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Big up but a first mi a hear bout Ms. Pottinger

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  • Big up but a first mi a hear bout Ms. Pottinger

    Noteable Music reorganising Sonia Pottinger's catalogue

    Basil Walters, Observer staff reporter
    Monday, February 16, 2009
    The expansive catalogue of the grand dame among Jamaican record producers, Sonia Pottinger, is being administered by the Los Angeles-based Noteable Music Publishing Company in an effort to collect outstanding royalties while searching for opportunities to promote it to a
    wider audience.
    This was disclosed by Noteable Music's vice-president, Damon Booth, and his visit to the island recently to attend the EME Awards ceremony at which Pottinger was one of three Music Role Models being honoured. The others were King Jammy's and Freddie McGregor.
    From left: Freddie McGregor, King Jammy's and Sonia Pottinger at the recently held Excellence in Music and Entertainment (EME) Awards where they were honoured. (Photo: Jermaine Barnaby)
    "We started last year working with Sharon Pottinger (Sonia Pottinger's daughter), and we are administering her publishing catalogue and helping her promote it to film and television projects and collect her royalities around the world and to look for opportunities for the songs and bring in new audience for her amazing legacy of this music," the vice-president of the publishing company started in 1962, told the Observer.
    "What blows me away," Booth added, "is that she could start with Baba Brooks and Joe White and Chuck in the ska era, took up where her husband Lyndon Pottinger left off, and then from there continued to have success through the rocksteady period into those amazing soul albums with Marcia Griffiths, and the group Culture and Sonia Spence in the late '70s. And so that span and that range is really amazing."

    It is arguable, that in the annals of Jamaican music, there are only two record producers who are ranked ahead of Sonia Pottinger - Clement "Sir Coxsone" Dodd and Duke Reid. What is undisputable is that Sonia Pottinger is the most important woman involved in the production of Jamaican music.
    Opening her Tip Top record shop in the mid 1960s, she ran many labels. Starting out with SEP (Sonia E Pottinger), then Gayfeet, after which it was Highnote Records, Glory (from which came local gospel pioneers such as Claudette Clarke and Otis Wright); and her Trojan UK sub-labels, as well as the Treasure Isle label which she bought from her long-standing associate Duke Reid shortly before his death in 1974.
    She reissued many Treasure Isle's tunes before she went into retirement in 1985. Her first hit was Joe White and Chuck's Every Night, with which she got off to a running start, and from then came numerous follow-ups. Sonia Pottinger became a very prolific hit-making record producer, and among her most well-known productions are The Whip by the Ethiopians, The Melodians' Swing and Dine (and dance for your money), Culture's Harder Than the Rest, 1978 album. And of course, she also has successful projects with Alton Ellis, Ken Boothe, Delano Stewart, Toots and the Maytals, Bob Andy, U Roy and Big Youth.
    And as was noted in her citation at the EME Awards function, she has the distinction of having three of her productions included on a list of top 100 Jamaican hits of all times, and Joe White and Chuck's Every Night, was listed at number 40.
    One of the country's leading record producers (male and female) for the first 25 years of Jamaican music, Sonia Pottinger is indeed a role model and legendary doyenne whose place in the history of Jamaican music is secured
    • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

  • #2
    assasin... i appreciate your candor... i am surprised by the admission considering i know you are in the music business... sonia have a few songs that she sings too...
    'to get what we've never had, we MUST do what we've never done'

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    • #3
      Brethren, I am always open to learning. I know sometimes we argue from different position but it is always good and ineresting to have others opinion and knowledge on topics. That is why I love the forum cause even sometimes you argue about a thing you walk away thinking about the information and prospective of another person.

      I love the fact that this woman is such a powerful person in reggae is getting some dues. I have heard of some of her label but not of the lady herself. I will check for one a her songs.
      • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

      Comment


      • #4
        A doan believe yuh?





        "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

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        • #5
          I rate her over Duke Reid btw, since most of his hit tunes were copies of Motown songs. Duke would often travel to Motown where he would purchase suitcases of music and then mek rocksteady versions of those songs.
          Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

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          • #6
            uhhh. Duke rocksteady era is not just the lyrics as we are not rating dukefor writing but for production.. I cant rate her over duke.. Coxsone Duke and then Joe Gibbs and Channel One... in that era.. Is'nt high note her major label..

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