The Ethiopians

The Ethiopians
Origin Jamaica
Genres Reggae, Rocksteady, Ska, Roots Reggae
Years active 1963–2011
Labels Studio One, Sir JJ, Doctor Bird, Trojan, Heartbeat, Nighthawk
Website www.trojanrecords.com/search/the_ethiopians
Past members Leonard Dillon
Steven Taylor
Aston Morrison
Melvin Reid
Foresight

The Ethiopians

The Ethiopians was one of Jamaica's best-loved harmony groups during the late ska, rock steady and early reggae periods. Responsible for a significant number of hits between the mid-1960s and early 1970s, the group was also one of the first Jamaican acts to perform widely in Britain.[1]

The Ethiopians was founded by Leonard Dillon with Stephen ‘Tough Cock’ Taylor and Aston ‘Charlie’ Morrison at the tail end of the ska period.[2] Dillon was a stonemason from the small community of Boundbrook, located on the outskirts of the northeast coastal town of Port Antonio, where he was raised by his grandparents in a strict Seventh Day Adventist household. With his grandfather the choirmaster in the local church, Dillon had good grounding in music from an early age. While still attending high school, he performed with a local act known as the Playboys (later renamed Ray and the Gladiators), the mellifluousness of his voice bringing the nickname Sparrow.

Like many of his peers, Dillon moved to Kingston towards the end of his teen years in search of work, staying first in a tiny shack in the west Kingston slum of Back-O-Wall. He travelled to Fellsmere, Florida in 1963 on a seasonal farm work contract, and after returning to Kingston in 1964, he settled in Trench Town, lodging at the home of the aunt of popular sound system deejay King Sporty, who he knew from his days in Port Antonio.[3]

In Trench Town, Dillon met Peter Tosh,[4] who introduced him to Bob Marley and Bunny Livingston, his fellow vocalists in the Wailers. An audition was swiftly arranged at Studio One (before Clement 'Sir Coxsone' Dodd, Lee 'Scratch' Perry and Jackie Mittoo),[5] where the Wailers were recording some of the biggest hits of the day, which led to Dillon voicing his first material. Three songs were backed by the Wailers, including a sound system favourite called ‘Ice Water,’ based on lyrics of double-entendre, while ‘Suffering On The Land’ and ‘Beggars Have No Choice’ were more concerned with the harshness of life in the ghetto; a fourth song, ‘Woman, Wine And Money,’ featured Delroy Wilson on harmony. All of the songs were issued on seven-inch 45RPM singles, credited to Jack Sparrow.[6] Shortly after the release of these singles, through the efforts of the Ethiopian Reorganization Centre in Waterhouse (established by elders Nasser King and Daddy King), Dillon entered the Rastafari faith, which he remained committed to thereafter.

Sales of the Jack Sparrow material were not particularly high, and the Wailers were focussing on their own careers. Noting that harmony groups were all the rage in Jamaica, Dillon subsequently made an exit from the Studio One stable to form a harmony group of his own with Taylor, Morrison, and a youth known as Foresight, who he encountered on the street in Waterhouse; the Ethiopian Reorganization Centre became their main rehearsal space. Foresight dropped out early, so by the time Dillon brought the group back to Studio One, they were a trio, debating whether to call themselves the Heartaches or the Ethiopians, until Studio One founder Clement ‘Sir Coxsone’ Dodd decisively stated that the latter was more distinctive, and more fitting for a group that was spiritually minded.[7] The first songs the group recorded at Studio One included ‘Live Good,’ ‘Why You Gonna Leave Me Now’ and the rock steady classic ‘Owe Me No Pay Me’ (aimed at a man known as Stampede that owed Dillon money), but the uncertain nature of the music business caused Morrison to then quit the group, since he had a young family to support. Undaunted by his departure, Dillon and Taylor went back to Studio One to record another half-dozen tracks, including the boastful ‘I’m Gonna Take Over Now,’ and a late-ska number called ‘I Am Free,’ which castigated an unfaithful lover.

Despite the popularity of the material, their earnings were still not sufficient for the group to concentrate on music full-time. Continuing with the masonry led Dillon to the Ethiopians’ next phase, once he found a financial backer for the group in the form of real estate speculator Leebert Robinson, who financed the self-produced single ‘Train To Skaville,’ issued in Jamaica on WIRL (West Indies Records Limited). Subsequent singles ‘The Whip’ and ‘Cool It Amigo’ were recorded at WIRL studio with top rock steady band Lyn Taitt and the Jets (and engineer Linford Anderson), and licensed to Sonia Pottinger for release in Jamaica, as well as Graeme Goodall's Doctor Bird label in Britain; the three songs were all significant hits in 1967. In fact, ‘Train To Skaville’ made such an impact overseas that it brought the Ethiopians to the UK for their very first tour in 1968, since the song had briefly appeared in the UK Top-40. The tour lasted 3 months in 1968, and another 2 months in 1969, and was arranged by Commercial Entertainment, a company established by former rock musicians Bruce White and Tony Cousins (aka Anthony Bautista), who would later be involved in record production and artist management.[8]

Back in Jamaica, Melvin Reid became a temporary member of the group for some recordings made at Federal recording studio, but the group soon reverted to a duo again. ‘Cut Down (On Your Speed)’ was recorded for Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, but far more successful work was issued by H Robinson's Carib Disco company, including ‘Reggae Hit The Town,’ celebrating the electrifying new beat that was taking Jamaica by storm, and the massively successful ‘Engine 54’ (recorded at a time when Trinidadian immigrant Garnet Hargreaves was acting as manager of the group), which celebrated a defunct railway engine that used to transport city folk on countryside excursions in Jamaica. The popularity of this track and earlier hit singles led to a debut album, Engine 54, being issued by Doctor Bird in the UK.

Then, the most solid and lasting working relationship of all was forged with producer Carl Johnson, aka ‘Sir JJ’ (the son of a bus company magnate and brother of the owner of Johnson's Drive-In restaurant), yielding a series of spectacular hits as the ‘60s gave way to the ‘70s. Things started off with a bang with ‘Everything Crash,’ after Sir JJ told Dillon to write a song with that title when Dillon first appeared at JJ's shop on Orange Street; the song commented on the widespread strikes that gripped Jamaica in 1968 and was recorded with noteworthy backing band, the Caribbeats. Other hits to follow included ‘Feel The Spirit,’ ‘Hong Kong Flu,’ and ‘Woman Capture Man.’ The Sir JJ phase yielded the popular albums Reggae Power and Woman Capture Man, both issued by Trojan in Britain.

During the early 1970s, the Ethiopians recorded widely for various producers, including Lloyd ‘The Matador’ Daley (the lewd ‘Satan Gal,’), Duke Reid (‘Pirate’, aimed at Daley), Derrick Harriott (‘Good Ambition’), Rupie Edwards (‘Hail Rasta Man’), Alvin Ranglin (‘Love Bug’), Prince Buster (‘You Are For Me’), Joe Gibbs (‘Ring A Burn Finger’), Bob Andy (‘The Word Is Love’), and Lee Perry (‘Life Is A Funny Thing’), among others. Dillon also helped build Perry's Black Ark studio in 1973-4.[9] But then, in 1975, Stephen Taylor was tragically killed in a traffic accident, leading to a period of inactivity as Dillon struggled to adapt to life without his singing partner.

Dillon subsequently formed a new version of the Ethiopians with other members of the Rastafari faith, including Melvin Reid, to record the album Slave Call with Niney the Observer in 1977. There were also a handful of singles cut for Alvin Ranglin, Winston Riley, Joe Gibbs and Rupie Edwards, circa 1976-78.

Leonard Dillon then largely became a solo artist, though he did tour as the Ethiopians with various backing singers, including Jennifer Lara and Merlene Webber. Under the name The Ethiopian, Dillon cut Open The Gate Of Zion for Ranglin in 1978, and Everything Crash for Studio One in 1980, the latter featuring the castigating ‘Locust,’ voiced on a mutation of the ‘Train To Skaville’ rhythm. The Dread Prophecy album, shared with the Gladiators, was issued by the American label Nighthawk in 1986. The set One Step Forward surfaced in France on Blue Moon in 1992, Owner Fe De Yard was a Studio One compilation of old and new works issued by Heartbeat in 1994, Tuffer Than Stone was recorded with Jahco Thelwell in 1999 and issued on the Mélodie label in France, while Mystic Man was issued by Studio One in 2002; a second set for Nighthawk remains unreleased.

The Ethiopians reached the end of their final chapter when Leonard Dillon died on 28 September 2011. He is survived by his widow Sylvia, seven children, seven grandchildren, two brothers and a sister.[10]

Discography

References

  1. Larkin, Colin (2012). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Reggae. Muze Books, pg 95.
  2. Larkin, pg. 95.
  3. Katz, David (2012). Solid Foundation: An Oral History of Reggae. Jawbone, pg. 64
  4. Leonard Dillon interviewed by Peter I, Reggae Vibes website, http://www.reggae-vibes.com/concert/ethiopian/ethiopian.htm
  5. Leonard Dillon interviewed by Peter I, Reggae Vibes website, http://www.reggae-vibes.com/concert/ethiopian/ethiopian.htm
  6. Solid Foundation, pg. 64
  7. http://www.reggae-vibes.com/concert/ethiopian/ethiopian.htm
  8. Katz, David (2012). Solid Foundation: An Oral History of Reggae. Jawbone, pg 118.
  9. Katz, David (2006). People Funny Boy: The Genius of Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry. Omnibus, pg. 157.
  10. Leonard Dillon Obituary, the Guardian, 26 October 2011, https://www.theguardian.com/music/2011/oct/16/leonard-dillon-obituary

External links

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