Prince Far I
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Prince Far I (b. Michael James Williams, c.1944, Spanish Town, Jamaica, d. September 15, 1983, Kingston, Jamaica) was a reggae toaster and producer and a Rastafarian.
Williams' first job in the music industry was as a deejay on the Sir Mike the Musical Dragon sound system,[1] also working as a security guard at Joe Gibbs' studio, and later as a bouncer at Studio One, but after recording "The Great Booga Wooga" for Bunny Lee in 1969 (under the name King Cry Cry - a reference to his habit of breaking into tears when angered),[2][3][1] he got the chance in 1970 to record for Coxsone Dodd when King Stitt failed to turn up for a session.[4] Dodd was sufficiently impressed to release the resulting recordings,[4] Williams now using the name Prince Far I at the suggestion of another producer he had worked with, Enos McLeod).[2] With a unique deep bass voice and talking over style, preferring to describe himself as a "chanter" rather than a "toaster",[3] he became a popular reggae musician, styling himself "The Voice of Thunder". His first album, Psalms For I, featuring the Lord's Prayer and various psalms, was dedicated to the illiterate who could not read the Bible for themselves. He then worked with Joe Gibbs on the second album, Under Heavy Manners, before being signed up by Virgin Records for their Frontline label. Twelve albums followed between 1978 and 1981, including the highly regarded Cry Tuff Dub Encounter series of dub albums, produced by Williams and released on his Cry Tuff label, and featuring the Roots Radics under the pseudonym The Arabs.[3] Spending an increasing amount of time in England, he also collaborated with UK On-U Sound Records including providing vocals in the reggae collective Singers & Players and may be considered a mentor figure to Adrian Sherwood. In 1983, he was recording the album Umkhonto We Sizwe with producer Roy Cousins in Kingston. Before the album was finished, he was shot at his home during a robbery, allegedly relating to a dispute over money,[5] and died later in hospital.
He is referred to by The Clash in their single "Clash City Rockers" and also by The Mountain Goats in the song "Sept. 15th 1983", a reference to his date of death.
[edit] Discography
- Psalms For I (Carib Gems, 1975)
- Under Heavy Manners (Joe Gibbs, 1976)
- Message from the King (Virgin Front Line 1978)
- Long Life (Virgin Front Line, 1978)
- Cry Tuff Dub Encounter (Cry Tuff/Hit Run, 1978)
- Cry Tuff Dub Encounter Part 2 (Cry Tuff/Virgin Front Line, 1979)
- Free From Sin (Trojan, 1979)
- Dub To Africa (Price Far I, 1979)
- Jamaican Heroes (Trojan, 1980)
- Cry Tuff Dub Encounter Chapter 3 (Cry Tuff/Daddy Kool, 1980)
- Showcase In A Suitcase (Pre, 1980)
- Livity (Pre, 1981)
- Voice of Thunder (Trojan, 1981)
- Cry Tuff Dub Encounter Chapter 4 (Cry Tuff/Trojan, 1981)
- Musical History (Trojan, 1983)
- Musical Revue / Suns of Arqa Live with Prince Far I (1983)
- Umkhonto We Sizwe (Spear of the Nation) (Kingdom/Tamoki Wambesi 1984)
- Black Man Land (1990)
- Dubwise (1991)
- Cry Freedom Dub (1994)
- In the House of Vocal & Dub with King Tubby (1995)
- DJ Originators Head To Head Volume Two Prince Far I & Trinity (1996)
- Health & Strength (Pressure Sounds, 1998)
- Megabit 25, 1922-Dub (1998)
- Ten Commandments (1999)
- The Golden Years 1977-1983 (1999)
- Heavy Manners: Anthology 1977-83 (Trojan, 2003)
- Silver & Gold 1973-1975 (Blood and Fire, 2005)
[edit] References
- ^ a b allmusic.com biography by Jo-Ann Greene
- ^ a b Barrow, Steve & Dalton, Peter:"Reggae: The Rough Guide", 1997, Rough Guides, ISBN 1-85828-247-0
- ^ a b c Thompson, Dave:"Reggae & Caribbean Music", 2002, Backbeat Books, ISBN 0-87930-655-6
- ^ a b Larkin, Colin:"The Virgin Encyclopedia of Reggae", 1998, Virgin Books, ISBN 0-7535-0242-9
- ^ Katz, David:"Solid Foundation - An Oral History of Reggae", 2003, Bloomsbury, ISBN 0-7475-6847-2
[edit] External links
- Tribute site to Prince Far I
- Prince Far I discography
- All Music Guide biography
- Prince Far I information at unofficial On-U Sound site