Ernest Ranglin was born June 19, 1932 and grew up in the
small town of Robin's Hall in the Parish of
Manchester, a rural community In the middle of Jamaica. Music has always claimed a
special place In the Island's culture, and Ranglin's destiny was set from an
early age when two of his uncles showed him the rudiments of playing the
guitar. When they discovered just how good the young boy was, they bought him a
ukulele.
Ranglin learned how to play by imitating his uncles, but he was soon to be
influenced by the recordings of the great American jazz guitarist Charlie
Christian. Living in rural Jamaica,
however, inhibited the boy's ambitions, which, even at the age of fourteen,
were focused on music. He then moved to Kingston
- the country's capital - ostensibly to finish his studies at BodminCollege.
Very high on Ranglin's agenda was to seriously study the guitar; something not
on the school's priorities.
His lessons came from guitar books and late-night sessions watching the
Jamaican dance bands of the time: he was particularly influenced by Cecil
Houdini, an unrecorded local musician. By the time he was sixteen years old,
Ranglin was acknowledged as the rising young talent in the city. In 1948 he
joined his first group, the Val Bennett Orchestra, playing in the local hotels.
Such was Ranglin's burgeoning reputation that he soon came to the attention of
rival dance bands and, by the early-Fifties, he was a member of Jamaica's
best-known group, the Eric Deans Orchestra, touring around the Caribbean and as
far north as the Bahamas.
The big bands gave Ranglin the hugely beneficial experience of learning how
to orchestrate and arrange. The typical repertoire of the day Included tunes by
Les Brown, Benny Goodman, Stan Kenton and Duke Ellington, together with Cuban
music and the hot Broadway show songs. The constant tours also gave Ranglin a
wider vision, meeting musicians from other traditions. Once, for instance, when
he was working In Nassau his performance was heard by Les Paul, who gave
Ranglin a guitar In admiration of his talents.
It was, however, back In Jamaica that his career was to be transformed by a
chance meeting. In 1958 Ranglin was leading his own quintet, playing the
leading hotels In Kingston and the resorts on the north of the Island. One engagement was at the Half Moon Hotel in Montego Bay, a show caught by a young would-be record producer
called Chris Blackwell.
Immediately Impressed by Ranglin's extraordinary talents, Blackwell offered
him the chance to make a record. The album featured a pianist called Lance
Heywood on one side with Ernest Ranglin on the other: It was the very first
release by Island Records and the start of a long association between Ranglin
and Blackwell.
By the following year, 1959, Ranglin had joined the bassist Cluett Johnson
in a studio group called Clue J and His Blues Blasters. This was a very
different kind of style to the big bands. Jamaican music was in a state of
flux, the traditional mento superseded by a tough urban stance influenced by
the pervading sounds of American R&B. Johnson and Ranglin recorded several
instrumentals for producer Clement 'Coxsone' Dodd at Federal - the only real
studio facility on the island. The first of these tunes, Shuffling Bug, is
widely regarded as the first example of ska, the shuffle rhythm which
exaggerated the 'jump beat' heard on New
Orleans' R&B records of the Fifties. Ska became
the bedrock of Jamaican popular music, leading to rock steady, reggae, ragga
and all the innovations the island has brought into the global mainstream.
Ranglin's fluent and versatile guitar style, coupled with his arrangement
skills, meant he was in constant demand right through the ska era. In addition
to his work with Prince Buster and BabaBrooks, Ranglin was also remembered by
Chris Blackwell who, in 1962, had launched Island Records in Britain.
Blackwell had a song he thought could be a pop smash. He also had a young
Jamaican singer called Millie, who'd previously recorded some sides for Coxsone
Dodd. In 1964 Blackwell brought both Millie and Ranglin to London;
they recorded My Boy Lollipop which, in the spring of that year, reached number
two in the UK
chart. It went on to become a worldwide hit, the first time ska had infiltrated
into the vocabulary of pop music.
In recent years, Ernest Ranglin has gone back to his roots and has made
various cross cultural collaborations and concept albums. On Below the Bassline
he covers some of the greatest songs of the rock and roll era. Memories of
Barber Mack is Ernest Ranglin's tribute to the late Jamaican saxophonist Barber
Mack. The Search of the Lost Riddim album took Ernest Ranglin to Senegal for his
first visit since the mid 1970's when he toured as part of the Jimmy Cliff
band. These recording sessions represent the accomplishment of a dream he had
cherished for over 20 years: returning to Africa
to record with African musicians. Modern Answers to Old Problems is an
adventuresome mix of jazz sophistication and Afro-pop syncopation, and finaly
his last album Gotcha! shows what a perfect instrumentalist Ernest realy is.
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