Captain Sinbad

Not to be confused with the 1963 film Captain Sindbad.
Captain Sinbad
Birth name Carl Dwyer
Born c.1959
Origin Kingston, Jamaica
Genres Reggae, dancehall
Occupation(s) Deejay, record producer
Years active Late 1970spresent
Labels Greensleeves, Oak Sounds, CSA, Sinbad

Captain Sinbad was the deejay alter ego of Jamaican record producer Carl Dwyer (born c.1955).

Biography

Dwyer was born in Kingston, Jamaica, and entered the music industry as a deejay under the name Captain Sinbad on the Sound of Silence sound system, which at the time also featured Sugar Minott, with whom he recorded the "Pressure Rock" single.[1][2] Minott had been assiciated with Clement "Coxsone" Dodd's Studio One label and studio for some years and took Dwyer there to record.[1] Although he recorded two songs at Studio One, they were not released.[1] He then worked with Henry "Junjo" Lawes, and also began working as a producer himself, beginning with Little John's "A1 Sound".[3] He also recorded for Dillinger's Oak Sound label, these recordings compiled on the Again album in 1983. Although he recorded for several producers, including Minott and Linval Thompson, his debut album release was the Lawes-produced The Seven Voyages of Captain Sinbad (1982). This was followed in 1983 with a collaboration with Peter Metro and Little John on Sinbad and the Metric System.[3]

Around 1982/83 he relocated to England, where he worked with the Saxon sound system and set up his own Rockfort label, on which he released his own productions of UK artists.[1] In the late 1980s he returned to Jamaica and set up the Sinbad label, the debut release on which was "Wickedest Thing in Life" by Gospel Fish.[1] Other artists he produced included Capleton ("Two Minute Man"), Nerious Joseph, Mike Ninja, Mad Cobra ("Merciless bad Boy"), Daddy Woody, Frankie Paul ("Heart Attack") and General T.K.[1][3]

In the early 1990s he began experimenting with hip hop, with remixes of his popular rhythms on the albums Sin Badda Than Them and Gangster.[4] His productions in the 1990s included the Romantic ragga series of albums.[4]

Discography

Productions

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Larkin, p. 51
  2. Jeffries
  3. 1 2 3 Moskowitz, p. 52
  4. 1 2 Larkin, p. 52

References

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