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Max Romeo
@ the Indigo 02
5 August 2012
Click an image to enlarge.
Biography
Max Romeo is a performer who managed to rise above
the rudest of beginnings (recording-wise) to become one of the first
Rastaman singers to record a series of deeply spiritual and socially
conscious roots songs.
He was born Maxie Smith in St. Anns and first became
famous for his raunchy early 60’s hit “Wet Dream,”
containing suspiciously suggestive lyrics concerning a man in bed
with his woman. The song was a runaway hit in Great Britain until
older people began listening to it closely and banned it. Though
Romeo publicly claimed the song was about a leaky roof, the ban
remained. This did not stop the song from making it to the British
Top Ten thanks to its popularity amongst London’s rebellious
young skinheads. With that success under his belt (as it were) Romeo
released a few more similarly themed ‘novelty’ tunes
such as “Wine Her Goosie” and “Pussy Watch Man”
with only modest success.
As the 70’s progressed, Romeo underwent a
few profound spiritual changes. By the time he teamed up with production
wizard Lee Perry in the mid 70’s, he had become a committed
Rastaman and was singing visionary songs praising Jah and calling
the sufferahs to social consciousness and culture. Songs from this
period include “Let the Power Fall,” “Pray for
Me,” “Every Man Ought to Know” and “Black
Equality.”
With Perry, Romeo recorded his magnum opus, “War Ina Babylon”
(1976), with the Upsetters. Though Romeo penned or co-penned most
of the songs, and sang all of the songs, most of the album's success
has been attributed to the genius of Perry and many consider this
one of his finest albums ever.
Romeo continued recording singles with Perry for
a short while afterward, but then the two had a falling out and
split up. Since then, though he continues to record and perform,
Romeo has yet to find the perfect niche for his silky, haunting
voice and earnest style, releasing “Selassie Forever”
in 1999. It was Romeo who first introduced to Britain the concept
of rude reggae with “Wet Dream”, which, despite a total
radio ban, reached number 10 in the UK charts in May 1969. He toured
the UK several times in the space of a year and issued two albums,
“A Dream” being the better selling. However, despite
other similarly styled singles such as “Mini Skirt Visio,”
he did not enjoy chart success again.
Romeo was, essentially, something of a gospel singer,
with an ability to convey a revivalist fervour on his records, which
included “Let The Power Fall On I” (a Jamaican political
anthem in 1972) and “Pray For Me.” Furthermore, he had
an ability to convey the trials, tribulations and amusements of
Jamaican life in a song, as evinced by “Eating Competition,”
“Sixpence” and “Aily And Ailaloo.”
In 1972 Romeo began a liaison with producers Lee
Perry and Winston ‘Niney’ Holness, and from this point
onwards, his records had a musical fire to match his apocalyptical
vision and contrasting humour. “Babylose Burning,” “Three
Blind Mice” and “The Coming Of Jah” all maintained
his star status in Jamaica between 1972 and 1975. “Revelation
Time was” one of the best albums of 1975, and 1976. “War
Ina Babylon” was hailed by the rock press as an all-time classic
reggae album. However, Perry had much to do with the artistic success
of those records, and following a much-publicised split between
the pair - with Perry recording “White Belly Rat” about
Romeo, and scrawling “Judas’ over the singer’s
picture in Perry’s studio - Romeo was cast adrift without
musical roots. He left Jamaica for New York in 1976, but “I
Love My Music,” recorded with the help of Keith Richards,
was a flop, and the stronger “Reconstruction” fared
little better. A move to the Wackies’ label in the early 80’s
failed to reverse his fortunes, and by the late 80’s Max Romeo’s
name was forgotten in the mainstream reggae market. He returned
to Jamaica in 1990, and in the spring of 1992, London producer Jah
Shaka recorded “Far I Captain Of My Ship” on Jah Shaka
Records, an unabashed, Jamaican recorded roots album, generally
reckoned to be Romeo's best work for over 15 years. |