Capleton, born Clifton
George Bailey III on 13 April 1967 in the parish of St Mary, Jamaica
is a reggae artist. He is also referred to as King Shango, King
David, The Fireman and The Prophet. His music label/office/home for
his direct supporters is called David House(-Productions).
 
Contents [hide]e]   
1 Early life
2 How Capleton got started
3 Capleton's place in reggae
4 His religious views
5 Criticisms
6 Discography
7 External links
[edit]
Early life
He was a very outspoken boy and became known in his community for
his profound views, especially those views which pertained to key
issues of the time: social injustice and African peoples. His
relatives and friends were very surprised by young Clifton and
bestowed on him the surname of popular Jamaican lawyer of the era,
Capleton.
Capleton believes that he was musically inclined from his youth. He
felt as if it was the manifestation of Jah that made him choose a
career in music. His main early musical influences were Bob Marley,
Bunny Wailer and Peter Tosh. At that time, Papa San was his favorite
DJ because he liked the length of his lyrics and it inspired him to
create longer lyrics for his own songs.
[edit]
How Capleton got started
In 1989 he got his first big international exposure. Stewart Brown,
owner of a Toronto-based sound called African Star, gave the
untested artist his first break, flying him to Canada for a stage
show alongside giants like Ninjaman and Flourgan. The appreciation
of the audience inspired Capleton; he never looked back.
When Capleton first arrived on the scene in the late 1980s, the
dancehall was a very different place than it is today. Slackness and
gun talk were the order of the day. The present day Rasta Capleton
announced his promising arrival with a string of hit songs from "Bumbo
Red" to "Number One on the Look Good Chart" and "Lotion Man".
Everything he touched hit the charts, and established himself as a
Dancehall hitmaker.
On his return to Jamaica he did the song that began to establish his
significant place in Dancehall, "Alms House" in 1992. The tune
became a big hit in the dancehall, followed up immediately by "Music
is a Mission" and "Tour".
In the early 1990s there was a trend away from what were termed as
slack songs; these made up almost the entire Dancehall industry; to
more conscious, roots oriented songs. Unlike other artists that
tried to totally detach themselves for their previous music,
Capleton preferred to acknowledge and, later, incorporate his
already established 'slack' songs, e.g. "Bumbo Red", in his thesis
of consciousness. He has routinely used lyrics from his music before
the 1990s to explain his view about controversial points raised in
the Jamaican music industry.
[edit]
Capleton's place in reggae
Capleton is regarded as one of the best deejays you will find in
reggae music today. He has maintained acclaim and sales since the
late 1980s both inside and outside of Jamaica. Capleton is
constantly topping the Billboard charts and creating numerous
dancehall classics.
[edit]
His religious views
As a member of the Rastafari movement Capleton belongs to a number
of different orders called Mansions of Rastafari. There is the
Nyabinghi, which chants death to black and white opressors. There is
also Coptic which is the old Orthodox, Twelve Tribe, and Bobo
Ashanti. Capleton sees Rasta as oneness but he endorses the Bobo
order because the word Bobo means 'humble thyself'. He advises youth
and fans to listen to his music as an international language that
speaks to all.
[edit]
Criticisms
Recently Capleton, along with other dancehall artists, has faced
criticism, predominantly outside of Jamaica, for homophobic lyrics,
such as "Blood out di chi chi, bun out di chi chi", calling for gays
to be killed and burned.[1] He also has faced, since early in his
career, criticism of his constant references to the "fire" in his
music. It was feared that it was a call for anti-social behaviour.
Capleton claims his "fire" to be philosophical and not literal, and
that it is his right and duty to speak out against issues that are
abhorrent to the views of Rastafari.
[edit]
Discography
Lotion Man - 1991
Alms House - 1993
Good So - 1994
Prophecy - 1995
I-Testament - 1997
One Mission (compilation) - 1999
More Fire - 2000
Still Blazin' - 2002
Voice of Jamaica - 2003
The People Dem - 2004
Reign of Fire - 2004
Hit wit da 44 rounds - 2007
[edit]
External links
Official website
Capleton's profile at VP Records' website
Photo-feature at reggaephotos.de
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capleton"
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