Lennie Hibbert

Lennie Hibbert OD (born Leonard Aloysius Hibbert, 12 November 1928 - 8 September 1984)[1] was a Jamaican musician who was bandmaster at the Alpha Cottage School, and also a vibraphone virtuoso, recording two albums for Studio One.

Lennie Hibbert
Birth nameLeonard Aloysius Hibbert
Born(1928-11-12)12 November 1928
Mavis Bank, Jamaica
Died8 September 1984 (1984-09-09) (aged 55)
GenresReggae, jazz
Occupation(s)Bandleader, musician
InstrumentsVibraphone, drums
Years active1940s – mid 1970s
LabelsStudio One
Associated actsSound Dimension

Biography

Hibbert was born in Mavis Bank, Jamaica in 1928. At the age of eight he began attending the Alpha School, where he joined the school band as a drummer. He left the school in 1944 and played in several small orchestras before joining the Military Band in 1946. While with the Military Band he taught himself to play the vibraphone. In 1955 he returned to Alpha as bandmaster,[2] his students including Floyd Lloyd and Vin Gordon. He worked as a live musician in jazz groups in the 1960s, and frequently worked with the Sound Dimension band, recording some of the best-known riddims for Clement "Coxsone" Dodd.[3][4] He recorded his debut solo album, Creation, for Dodd in 1969, comprising instrumentals featuring Hibbert's vibraphone playing.[5] A single from the album, "Village Soul", has been described as "simply one of the most beautiful instrumentals ever to emerge from Brentford Road".[5] A second album, More Creation, was issued in 1971.[6] Hibbert went on to work with Harry Mudie, with the "Margaret's Dream" single issued in 1974. In 1976 he was awarded the Order of Distinction (O.D.) for his contribution to music on the island and for his youth work. Hibbert died on 8 September 1984 (aged 55). He is commemorated at Alpha by the Lennie Hibbert Hall.[7] He received a posthumous "unsung hero" award from the Jamaican Reggae Industry Association (JARIA) in 2009.[8]

Hibbert was the uncle of reggae singer Junior Delgado.[9]

He also taught music at Ocho Rios Secondary school prior to his death while living in Content Gardens Ocho Rios

Discography

Albums

  • Moon-light Party at the Myrtle Bank Hotel (1961), Beach - The Lennie Hibbert Combo [10]
  • Creation (1969), Studio One
  • More Creation (1971), Studio One

Singles

  • "Pure Sole" (1967), Dr. Bird - Lennie Hibbert & Count Ossie Band
  • "Village Soul" (1969), Coxsone
  • "Montego Rock" (1971), Studio One
  • "Margaret's Dream" (1974), MHA
  • "Stick It Up" (1974), Moodisc
  • "Ital Vibes" (1974), Moodisc
  • "Far Beyond" (2001), Soul Jazz

Notes

  1. tropicmusic.com
  2. Hyatt
  3. Thompson, p. 378
  4. Barrow & Dalton, p.90
  5. Barrow & Dalton, p. 93
  6. Chapman
  7. Blowtorch
  8. Walters
  9. Katz, p. 210
  10. https://www.discogs.com/The-Lennie-Hibbert-Combo-Moonlight-Party/master/1048684
gollark: 2050: JavaScript development is conducted entirely on Google gPhones™. Hello World imports over 2000 packages, one of which is deprecated per day. Types have now been deprecated and everything is implicitly converted based on a 1000-page spec nobody ever reads. Applications take up about 50GB of space each and use about half of a recent 60GHz carbon-nanotube ARMv18 CPU's processing power. Each browser tab uses 1TB of RAM, more if it's playing videos.
gollark: For practical high-level programming, no.
gollark: Bad.
gollark: Hey, Node isn't that bad, Electron is.
gollark: Oh, no, I mean this is the extreme Andrew was asking about.

References

  • Barrow, Steve & Dalton, Peter (2004) The Rough Guide to Reggae, 3rd edn., Rough Guides, ISBN 1-84353-329-4
  • Blowtorch, Eric (2007) "Reports from Kingston, Jamaica", OnMilwaukee.com, 20 June 2007
  • Chapman, Rob (1996) Downbeat Special, private press
  • Hyatt, Cottrell "History of Alpha Boy's School", Alpha Old Boys Association
  • Katz, David (2000) People Funny Boy: the Genius of Lee "Scratch" Perry, Payback Press, ISBN 0-86241-854-2
  • Thompson, Dave (2002) Reggae & Caribbean Music, Backbeat Books, ISBN 0-87930-655-6
  • Walters, Basil (2009) "JARIA honours unsung heroes of Jamaican music", Jamaica Observer, 6 March 2009
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.