Purpleman

Purpleman, aka Peter Yellow (born as Anthony Jones 4 January 1962, Waterhouse District, Kingston, Jamaica), is a Jamaican dancehall deejay. Being one of three albino deejays in the 1980s (Yellowman, Purpleman, and King Mellow Yellow), he often called himself Yellowman, and even released an album as him.

Purpleman
Also known asPeter Yellow
Born (1962-01-04) 4 January 1962
OriginWaterhouse district, Kingston, Jamaica
GenresReggae, dancehall
Occupation(s)Musician, songwriter, deejay
Years active1979–present

Biography

Purpleman deejayed with King Jammy's sound system, including performing at 'clashes' with other systems such as Youth Promotion, Arrows, Killamanjaro and Black Scorpio at the 'Shock of the Century' in 1985.[1] Purpleman's first release was an album entitled Hot In 1982. He went on to record a series of albums shared with other deejays including Yellowman, Sister Nancy, and Papa Tollo. In 2014 he made a comeback with a new album entitled "Home once more".

Albums

  • Hot (1982), Black Music/Sonic Sounds (as Peter Yellow)
  • DJ Confrontation (1982), CF – with U Brown
  • The Yellow, The Purple & The Nancy (1982), Greensleeves – with Yellowman, Fathead and Sister Nancy
  • Purpleman Saves Papa Tollo in a Dancehall (1983), Vista Sounds – with Papa Tollo
  • Laserbeam (1983), Enterprise (with Sister Candy)
  • Confessions (1983), Vista Sounds – credited to Yellowman, probably for commercial purposes
  • Showdown Vol. 5 (1982), Hitbound – with Yellowman and Fathead

Purple Man No Mash Up The Dance Hall digital download (2019), (Produce by Slikk Rikk San Diego, Ca. Video Edited by Rodney Davis.)

7" Discos

1980s

  • D&G (198X)
  • Dem A Call Mi Name (with Saramouche) (198X)

1990s

  • DJs Program(199X)

12" Discos

1970s

  • A Fe We Jah (*as Ranking Purple)

1980s

  • Water Pumpee (198X)
  • Rose Marie (198X)
  • Level Vibes (1983)
  • Keep on Working (with Cornell Campbell) (198X)
  • Get Me Mad (1980)
  • Water Pumping (1983)

1990s

  • Daddymix (1996)

References

  1. Lesser, Beth (2008) Dancehall; The Rise of Jamaican Dancehall Culture, Soul Jazz, ISBN 978-0-9554817-1-0, p. 172
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.