Emmanuel Anebsa

Emmanuel Anebsa is a singer, songwriter and producer from the United Kingdom. He has recorded over 30 albums, all independently produced.[1][2]

Emmanuel Anebsa
Background information
Birth nameSteven Emmanuel Wilks
Born27 November 1972
OriginBristol, United Kingdom and Jamaica
GenresReggae
Years active1999-present
LabelsWontstop Record
Associated actsJunior Kelly, Earl "Chinna" Smith, Anthony B.
Websitehttp://emmanuelanebsa.com

Early life

Anebsa, born Steven Emmanuel Wilks,[1] grew up in St Pauls in Bristol in the 1970s and 1980s. He was the child of a Jamaican father, Bertram Wilks, and an English mother.[3] He was raised by his father, Bertram,[2] who was the owner of the Black and White Café in Bristol, which was his introduction to reggae music.[1] Reggae stars such as U-Roy, Big Youth and Prince Fari passed through the café, and Anebsa grew up listening to artists such as Papa Toyan, Eek-A-Mouse and Peter Metro as well as Yellow Man, Dennis Brown and Gregory Issacs.[2] He was nine years old when he came home from school to find the café being raided.[3] After frequent police raids, the café finally closed for good in 2004.[2]

Musical career

As well as recording over 30 albums, Anebsa has produced and collaborated on songs with artists such as Junior Kelly.[4] Earl "Chinna" Smith,[2] and Anthony B.[5]

Personal life

Activism

Anebsa was born Steven Emmanuel Wilks, but changed his name to Negus Emmanuel Anebsa to "release himself from Babylon bondage" and has used the name Emmanuel Anebsa professionally ever since.[2] He rejects his British background and considers himself Jamaican.[2] He considers his music a form of activism, designed to combat the "stinging crush of white oppression".[3] He traces his what he terms his "afro-consciousness" back to witnessing the police raids on his father's café, which he believes were racially motivated.[2]

Discography

Albums

  • U Gotta Believe (2000)[6]
  • It's a Shame (2001)[7]
  • Smiling (2005)[8]
  • Tears (2005)[8]
  • Brightest Night (2006)[8]
  • He loves You (2008)[8]
  • You Are The Sunshine (2008)[8]
  • Blow myself Away (2008)[8]
  • Build a Sofa (2008)[8]
  • You Can't Save Me (2008)[8]
  • To Be Humble (2008)[8]
  • Brother Faith (2009)[8]
  • With You (2009)[8]
  • Pressure Like Me (2009)[8]
  • Voix ala Guitare (2010)[8]
  • Love Them (2010)[8]
  • Mr Nobody (2010)[8]
  • Vibes (2011)[8]
  • Making Me Sick (2011)[8]
  • Shoeshine Boy (2011)[8]
  • Won't go Away (2012)[8]
  • We Got Problems (2012)[8]
  • You cause Pain (2013)[8]
  • Fighting (2016)[8]
  • Revolution (2016)[8]
  • Ghetto Beats (2016)[8]

Singles & EPs

  • Why Do I Feel This Way - EP (1999)[8]
  • Doniki - Fly to Zion - 7" (2005)[8]
  • Friends Now - EP (2008)[8]
  • Iona (2016)[8]
  • One Woman Man (2017)[8]
  • Black People (2017)[8]
  • We Wear It Well (Unknown)[8]
gollark: nesymerp1 is still active? Oh no.
gollark: Sad.
gollark: pls latex \frac1x
gollark: .
gollark: Also, that looks like a solar thermal design with all the mirrors, not the more common photovoltaic

References

  1. Limited, Jamaica Observer. "A call to Black People - Entertainment". Jamaica Observer. Retrieved 2017-03-08.
  2. "Black People by Emmanuel Anebsa". United Reggae. Retrieved 2017-03-26.
  3. "Emmanuel Anebsa sings for the oppressed". jamaica-star.com. Retrieved 2017-03-08.
  4. Emmanuel Anebsa - Topic (2017-01-14), Life Is so Confusing (feat. Junior Kelly), retrieved 2017-03-08
  5. "Wontstop Records Presents Conscious Voices by Various Artists on Apple Music". iTunes. Retrieved 2017-03-08.
  6. "U Gotta Believe by Emmanuel Anebsa on Apple Music". iTunes. Retrieved 2017-03-08.
  7. "It's a Shame by Emmanuel Anebsa on Apple Music". iTunes. Retrieved 2017-03-08.
  8. "Emmanuel Anebsa". Discogs. Retrieved 2017-03-08.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.