Iconic Reggae Weekend features Johnny Clarke honours
Johnny Clarke, the singer whose up-tempo songs made him one of roots-reggae’s biggest stars during the 1970s, will be honoured during the Iconic Reggae Weekend from February 20-22.
The series of events are promoted by the family of Bunny Lee, the flamboyant music producer with whom Clarke had a string of hit singles 50 years ago.
Clarke received the Bunny Lee Lifetime Achievement Award on February 20 at Bunny Lee Museum in Duhaney Park, St Andrew.
Bunny Lee Jr said it is fitting Clarke be the first recipient of an award named in memory of his father who died in October 2020 at age 79.
“Johnny Clarke was one of the artistes Bunny Lee worked with who helped make reggae a powerful, popular sound. When Clarke teamed up with Lee in the 1970s, they created some of Jamaican music’s most memorable songs like None Shall Escape The Judgement and Rock With Me Baby that were loved here and overseas,” he told the Jamaica Observer. “Because of the success they had together, Clarke is recognised as someone who helped define the sound Bunny Lee was famous for producing.”
Clarke, a past student of Jamaica College, was working at Grace Kennedy in 1974 when he hit with None Shall Escape The Judgement, originally done by singer Earl Sixteen.
The unassuming Clarke, who was Lee’s brother-in-law, also scored with songs like Move Outa Babylon and African Roots for the producer’s Striker label.
On Saturday, there was a relaunch of dub master Augustus Pablo’s Rockers International record store at Orange Street.
There was also an event at Randy’s Museum in North Parade, downtown Kingston — the location for many years of Randy’s Records and studio, owned by Randy Chin, founder of VP Records.
Today is dubbed Legacy Sunday. Highlights include Kingston Rhythm at Waterfront, a dance at Victoria Pier, and Closing Dub, which takes place at the Dub Club (Skyline Drive).
The Bunny Lee Museum, which officially opened a year ago, is Lee’s former recording studio. It is stocked with memorabilia including his flashy outfits and hats, murals of fellow producers Clement Dodd, Prince Buster, and Duke Reid, and instruments that belonged to musicians who developed his Greenwich Farm sound.