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Carlton Livingston biography, Carlton Livingston discography
IsEmpty(a)function setActive(b)function setInactive(b)function whatInputFocus(b)else a.IsEmpty(a)function setActive(b)function setInactive(b)function whatInputFocus(b)else a.Click on the picture you want below to get the full version.Wendy Eschete Carlton are now friends.If you are not using graphics enabled BOINC client, you may use manual registration ...Carlton conference banquet July 26: DCP_2306.Ritual: Nicholas Payton Bob Belden Mysterious Shorter: Cedar Walton, Javon Jackson, Christian ...Happy New Year Comment Graphics: Jesse ...IsEmpty(a)function setActive(b)function setInactive(b)function whatInputFocus(b)else a.Welcome to 1 Carlton House Terrace The House was built in 1830 ...Ambassador of the United States, Joseph H Choate from ...The Bessemer Room on the Ground Floor was originally the ...Manhattan Hall of Fame in the Carlton ...In 1960 John Kennedy of Choate, Harvard and Palm Beach ...Retrospect is the ultimate collection of the music of Carlton Livingston, with songs from the 70s and 80s: roots, lovers rock and dancehall.Carlton livingston label, a division of Dynamite records.Carlton Livingston was born in the Parish of St Mary, Jamaica.Carlton also sans on the Church
choir at an early age.Born in September, he is a Virgo at heart.Carlton is also an avid sports fan, he enjoys playing soccer.This group went on to be
famous a BOB MARLEY and the WAILERS.Carlton and Ranger one night and
took them along with Welton Irie and Puddy Roots.Label, this results in underground hits like (Why) (Predictions) (Here I stand) this has
blossomed in the fact that Carlton has done about forty (40) recordings for the Label.TAXI LABEL (Tricks) and (Trodding) was recorded during this
period.Hot summer) was also recorded during this
period.North America with Lone Ranger, Tristan Palmer and Sammy Dread.While settling in the U.Big Blunts Volume 2), has long deserved a showcase of his underrated,
underexposed talent...Livingston's songwriting and vocal skills
are too strong for there not to be.Unfortunately, the generic cover
art of the album foreshadows the generic filler in between the solid cuts, but sifting
through them is worth the exposure to Carlton Livingston.Unforgiven (Jamadon, 2000)
Like Emotions, Unforgiven underutilizes Carlton Livingston's
talent with an uneven collection dominated by a generic dancehall sound.Johnny Was a Bad Boy
10.That Will Be the Day
12.Robbie, Jah Life or the legendary Coxson Dodd's Studio One label (LP Available).Other Sizeable hits include "Troddin' through the Jungle", "100 Lb of Collie Weed", "Itch it up Operator" or "Please Mr.Nowadays Carlton lives in the US where he keeps recording and performing for his worldwide fans.It was Lone ranger who introduced him to Clive Hunt who produced the massive hit "Rumours" (on the Dynamite Record label) which was re voiced in 1998 by Bobby Digital as a combination with Grammy Award winner Shabba Ranks.Robbie, Jah Life or the legendary Coxson Dodd's Studio One label (LP Available).Other Sizeable hits include "Troddin' through the Jungle", "100 Lb of Collie Weed", "Itch it up Operator" or "Please Mr.Nowadays Carlton lives in the US where he keeps recording and performing for his worldwide fans.Carlton Livingston is one of the many great singers from Jamaica whose undoubted talents are frequently overlooked.Carlton started with a group of singers in the Trench Town suburb of Kingston (this was a group later known as Knowledge).Lone Ranger before returning to singing again later on in that same decade.Dynamite imprint and Jah Life among others.Some twenty years back, around the time of his first albums for the Bebo label he also recorded for Studio One, one single from these sessions, "Why", was released in 1981.There is also a Studio One album completed , but unfortunately, still awaiting release.Coxsone and when his Studio One LP was expected to appear at any time.Q: Give me some of your family background and the music you were surrounded by?Ann on the north side of Jamaica.Q: So your mother taught you more or less how to do phrasing, the rudiments, or was it someone at the church the family went to?A: The early influences was the church, because it was mandatory for me to go to church on Sundays (laughs)!And there was no choice, no arguments, there's no discussion.After starting out young, after a while the choir appealed to me and I start to stand in the choir at a young age.Q: You were never a part of a band in the early days?A: Well, with the choir that was, like, late fifties.To be honest I have forgotten the name of the group.But there was one guy in the group, his name was (Anthony) Doyley, and basically he..Because I used to go to Trench Town Comprehensive High School and basically sneak away and go listen to Bob Marley down on Third Street, rehearsing in the yard.And then he decided he want to start a group and he asked me to come into the group.We usually rehearse at Excelsior high school, which is a high school that's very versatile in Jamaica.So eventually we just rehearse but we never got anywhere.Q: You never entered a competition at the time?"You know, you can sing!"Doyley came along and he really push me after the group broke up.Q: What about Soul Express?You were the deejay and he was the singer then.And then it just basically evolved into me being a singer and he the deejay, and they say "the rest is history..".Q: But how come you got into deejaying, first as harmony singer in the Trench Town group, and then a bit of deejay business?Then I start to voice one or two tracks and Ranger got back off the singing.And it was while in Soul Express that Tony Walcott discover us.You know, me, Ranger, Puddy (Roots) and Welton Irie we usually go to his house Sunday mornings and do basic rehearsal over Studio One tracks.Q: How long did you stay with him and that sound?Q: Were these people from the St.Mary area like yourself, or was it a Kingston sound?A: No, this was a Kingston sound.We usually play down there a lot.You know, soul bellfoot pants (inaudible) together.But we were never like a soul set, or like a Rasta set.We straddled both the soul and the Rasta.Because the dreads from House of Dread, which was up in Allman Town..A: We usually go to school together.We use to go to Vauxhall school, Vauxhall Junior Secondary School.And we start to build amplifiers for people and then we were like "let's build ourselves a sound".Q: What about your early, early influences or at least the music closest to your heart in the younger days, before we jump too fast into the recordings.Sam Cooke, I love his gospel set and all them other stuff.So I heard all them guys and I just sing along to them tracks.So basically my influences is Ben E.One particular track that, when I do it, I close my eyes and I remember it..To this day I have a keyboard.Cos I had a keyboard for the last couple of years.In any form it's easy to me.Because when I usually write my songs it's like sometimes..I, like: 'OK, I might make a slight change but this is the riddim that this song is matching'.That was the first record bearing your name, 1977.First person that collects that I knew about.He took me and Ranger to Channel One, and I did 'The Tale of Two Cities', and I think Ranger did something else.Waterhouse and them places, and we were from the east.It was like it was a long trip to go over there.They, who live in the west, they usually look at you and say: "Eastman cyaan do the same as Westman".And I always, before he died, I say, "Morwell, remember them days when you say that to me"?Walcott) took us up to Coxson.With Coxson now it was much more easier, to work with.Jo Jo but I know you go down with this cassette..Q: The riddim for 'Tale..And I listened about three times, and I wrote the lyrics right then and there.NOTS' label, produced by one 'L.McKenzie', at 24 McDonald Lane.That's what you call a "bogus label", but its still Channel One.McKenzie' was one of the engineers, I forgot his name..?He was the one that originally start the engineering at Channel One...A: No, it's Channel One.But that's just a label that they used, out of the way.And Chester is my friend Leon Synmoie's brother, he was there with us from the beginning too.Q: Are you familiar with the deejay piece to that riddim, 'Jah Station' by Johnny Lover?This guy up in Vermont he put it on a CD and send it to me.A: No, that's the only song I did for Channel One.Never did get around to do anything more for Channel One.And as I said the politics of Channel One was more geared to people in the west.Q: The next step was recording with Alvin Ranglin?Actually that song I did..So he asked what I think, and we end up down there to do maybe about two tracks and then we end up with the album 'Soweto'.Q: With the Revolutionaries backing.
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