Bunny Lee

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Bunny Lee
Bunny Lee in 2007
Bunny Lee in 2007
Background information
Birth name Edward O'Sullivan Lee
Also known as Striker Lee
Born 29 August 1941 (1941-08-29) (age 66)
Genre(s) Reggae
Occupation(s) Record producer
Label(s) Dynamic, Jackpot
Associated acts The Aggrovators

Edward O'Sullivan Lee, better known as Bunny "Striker" Lee (born 29 August 1941) was a prominent, prolific and successful Jamaican record producer in the 1960s and 1970s.

Contents

[edit] Career

Lee began his career working as a record plugger for Duke Reid's Treasure Isle label in 1962,[1] later performing the same duties for Leslie Kong.[2] He then moved on to work with Ken Lack and took on engineering duties. Lee then moved into producing (i.e. financing) records himself, his first hit record coming with Roy Shirley's "Music Field" on WIRL in 1967.[1][3] Lee then set up his own Lee's label, producing hits during 1967-68 by Lester Sterling and Stranger Cole, Derrick Morgan, Slim Smith and The Uniques ("My Conversation"), Pat Kelly, and The Sensations, establishing him as one of Jamaica's top producers.[1] Between 1969 and 1972 he produced classic hits including Slim Smith's "Everybody Needs Love", Delroy Wilson's "Better Must Come", Eric Donaldson's "Cherry Oh Baby", and John Holt's "Stick By Me".[1]

Lee was a pioneer of the United Kingdom reggae market, licensing his productions to the Palmer Brothers (Pama) and Trojan Records in the early 1970s.[2]

The mid-1970s saw Lee work with his most successful singer,[2] Johnny Clarke, as well as Owen Grey and Cornell Campbell, and along with Lee "Scratch" Perry, he broke the dominance of Coxsone Dodd and Duke Reid.[1] This era also saw the emergence of the "flying cymbal" sound on Lee's productions, developed by drummer Carlton 'Santa' Davis,[2] with Lee's session band, The Aggrovators.

Lee was instrumental in producing early Dub Music, working with his friend and dub pioneer King Tubby in the early 1970s. Lee and Tubby were experimenting with new production techniques, which they called "Implements of sound."[citation needed] Working with equipment that today would be considered primitive and limiting, they produced tracks that consisted of mostly the rhythm parts mixed with distorted or altered versions of a song[4].

With all the bass and drum ting now, dem ting just start by accident, a man sing off key, an when you a reach a dat you drop out everything an leave the drum, an lick in the bass, an cause a confusion an people like it...

Lee encouraged Tubby to mix increasingly wild dubs, sometimes including sound effects such as thunder claps and gunshots.[2] In addition to King Tubby, dub mixers Prince Jammy and Philip Smart also worked extensively on Lee's productions, with most of Lee's dubs from 1976 onwards mixed by Jammy.[2]

In addition to dub sides and instrumentals, Lee would be one of the first producers to realize the potential of reusing the same rhythm tracks time and time again with different singers and deejays, [2] partly out of necessity - unlike some of the other major producers Lee did not have his own studio and had to make the most of the studio time he paid for.

The latter half of the 1970s saw Lee work with some of Jamaica's top new talent, including Linval Thompson, Leroy Smart, and Barry Brown.

By 1977 Joe Gibbs and Channel One with the Hookim Brothers became "the place to be", reducing Lee's prominence. However, during the late 1970s Lee produced almost every deejay, notably Dennis Alcapone, U Roy, I-Roy, Prince Jazzbo, U Brown, Dr. Alimantado, Jah Stitch, Trinity, and Tapper Zukie. Most of these were quick productions, usually to classic Studio One or Treasure Isle riddims. The aim was to get deejay versions on the street quickly and were usually voiced at Tubby's studio in the Waterhouse district of Kingston.

In 1982 an episode of the Channel 4 documentary series Deep Roots was dedicated to Lee. Filmed in 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, Johnnie 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. [5]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e Larkin, Colin:"The Virgin Encyclopedia of Reggae", 1998, Virgin Books, ISBN 0-7535-0242-9
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Barrow, Steve and Dalton, Peter:"Reggae: The Rough Guide", 1997, Rough Guides, ISBN 1-85828-247-0
  3. ^ Turner, Michael and Schoenfeld, Robert, Eds. "Roots Knotty Roots". Nighthawk Records.
  4. ^ "Replicant: On Dub" by David Toop; Chapter 51, Pages 355-356.
  5. ^ REGGAE NASHVILLE - Deep Roots Music 2 - Bunny Lee Story - Black Ark. screenedge.com. Retrieved on 2008-03-22.

[edit] External links

[edit] Further reading

  • Cox and Warner, eds. Audio Culture: Readings in Modern Music. Continuum: 2004. ISBN 978-0826416155.
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