U Brown

Huford Brown (born 8 June 1956, Kingston, Jamaica), better known by the stage name U Brown, is a reggae deejay who released eleven albums between 1976 and 1984.

U Brown
Born (1956-06-08) 8 June 1956
OriginKingston, Jamaica
Genresreggae
Occupation(s)Musician
Instrumentsvocals

Biography

Brown grew up in Bond Street in Kingston, living two doors away from Duke Reid's Treasure Isle studio.[1] Heavily influenced by U-Roy, but also citing Big Youth, Dennis Alcapone, Prince Jazzbo and I-Roy as influences, Brown began his career on the Silver Bullet sound system in the early 1970s, moving on to Sound of Music and replacing U-Roy on the King Tubby's Hi-Fi system in 1975.[1][2] Brown was initially given a chance to record by Winston Edwards and then Yabby You, and had a local hit in 1976 with "Starsky and Hutch", which was followed by a series of albums produced by Bunny Lee.[1][2] He was signed to Virgin Records in the late 1970s, releasing two albums on their Front Line label. The Virgin contract enabled Brown to travel frequently to the United Kingdom, where he performed with the Unity Hi Power sound system. Brown returned to prominence in 1982, with "Tu Sheng Peng" (a version of Dennis Brown's "If This World Were Mine").

Brown set up his own Hit Sound label in 1977 as an outlet for his work as a producer.[1]

In the 1980s, Brown relocated to Miami, returning to Jamaica in 1990.[3] Blood & Fire released a compilation of Brown's 1970s work in 1997, raising his profile and leading to new recordings, working with Jah Warrior among others.

Albums

  • The Originator (1976) Carib Gems (Nuroy and U-Roy)
  • Satta Dread (1976) Klik
  • London Rock (1977) Third World
  • Revelation Time (1977) Live & Love
  • Mr Brown Something (1978) Virgin/Front Line
  • Weather Baloon [sic] (1978) Gorgon, also released as You Can't Keep a Good Man Down (1978) Virgin/Front Line
  • Repatriation (1979) Hit Sound
  • Hotter Reggae Music (1982) Tad's, also issued as Tu Sheng Peng
  • Raver's Party (1982) Trojan
  • DJ Confrontation (1982) CF (with Peter Yellow)
  • Jam It Tonight (1983) CSA, also issued as Black Princess (1999) Dressed To Kill
  • Superstar (1984) Culture Press
  • Train To Zion (1997) Blood & Fire (compilation)
  • 3 The Roots Way (2001) Krescendo (with Ranking Joe and Trinity)
  • Rougher Than The Rest (2003) Jah Warrior
  • Still Standing Strong (2002) Hit Sound
  • Rastafari Bible Belle
  • Hit Sounds From Channel One (1999) Tabou 1 (compilation)
  • The Original D.J. Sonic Sounds
  • U Brown's Hit Sound (2007) Roots (compilation)
gollark: There's probably a weird arbitrary limit.
gollark: *puts Something-claw on future names list*
gollark: Found where? The AP?
gollark: ยก?
gollark: https://dragcave.net/view/n/Semicolon

References

  1. Interview by Peter I, October 2003
  2. Larkin, Colin:"The Virgin Encyclopedia of Reggae", 1998, Virgin Books, ISBN 0-7535-0242-9
  3. Dougan, John, "allmusic biography", allmusic.com, Macrovision Corporation
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