the only wisdom I got,
what I see there,” observes Anthony who has attracted
tens of thousands of fans in concert appearances throughout
Europe, Africa, North America and The Caribbean. “Travelling
the world, you see suffering is a system designed to hold people
back and all kinds of people suffer. You get to see that what
you are crying for, other people are fighting for the same cause.
That’s why music is so effective in different countries.”
Born
Keith Anthony Blair on March 31, 1976 in the rural sugar farming
community of Clarkstown located in the northwestern Jamaican parish
of Trelawny, Anthony B grew up in a deeply religious family. Singing
hymns in church (as well as giving impromptu performances on the
roadside in his community) helped Anthony refine his vocal skills.
“My mother was an Adventist and my grandmother was a Revivalist,
so I’d have to go to church both Saturday and Sunday,”
he recalls. Anthony however, chose his own spiritual path, adopting
the Rastafarian way of life as a teenager, a decision that caused
dissension among his family members. “As a youth growing
up, my grandmother say dem Rasta is a blackheart people and they
said I had to leave if I didn’t trim (cut his dreadlocks).
I wasn’t going to change so I went to live with my aunt
and uncle in Portmore (a suburb of Jamaica’s capital city
Kingston).”
While
still attending school, Anthony joined forces with other aspiring
teenage artists and began deejaying (rapping) with a local sound
system. Despite his youth, Anthony’s lyrics reflected spiritual
convictions and a strong social consciousness, a stark contrast
to the pervasive guns and girls rhymes that dominated dancehall
Reggae in the early 90s. Another deejay, Little Devon, heard Anthony’s
cultural lyrics and introduced him to producer Richard “Bello”
Bell of Star Trail Records. Bello, a Bobo Shanti Rastafarian was
also known for making uplifting records at a time when such music
opposed the prevailing trends. Bello was immediately impressed
with Anthony’s vocals and his ability to construct song
lyrics.
Anthony
recorded a succession of hits for Star Trail including “A
De Man” followed by “Hurt The Heart”, “One
Thing”, “Rumors” and the classic “Raid
The Barn”. Several of Anthony’s Star Trail singles
including “Fire ‘Pon Rome” were featured on
his critically acclaimed debut album “So Many Things”
(VP Records). Anthony’s sophomore effort for VP, 1997’s
“Universal Struggle” featured “Nah Vote Again”
which continued to lash out against “politricks”;
the deejay, however, cast his vote in a campaign to elevate Bob
Marley to status of Jamaican National Hero in the Ska flavored
“Marley Memories”. “Seven Seals” released
in 1999 by VP, adhered to Anthony’s insurrectionary route
with the profound “Mr. Heartless” “aimed at
all the Governments of the world who are not doing much to help
the sufferers” along with “Who Shoot First”
and the foreboding “Wicked People”. With each subsequent
album, Anthony’s lyrical skills grew more sophisticated
while the Bello\Star Trail productions took greater risks, incorporating
disparate influences from hard rock guitar riffs to jazzy saxophone
solos into a compelling brand of roots rock dancehall.
Several of the 16 tracks featured on Anthony B’s new 2001
release “That’s Life” (VP Records) continue
to fuel the revolutionary flames. “Fire ‘Pon The Government”
transcends the Jamaican oppressors identified in “Fire ‘Pon
Rome” and chastises systems worldwide that enforce racism
and corruption: “Haffe burn Fire Pon de Government, Mr.President
to the poor you’re negligent\pure fire burn ‘pon de
system\poor man alone turn a victim.” “That song is
coming from a vibe going through black history in America,”
Anthony comments. “In this modern time we feel racism should
be abolished, discrimination put away.” Anthony’s
razor sharp commentary continues with “Rally Round”.
The title is chanted as an empowering mantra with Anthony imploring
the youth to “rise up for the struggle, no time to sit by
the roadside and wonder\dash way the chain, release the anger,
your destiny lies over yonder.” He explains “I didn’t
set out to write something controversial but I try to write things
that are the truth, something that means something to society.
People either like it or they don’t but I’m saying
it because it needs to be said. People complain about the state
of Reggae today that it’s not uplifting but they don’t
want to put that message music forward.”
Bello
produced “Fire ‘Pon The Government”, “Mad
Dem” and the rollicking “Fire Dance” for “That’s
Life” but Anthony recruited additional producers for the
remaining 13 tracks to create “a different sort of record”.
The title track, courtesy of Bak Beat productions, employs a sparse
rhythm as Anthony recounts some of life’s vicissitudes:
“superstars get hooked on coke, man get rich, then get broke”.
Other producers contributions include New York’s Bobby Konders’
“Dust Dem Out”; Fat Eyes’ “Man Got To
Do” and Reggae group Morgan Heritage’s “Wave
Off The Cross” and “Lock The Guns Dem”, inspired
by the 1999 Columbine High School shooting. Soulful Reggae crooner
Beres Hammond produced Anthony’s smash hit “Good Life”
(on the smash “They Gonna Talk” riddim)a simple yet
effective expression of cooperation: “if it’s one
slice a bread, please let we break it”. The Bobo youth from
Trelawny also displays romantic inclinations on “Love or
Infatuation” (Bak Beat Productions) and the warmly brewed
“Black Coffee” produced by Keith Blair (a.k.a. Anthony
B).
Anthony
B is often compared to Peter Tosh, perhaps the most militant Reggae
artist Jamaica has ever produced. Anthony ranks Tosh among his
primary musical influences and pays tribute by covering Tosh’s
signature anthem “Equal Rights”. Sly and Robbie, who
played on Tosh’s 1977 “Equal Rights” album produced
the track. “When Peter Tosh sings, you can really feel it,
it sounds meaningful, convincing,” explains Anthony. “I
stand for Equal Rights and Justice, that’s why I did his
song; my music is all about love, purity, not about “downpression”,
aggression, racism, and maliciousness.”
His
latest album, “Street Knowledge” is a collection of
songs from the last year and a half that represent Anthony B.’s
best output of 7” singles that were recorded in Jamaica
with Bobby ‘Digital’ Dixon, Sheldon ‘Calibud’
Stewart, Steven ‘Lenky’ Marsden, Q 45, Anthony ‘Red
Rose’ Camron among others. Stand out tracks include “Wine
& Roses”, “God Above Everything”, “Good
Cop” and the remake of the roots reggae classic ”Two
Sevens Clash” featuring Joseph Hill A.K.A. Culture.
|