|


Over the course
of the past two and a half
decades, Lloyd Brown has risen
to the very pinnacle of his
profession, and with a string of
hit singles and critically
acclaimed albums to his credit,
is now hailed as one of this
country’s best ever reggae
singer/songwriters.
Born and raised in London to
Jamaican parents, he began his
career in 1979 by dee-jaying in
“blues-dances” before
progressing on fully fledged
sound-systems in the early
eighties with London-based
sound-systems Marcus, Exodus and
East Man.
After taking a sabbatical in
Jamaica, he then joined vocal
harmony group Sweet Distortion,
who were voted Best Reggae
Newcomers by the readers of
Black Echoes in 1984, just prior
to their guest appearance on the BRAFA (British Reggae Artists
Famine Appeal) single, Let's
Make Africa Green Again. Led by
Lloyd’s namesake and early
source of musical inspiration,
Dennis Brown, this record helped
raised funds for Ethiopian
famine victims, and remains a
milestone of UK reggae history.
By 1987 Sweet Distortion had
successfully auditioned for the
part of the Jackson Five in the
acclaimed British musical, Black
Heroes In The Hall Of Fame, but
split up soon afterwards,
leaving Lloyd free to pursue a
solo career.
His earliest singles included
Music Medley, Ring Up My Number
and The Love In Me, all of them
released on Robert Ribs’ Unity
label circa 1987. In the
meantime, he’d started
performing more demanding roles
with Black Heroes In The Hall Of
Fame – most notably those of
Otis Redding, Marcus Garvey,
Haile Selassie and Nelson
Mandela. Sharing The Night
(produced by Junior Frost), then
provided him with his first No.
1 hit, and was voted Reggae
Single Of The Year in 1990. You
Can't Hurry Love, For The Love
Of You and Love U Down (his
second No. 1 hit, and another
Reggae Single Of The Year) soon
followed, together with a
version of Otis Redding’s These
Arms Of Mine.
Despite his success with other
people’s songs, Lloyd was
increasingly writing his own
material by this time, as
demonstrated on It's A Love
Thing, which marked the start of
his long-standing partnership
with dee-jay Tippa Irie. Their
follow-up smash hit, Stress,
caused controversy since it put
into song what many men were
thinking about their female
partners, but both singles duly
topped the UK reggae charts,
then won the duo a well deserved
contract with Arista, who
released their follow-up single,
Baby Mother (another vibrant
slice of social commentary), in
1995. An album recorded for
Arista during this period was
subsequently released as
Combination on Discotex at the
end of 2001 – Lloyd & Tippa’s
association with Arista having
ended as unexpectedly as it had
begun.
Undaunted by such
disappointments and eager to
reclaim his popularity among
grassroots reggae fans, Lloyd
began recording with leading UK
lovers’ rock producers Groove
And & Quarter, who issued his
debut album, Straight No Chaser,
in 1996. Among the many
highlights was A Mother's
Prayer, which he recorded with a
veritable Who’s Who of UK soul
and reggae talent and dedicated
to the memory of his mother,
who’d recently died of cancer.
Two other tracks, Jah Works and
Increase The Peace, offered
early evidence of the roots and
culture content he was to
showcase on his next set, Rhyme
& Reason, which he recorded for
Saxon. Prior to its release in
1998, the singles Need A
Revolution and Power Of Jah had
marked a turning point in both
his life and career. His new
head of dreadlocks illustrated
this change of direction, and he
began writing lyrics with far
more spiritual content than
before, even whilst continuing
to make sublime lovers rock hits
such as Night Shift, Blackbird
and Real Love. He named Buju's 'Til
Shiloh LP as a formative
influence during this stage of
his career, and after announcing
that the emergence of the new
cultural artists had taken
reggae to a different plane,
said he wanted to sing songs
that will uplift people. His
Saxon album thus had
transformation at its artistic
core, and with its emphasis on
self-penned material, proved a
masterly showcase of his
talents.
Once Saxon producer Lloyd
“Muscle Head” Francis had
decided to concentrate on his
sound-system, rather than
production, the durable Mr.
Brown embarked on a run of hits
for Jet Star that still shows no
sign of abating three years
later. Their most significant
triumph to date has been a
massively successful cover of
Craig David’s Fill Me In, as
included on Vol. 2 of Jet Star’s
Pop Hits In A Reggae series.
With Fill Me In getting regular
airplay in Jamaica – where Lloyd
enjoys widespread support – Jet
Star then helped further his
dominance with several other
notable single releases,
including Hook It Up, Put It
Down and Memories, which like
Humanity Part 2 (recorded for
Mikey Koos’ ARM label), is
another joyous celebration of
old school reggae vibes, and so
steeped in nostalgia, it could
bring tears to the eyes.
In-between voicing for Jet Star
and making preparations for his
starring role in yet another
musical, The Best Years Of Our
Lives (starring alongside the
great Pam Hall), Lloyd then
began work on an independent
project with former
international hit maker Bitty
McLean, who’d served his
apprenticeship with UB40. Aided
and abetted by Bitty’s
production and engineering
skills, and with his own
creative ideas going into
overdrive, Lloyd completed the
nucleus of his album Deep at
Bitty’s Platinum Suite studios
in Birmingham before adding a
choice selection of Jet Star
material into the mix. It was
the kind of album only true
craftsmen could produce. Its
dazzling range of lyrical
perceptions being matched to
some of the most enthralling,
contemporary reggae and
crossover rhythms heard all
year. I Know (inspired by Bob
Marley’s Kinky Reggae)
subsequently became one of
2001’s biggest reggae hits, even
as Deep was being acclaimed as a
masterpiece and his best album
thus far.
|

By the time the follow-up,
Against The Grain, was released
two years later his tally of hit
singles had swelled to include
You Must Know, co-starring Don
Campbell; Bless Me and the
unstoppable Main Squeeze, which
rocketed into the Reggae Top 5
on both sides of the Atlantic.
Like its predecessor, Against
The Grain was another
world-class collection,
showcasing tracks like the
popular Mr. Brown, Food For
Thought (a version of Aswad’s
Warrior Charge); he and Omar’s
stunning cover of Stevie
Wonder’s Feeding Off The Love Of
The Land and the magical Love
Within The Music, co-starring a
galaxy of UK talent. Against The
Grain was nominated for Best
Album at the 11th Annual Reggae
Soca Awards in Florida; an event
that saw Lloyd being crowned
Best Newcomer for the second
time in his career.
His
next set was Dreams To Remember,
produced by Lloyd Campbell and
released on VP Records in 2004.
This album, recorded in Miami,
yielded four hit singles in the
shape of Bless Me, Since You’ve
Been Gone, Heartaches and Bongo Nyah, which soon gave Lloyd his
second Reggae Top 5 hit in New
York. Songs like that, voiced
over Lloyd Campbell’s more
traditional style reggae
rhythms, fuelled growing demand
for his sublime vocal and
writing talents in America. Its
success prompted the release of
an album shared with Peter
Hunnigale as part of Jet Star’s
celebrated Toe 2 Toe series that
same year. Here was an album
that made artistic, as well as
commercial sense, since both
singers epitomise the best of UK
reggae music.
Three of Lloyd’s more recent
hits were included, namely Full
Hundred, No Watch Dat and the
compelling Black Bags, together
with other tracks that inspired
comparisons with reggae legend
Beres Hammond.
Red-hot form like this saw him
embark on a string of European
tour dates with Sanchez
throughout the summer of 2004,
as he continued on his journey
towards some long-overdue
international recognition.
His follow-up album for VP
Really Together featuring Fiona
was cited by Lloyd as a “true
labour of love” as Fiona was an
artist he really admired and
wanted to work with-which proved
its point in the finished
product, also with the reggae
panel of the Grammys who have
shortlisted the album for
nomination for Best Reggae Album
2005. Armed with album number 10
called Said And Done in the bag
(entirely self-produced) and his
own studio RiddimWorks
Production House, truly
demonstrated his skills as a
producer in his own right with
all he has absorbed culminating
thus far.
Further expanding his all-round
skills, Lloyd broadened his
Riddimworks “imprint” on other
projects in 2007, co-producing
fellow U.K Lovers King Michael
Gordon’s “Poems and Rhymes” set,
also U.K Lovers Queen Donna
Marie’s “Next Chapter” and
various music-video projects
showcasing his extraordinary
skills as a director, headed by
his truly cinematic offering of
“I’m Sorry” which co-stars his
peer and friend Peter Hunnigale.
His eleventh landmark release
entitled Silver, celebrates
Lloyd’s 25th year in the music
industry and has undoubtedly
stood testament in his long and
distinguished career. The
album’s opener “Show Me That You
Love Me” voiced on Tarrus
Riley’s monster hit riddim
“She’s Royal” proves that
Lloyd’s song-writing skills are
in effect and leans not solely
on the riddim to carry his
songs..far from it. When he does
put pen to paper, as on “From
The Root”, “Up To You”, the
powerful and haunting “Charcoal
Bridges” and the truly wonderful
“Seacole”, a song commissioned
by Flip Fraser to feature in the
hit musical Black Heroes In The
Hall Of Fame, and written about
nurse Mary Seacole, the quality
shines through like a beacon,
and you remember just how lucky
we are having a reggae artist
like him in our midst.
2008 saw Lloyd’s appeal grow to
a more international status,
amassing fans in Japan, North
and South America and numerous
territories. In turn, Lloyd
concentrated towards embarking
on promotional tours in the U.S,
starting off in California where
he had linked with Berkeley’s
finest “7th Street Band that
summer. The tour proved so
successful, that he was booked
speedily to tour California
again in early 2009.
In between time, Lloyd worked on
his twelfth album entitled
“Brownie Points”. This album was
a slight departure to material
he had recorded before, but
nonetheless had the unmistakable
Lloyd Brown imprint that has
been skillfully carved
throughout his career. Covers
and originals blending
beautifully to present another
concept album, headed by 12
various “Brownie Points”
describing in song his
observations and also, what
makes the man tick.
Covers such as “It Takes Two”
duet with Lovers Rock chanteuse
Sylvia Tella, Dennis Brown’s
“Ray Of Light” and Nicky Thomas’
angelic “Love Is” simply
describes what love is in
musical terms so well, that the
coldest of hearts will truly
melt to it. Originals, such as
the salsa-tinged “Loco Theng”
takes you on a heady trip to
Acapulco in the first two bars,
and “Forgive Them” duet with
friend and peer Peter Spence
takes you to the hills in
Jamaica amongst the Rasta
brethren and sistren citing
forgiveness as the way forward
for humankind.
Not being a man to rest on his
laurels….Lloyd has just released
his thirteenth album entitled
“For Your Consideration”
accompanied by his Riddimworks
Films produced music video "It's
Not About....." released thru
RiddimWorks/Cousins Records
November 2009.
Long may the works continue
~ John
Masouri
Listen to the music of Lloyd Brown
Lloyd Brown Links:
|