Tom the Great Sebastian was an early Jamaican sound system started by Tom Wong in 1950, [1] named for a trapeze performer [2] in Barnum and Bailey's circus. [3] The group has been called "the all-time giant of sound systems" [1] and helped launch several notable artists. Count Matchuki is generally credited as Tom's first deejay, [3] before he joined Coxsone Dodd, and Duke Vin was one of Tom's selectors. [3] [4] The sound was also backed by Prince Buster. [5] It was later known as Metromedia.
Tom Wong, half Chinese-Jamaican and half Afro-Jamaican, [6] owned a hardware store where he played music and got started in the music business by taking his equipment out to parties. He was "widely regarded as the leading sound system of his day," and helped popularize dancehall music and sound system dance, aided in no small part by powerful amplifiers built by fellow DJ Hedley Jones. [7] In addition to the equipment, his musical selections (many imported directly from the United States) and his originality as a DJ have been credited for his success. [1]
Tom played rhythm and blues loved by the "ghetto folk" and music intended to attract a more upper-class audience, such as merengue and calypso. [8] There are rumors that Duke Reid, a competing sound system operator who started four years after Tom and is credited with bringing gangland-style tactics to dancehall, [9] drove Tom out of the downtown area of Kingston using ruffians from the Back-O-Wall slum, but Duke Vin insists that Duke and Tom were friends and that Duke's followers never bothered Tom. The closest they came to a sound clash was a set of competing parties in adjacent yards; they never went head-to-head. [8] Tom did, however, move away from the violence of the downtown area [9] to the Silver Slipper club in the more upscale Cross Roads area, [8] a move which did not harm him financially. [10]
Tom the Great Sebastian was the most popular of the first generation of sound systems until the mid-1950s when the "big three" of sound systems rose to popularity: Coxsone Dodd's Downbeat, Duke Reid's Trojan, and King Edwards's Giant. [2] Tom Wong committed suicide in 1971. [6] After his death, the sound system was continued by Lou Gooden, who changed its name to Metromedia, after a record label. [11] In 1976 it was sold again to Haidan "Jimmy Metro" James. [12] Metromedia became one of the most popular sounds of the 1980s, featuring the deejay Peter Metro and selector Sky Juice. The sound system still operates from its Woodford Park base. [12]
In Jamaican dancehall music, a riddim is the instrumental accompaniment to a song and is synonymous with the rhythm section. Jamaican music genres that use the term consist of the riddim plus the voicing sung by the deejay. A given riddim, if popular, may be used in dozens—or even hundreds—of songs, not only in recordings but also in live performances.
Arthur "Duke" Reid CD was a Jamaican record producer, DJ and label owner.
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In Jamaican popular culture, a sound system is a group of disc jockeys, engineers and MCs playing ska, rocksteady or reggae music. The sound system is an important part of Jamaican culture and history.
The dance halls of Jamaica in the 1950s and 1960s were home to public dances usually targeted at younger patrons. Sound system operators had big home-made audio systems, spinning records from popular American rhythm and blues musicians and Jamaican ska and rocksteady performers. The term dancehall has also come to refer to a subgenre of reggae that originated around 1980.
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Socialist Roots Hi-Fi was a prominent Jamaican reggae sound system and record label owned by Tony Welch in the 1970s and early 1980s. It was originally named King Attorney. The name changed in 1976 when Welch bought the set. Regular deejays included Ranking Trevor, U Brown, Jah Mikey and Nicodemus, alongside the regular selector Danny Dreadlocks. They received dub cuts from Bob Marley & The Wailers. After 1981, the group was known as Papa Roots Hi-Fi.
Winston Sparkes, better known as King Stitt, was a Jamaican pioneer DJ.
A sound clash is a musical competition where crew members from opposing sound systems pit their skills against each other. Sound clashes take place in a variety of venues, both indoors and outdoors, and primarily feature reggae and dancehall music. The object is to beat or "kill" their competitors.
Uzziah "Sticky" Thompson was a Jamaican percussionist, vocalist and deejay active from the late 1950s. He worked with some of the best known performers of Jamaican music and played on hundreds of albums.
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Winston Cooper, better known as Count Matchuki or Count Machuki, was a Jamaican deejay.
Vincent George Forbes, better known as Duke Vin, was a Jamaican-born sound system operator and selector who operated the first sound system in the United Kingdom.
Doris Albertha Darlington was a Jamaican Maroon who owned a food shop and later a liquor store in Kingston, Jamaica, in the 1950s and 1960s. This site provided the initial space for her son Coxsone Dodd to begin playing music for customers, a practice that eventually led to his founding Studio One and becoming one of the island's key musical forces. When her son was away buying records to play on the sound system, Darlington set up and ran the sound system herself, and thus can be named one of Jamaica's first sound system operators, and a force in the development of ska, rocksteady and reggae music. Darlington also ran a record store in Jamaica, was often present at Studio One recording studios and involved in producing music in the early 1960s.
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