Home Page
Free Newsletter
What's New
eCatalog
Audio Clips
Reviews
To Order
Payment Options
Shipping Info
Search
Profiles
About eCaroh
Things Caribbean
| |
Profiles of Caribbean Artistry
Eddie Grant - Music Icon
Introduction:
Among the biographies
written of Edmond (Eddy) Grant there is an official one and the one which
follows. We take the editor’s privilege to select the one written by Jo-Ann
Greene and published by All Music Guide. This one gives a more extensive review
of his career even though narration ends at the dawn of 2000. We had hoped to
present a version we know that is being prepared by a scholar. That version
would be expected to include Mr. Grant’s other business, social and
philanthropic contributions. Alas, we can wait no longer to have Eddy Grant’s
profile of excellence posted on our web site.
Eddy Grant has done things
differently and some of them in grand scale. He has led the way and even now in
his semi-retirement from performance he leads. Beyond the soca creation
controversy, he brought most West Indian performing artistes to a new awareness
about intellectual property rights. Few will admit it.
On the international
advertising scene his original recordings are properly licensed and aired as the
musical accompaniment for a select set of products. There is a leading edge on
that too. Eddy Grant’s voice was one of the first to be heard when major
advertisers started to shift from jingles to songs with a message. A few
international, big name artistes were approached and he was one of the few.
Advertisers are in search of authentic voices. Eddy Grant’s was one of the small
number. In many other notable respects he is one of a kind; we look forward to
other tributes but at this time we proudly present the music icon.
[eCaroh/ Ron. April 2004]
Eddy Grant stands amongst an
elite group of artists as one who has not just merely moved successfully across
the musical spectrum, but has actually been at the forefront of genres and even
created one of his own. From pop star to reggae radical, musical entrepreneur to
the inventor of Ringbang, the artist has cut a swathe through the world of music
and made it his own.
Born in Plaisance, Guyana,
on March 5, 1948, the young Edmond Grant grew up on the sound[s] of his
homeland, [which included calypso and] tan singing, an Indo-Caribbean vocal
style whose roots lay in south Asia and are the backbone of modern chutney. Then
in 1960, the Grant family emigrated to England, taking up residence in the
working class Stoke Newington area of London. The young teen's musical horizons
swiftly expanded, embracing R&B, blues, and rock that percolated across his new
island home.
In 1965, Grant formed his
first band, the Equals, and long before the days of Two Tone, the group was
unique in being the first of Britain's multiracial bands to receive any
recognition. The West Indian contingent comprised Jamaican-born singer Lincoln
Gordon, with his twin brother Derv and Grant both on guitar, while the rhythm
section of bassist Patrick Lloyd and drummer John Hall were native-born white
Englishmen. Like most of the teenaged bands roaming the capital at the time, the
Equals cut their teeth on the club and pub circuit and finally inked a label
deal with President Records in early 1967. Their debut single, "I Won't Be
There," didn't crack the charts but did receive major radio support. This,
alongside an expanding fan base wowed by their live shows, pushed their first
album, “Unequaled Equals”, into the U.K. Top Ten.
At the request of his label,
Grant had also been working with the Pyramids, the British group who had backed
Prince Buster on his recent U.K. tour. Besides composing songs for the band (and
one for Buster himself, the rude classic "Rough Rider"), Grant also produced
several tracks, including the band's debut single and sole hit, "Train to
Rainbow City." In 1968, the Equals scored their own hit with "I Get So Excited,"
the group's debut into the Top 50.
Although their follow-up
album, “Equals Explosion”, proved less successful than its predecessor, as did
the next single, the quintet's career was indeed about to explode. "Hold Me
Closer" may have disappointed in the U.K., where it stalled at a lowly number
50, but in Germany, the single was flipped over and "Baby Come Back" released as
the A-side. It swiftly soared to the top of the German charts, a feat repeated
across Europe. Later that spring, a reissued British single finally received its
just due and reached number one. Even the U.S. took notice, sending the single
into the lower reaches of the Top 40. Sadly, this turned out to be a flash in
the pan.
The Equals' follow-up
single, "Laurel and Hardy" died at number 35, its successor did even worse,
while their new album, Sensational Equals, didn't even make the charts. New hope
arrived when "Viva Bobby Joe" shot into the Top Ten in the summer of 1969, but
its follow-up, "Rub a Dub Dub," just scraped into the Top 35. Understandable,
considering the Equals roller coaster of ups and downs, Grant now turned his
attention elsewhere.
In 1970, he started up his
own specialty record label, Torpedo, concentrating on British reggae artists. He
also utilized the label as a home for a brief solo career under the alias Little
Grant, releasing the single "Let's Do It Together." But the artist hadn't given
up on the Equals yet, and good thing too. Later that year, their new 45, "Black
Skinned Blue Eyed Boys," slammed the group back into the Top Ten.
And then, the unimaginable
happened. On New Year's day in 1971, Grant, all of 23 years old, suffered a
heart attack and a collapsed lung. If lifestyle played a part, it wasn't because
he drank, took drugs, smoked, or ate meat; it was due to Grant's only vice - a
hectic schedule. He quit the group at this point and the Equals soldiered on
into the shadows without him. He sold Torpedo as well and with the proceeds
opened up his own recording studio, The Coach House, in 1972.
Grant continued to produce
other artists and release their records through his newly launched Ice label,
but his own musical talents were seemingly left behind. It wasn't until 1977
when Grant finally released a record of his own, the “Message Man” album. It was
three years in the making and a stunning about face from his previous pop
persona, even if "Black Skinned Blue Eyed Boys" had suggested a change was
imminent. Tracks like "Cockney Black," "Race Hate," and "Curfew" were
politicized dark masterpieces laced with aggression and anger.
But the album also included
some lighter moments, including "Hello Africa," which featured a sound that the
media hadn't even invented a word for yet. Grant dubbed it "kaisoul," an
amalgamation of kaiso (the traditional word for calypso) and soul. Caribbean
legend Lord Shorty, the acknowledged inventor of this new crossover hybrid,
labeled it solka. Neither term stuck, however, once the Trinidad and Tobago
press came up with their own label - soca. But regardless of what it was called,
the style was just one of many hybrids that Grant was entertaining. “Message
Man’ may have proved a commercial failure, but that didn't dim the artist's
vision for one second.
Two more years passed while
Grant wrestled with its follow-up in the studio, composing, producing, and
performing virtually the entire album himself. The end result was 1979's
“Walking on Sunshine”, one of the greatest albums of the decade. While the
B-side featured a clutch of seminal musical hybrids, the centerpiece of the
album's A-side was "Living on the Frontline," a dance floor classic that blended
tough lyrics with an electro-sheen, a sense of optimism and a funk-fired sound.
Released as a single, the song roared up the British chart, while becoming a
cult hit in U.K. clubs. Inexplicably, the album itself didn't chart at all, nor
did its follow-up, 1980's “Love in Exile”. However, in the next year, Grant
finally cracked the market wide open with “Can't Get Enough”, which finally
breached the Top 40. His singles' success had continued uninterrupted across "Do
You Feel My Love," "Can't Get Enough of You," and "I Love You, Yes I Love You."
A phenomenal live album, “Live at Notting Hill”, was recorded in August 1981
during London's Notting Hill Carnival. The following year's “Killer on the
Rampage” slew its way into both the British chart and the American, where it
landed at number ten. The album spun off "I Don't Wanna Dance," which topped the
chart in the U.K., while the exhilarating "Electric Avenue," from his next album
“Going for Broke”, landed at number two on both sides of the Atlantic.
Nothing else would equal
these dizzying heights. Three more singles followed by the end of 1984, but none
managed to break into the Top 40. In the U.S., only one, "Romancing the Stone,"
actually made the chart, charming its way into a respectable berth just outside
the Top 25. That was his final showing in the U.S. On both sides of the
Atlantic, 1987's ‘Born Tuff” and the following year's “File Under Rock” were
passed over by the record buying public. However, the British gave the artist
one last Top Ten hit in 1988 with "Gimme Hope Jo'anna," a highlight of his 1990
“Barefoot Soldier” album. Unfortunately, its 1992 follow-up, “Painting of the
Soul”, went the way of its last few predecessors.
By then, the artist had long
ago left the U.K., having emigrated to Barbados a decade earlier. Even as his
own career had taken off back in England, Grant was spending much of his time
mentoring a new generation of soca talent. He opened a new studio, Blue Wave,
and lavished most of his attention on it, which explains the gap in his output
between 1984 and 1987. By the time "Jo'anna" had fallen off the chart, Grant was
well on the way to creating his own mini-empire. Besides giving new stars-to-be
a helping hand, Grant also moved into music publishing, specializing in
calypso's legends.
Over the years, Ice has
thrilled the world by making the back catalog of multitudes of stars available,
Lord Kitchener, Roaring Lion, and Mighty Sparrow, to name a few. And almost
uniquely amongst Caribbean artists, Grant has maintained control over his own
music, and Ice, of course, has kept it available. Across Grant's solo career,
the artist has continued to experiment with different styles in ever-changing
combinations. Pop, funk, new wave, reggae, Caribbean, African, and even country
have all been melded into his sound. 1992's “Painting of the Soul” was heavy
with island influences, while the next year's “Soca Baptism” is a collection of
covers, from hits to obscurities, all dosed with a modern sound.
By this time, Grant was hard
at work in the evolution of yet another hybrid style -Ringbang. Many of the
genre's elements are easily found in the artist's earlier recordings, from
African rhythms to military tattoos, alongside soca itself and dancehall
rhythms, many of the latter influenced by Grant's own previous work. The new
style debuted in 1994 at the Barbados Crop Over festival. Since then, the style
has continued to intrigue, but has yet to create the international success that
it's always threatened. Much of this can be laid at Grant's own door, through a
simmering dispute with other artists and the legal ramifications of the genre's
trademark.
A vociferous supporter of
artists' rights, Grant first ran into trouble in 1996 when he demanded his
label's artists receive adequate copyright fees from Trinidad and Tobago’s
Carnival. A heroic stance that infuriated the festival's organizers, this was
quickly overshadowed by the public outcry over soca itself. As far as T&T was
concerned, the inventor of soca was island native Lord Shorty, who announced its
birth in 1978 with the “Soca Explosion” album. However, Grant insists otherwise,
crediting his own "Black Skinned Blue Eyed Boys" as the first-ever soca record.
Needless to say, his public
proclamations of this fact continue to infuriate T&T and other Shorty
supporters. But politics aside, the greater factor may be in Ringbang's
trademark. Once Grant filed it, the word could no longer be used by other
artists without express permission. A perusal of any soca, calypso, or chutney
hits collections shows the importance of the use of the genre term to the actual
song, and just how many titles feature the term. By preventing artists from
using the word Ringbang, few outside the Ice stable were willing to explore the
genre. Even so, Grant managed to organize the Ringbang Celebration 2000 as part
of T&T's millennium festivities. The event, which went off without a hitch,
created further ill-will due to its price tag, a whopping 41 million [TT$]
(U.S. $6.5 million). The artist himself performed two songs at the event.
In the new year, he recorded
a new version of one of them, "East Dry River" while in Jamaica, appropriately
enough in a ska style. The previous year, the artist released the “Hearts &
Diamonds” album. Grant continues to make an impact on both sides of the studio,
with his music always an intriguing concoction of sound and his studio work [is]
equally innovative. Ice itself is equally instrumental in the music world, both
in its preservation of past legacies and its attention to new artists.
~ Jo-Ann Greene, All Music
Guide
Posted May 2, 2004
|