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Stanley Beckford — mento king
Stanley Beckford
Art & Culture, Entertainment, Music
September 9, 2022

Stanley Beckford — mento king

The Jamaica Observer’s Entertainment Desk continues with the 50th of its biweekly feature looking at seminal moments that have helped shape Jamaica over the past 60 years.

UNLIKE his contemporaries, four-time Jamaica Festival Song Competition winner Stanley Beckford’s star shone brightly outside of the annual contest.

The dimunitive showman had massive hits with his mento-flavoured ditties Broom Weed, Leave My Kisiloo, and Soldering.

Born in Portland, Beckford was raised by his grandparents. His career started as a rocksteady/reggae artiste in the late 1960s, but he switched to mento in the early 1970s and began playing for tourists in north coast hotels.

Up until his death on March 30, 2007 at 65, Beckford single-handedly kept the mento sound alive with a series of hit songs.

His Festival winners (twice with The Turbines, once with The Astronauts, and solo) were uptempo mento songs that featured his distinct nasal twang. Those songs were Come Sing With Me (1980), Dem A Fi Squirm (1986), Dem A Pollute (1994), and Fi Wi Island A Boom, which won in 2000.

Zac Henry, founding member of The Astronauts, describes Beckford as the consummate showman.

“I met Stanley about the late ’60s, early ’70s. He could take any song and put a mento twist to it… He was the master of ad lib; his style was special. He could dance and he always found some costume you would have to talk about,” Henry told the Jamaica Observer. “Stanley was a jovial and ‘vibesy’ person.”

Keeping mento in the mainstream was probably Beckford’s greatest accomplishment. He had big hits in the 1970s, a fertile period for roots-reggae and Rastafari.

His breakthrough song came in 1975 with the risqué Soldering, which was banned from Jamaican airwaves. Interestingly, that song was covered by an emerging American duo named Hall and Oates for their 1975 album Daryl Hall & John Oates.

Other Soldering tidbits: It was co-written by Beckford and Alvin Ranglin, who produced several of Gregory Isaacs’s hits, including Love is Overdue and Border. Beckford was backed on Soldering by Soul Syndicate, one of the top bands in reggae history.

Broom Weed and Leave my Kisiloo were other radio-friendly Stanley Beckford songs that became favourites prior to his Festival success. Along with Soldering, they are on the 2002 album Stanley Beckford Plays Mento.

Though he was best known for mento and his Festival Song Contest triumphs, Stanley Beckford recorded a number of reggae songs, mainly for Ranglin’s G G Records. Some of his albums were distributed by companies such as Dynamic Records and Tuff Gong.

In April 2007 American author David Katz wrote a comprehensive obituary saluting Beckford’s understated legacy for Britain’s The Guardian newspaper.

“In 2001, while playing hotel performances with the Fab 5 band, he was asked by French record executives to record an album of old-time mento for the European market. On Stanley Beckford Plays Mento, released by Barclay, Beckford was backed by the Blue Glaze band, one of the island’s top mento groups, with additional harmony provided by his wife Thelma and daughter Monique. The album and European tours gave Beckford a new audience. In France he was compared to Compay Segundo of the Buena Vista Social Club and his success there led to the 2004 follow-up Reggaemento released by Warners.”

Proof that Stanley Beckford was much more than a Festival and mento singer.

— Observer’s Entertainment Desk

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