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The Gladiators are a Jamaican roots reggae band, most popular during the 1970s. The core was Albert Griffiths (lead guitar and vocals; born 1945, died 15 December 2020), Clinton Fearon (bass guitar and vocals) and Gallimore Sutherland (rhythm guitar and vocals). Their two most famous albums are Trenchtown Mix Up (1976) and Proverbial Reggae (1978) with songs such as "Hearsay", "Jah Works", "Dreadlocks the Time is Now". "Mix Up", "Music Makers from Jamaica", and "Soul Rebel" – a song written by The Wailers. Gladiators also cooperated with the toaster U-Roy.
The Gladiators | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Origin | Kingston, Jamaica |
Genres | Roots reggae |
Years active | 1968–present |
Members | Gallimore Sutherland Alan Griffiths Anthony Griffiths Clinton Rufus Vernon Sutherland Glen Williams Mark Gooden |
Past members | Albert Griffiths Clinton Fearon Errol Grandison David Webber |
History
editAlbert Griffiths, singer and guitar player, was the founder of the reggae group The Gladiators. After some success with the singles "You Are The Girl" (a b-side to The Ethiopians' hit record "Train to Skaville") in 1967, he recruited his childhood friends David Webber and Errol Grandison in 1968 to form the original Gladiators vocal group. The group's name was allegedly suggested by a fellow bus passenger during the time of their first recordings.[1]
The group's first major success was with the single "Hello Carol" in 1969, for producer Coxsone Dodd, which topped the Jamaican music charts. Shortly afterwards, in 1969, Webber was stricken with illness and was replaced by Clinton Fearon, one of Griffiths' proteges. Similarly Grandison left the group in 1973 for family commitments and was replaced by Gallimore Sutherland.[2]
During the early 1970s the Gladiators cut numerous records for various producers such as, Lloyd Daley and Lee Perry, but it was their recordings for Dodd at Studio One that became the biggest hits. During this time at Studio One the Gladiators' hits included "Bongo Red", "Jah Jah Go Before Us", "Mr. Baldwin", and "Roots Natty".[3]
The success of these recordings garnered the attention of Britain-based Virgin Records, who gave the group their first major recording contract in 1976.[3] Their debut album released on Virgin was the Tony Robinson produced Trenchtown Mix Up (1976), which included revisions of many of their early hits.[3] They followed this effort with Proverbial Reggae (1978).[3] At the time Gladiators was a band with Albert Griffiths on lead guitar and vocals, Clinton Fearon on bass guitar and vocals, Gallimore Sutherland on rhythm guitar and vocals, Sly Dunbar on drums, Lloyd Parks on bass, Uziah "Sticky" Thompson on percussion, Ansel Collins on keyboards and Earl 'Wire' Lindo on synthesizer. Errol Thompson and Joe Gibbs were their engineer and mixer, and Robinson the record producer.
Dodd and Studio One also released Studio One Presenting the Gladiators, (1978)[4] a compilation of some early Gladiators' records released 1968 – 1974. The Gladiators' next two albums on Virgin were Naturality (1978) and Sweet So Till (1979).[3] The group's next album Gladiators was recorded at Coach House Studios in the UK with local producer Eddy Grant. It was the first Gladiators' album on which no member of the group played any of the instruments, as a few members of the band Aswad were brought in. The album did worse than their previous work, and they were subsequently dropped from their contract with Virgin.[3] Virgin subsequently released two compilation albums Vital Selection in 1981 and Dreadlocks The Time Is Now in 1983.[1]
At the time, roots reggae was declining.[2] A new type of reggae – based on drum machine, sampler, synthesizers and organ – occurred in the 1980s; ragga. One of the reasons for ragga's swift propagation is that it is generally easier, and less expensive to produce, than reggae performed on traditional musical instruments.[5] Nevertheless, the Gladiators released eleven studio albums in the 1980s. They soon found a home at US-based Nighthawk Records and released Symbol of Reality in late 1982 followed by Serious Thing in 1984.[3] One year later the Gladiators changed labels again, this time moving to Heartbeat Records, where they released albums throughout the latter half of the decade. In 1987 Fearon left the group after eighteen years, but Griffiths and Sutherland have continued to release albums on various labels since then.
With the advent of dancehall in the 1990s, the Gladiators only released three studio albums during that decade. Eventually, the Gladiators, Mighty Diamonds, Bunny Wailer, Heptones and Burning Spear had a renaissance. The dancehall artists had to change their profile and baptised their new showmanship as conscious dancehall.[6]
In 2005, the Gladiators released Fathers and Sons which has been regarded as Albert Griffiths' farewell after ill health forced him to retire from touring, with his sons, Alan and Anthony, joining the group.[2]
In June 2013, the group announced that their next album would be a collaboration with deejay Droop Lion, nephew of original Gladiators' member David Webber, performing new versions of some of the group's most popular tracks.[7]
Discography
editStudio albums
editAlbum | Release Year | Label |
---|---|---|
Trenchtown Mix Up | 1976 | Virgin Records |
Studio One Presenting the Gladiators | 1977 | Studio One |
Proverbial Reggae | 1978 | Virgin Records |
Naturality | 1979 | Virgin Records |
Sweet So Till | 1979 | Virgin Records |
Gladiators | 1980 | Virgin Records |
Babylon Street | 1982 | Jam Rock Records |
Back To Roots | 1982 | Stunt Sounds |
Symbol of Reality | 1982 | Nighthawk Records |
Reggae To Bone | 1982 | Jam Rock Records |
Serious Thing | 1984 | Nighthawk Records |
Show Down Vol. 3 w/ Don Carlos & Gold | 1984 | Empire Records |
Reggae Jamboree | 1984 | Roots Reggae Library |
Country Living | 1985 | Heartbeat Records |
Dread Prophesy w/ The Ethiopians | 1986 | Nighthawk Records |
In Store For You | 1988 | Heartbeat Records |
On The Right Track | 1989 | Heartbeat Records |
Valley of Decision | 1991 | Heartbeat Records |
A True Rastaman | 1992 | MPO Records |
The Storm | 1994 | Riddim Mu Records |
Something a Gwaan | 2000 | RAS Records |
Once Upon A Time in Jamaica | 2002 | XIII Bis Records |
Fathers and Sons | 2005 | RAS Records |
Continuation | 2009 | Mediacom |
Back on Tracks | 2014 | Utopia |
Index of 1966 - 1975 singles and recordings
editAlbum | Songs | Label |
---|---|---|
Bongo Red | 12 | Roots Reggae Library |
Freedom Train | 12 | Roots Reggae Library |
Live Wire | 11 | Roots Reggae Library |
Peace Truce | 11 | Roots Reggae Library |
Watch Out | 11 | Roots Reggae Library |
Compilation and live albums
editAlbum | Release Date | Label |
---|---|---|
Studio One Presenting the Gladiators | 1979 | Studio One |
Vital Selection | 1981 | Virgin Records |
Gladiators By Bus | 1982 | Jam Rock Records |
Live at Reggae Sunsplash w/ Israel Vibration | 1982 | Genes Records |
Dreadlocks The Time Is Now | 1983 | Virgin Records |
A Whole Heap | 1989 | Heartbeat Records |
Full Time | 1995 | Nighthawk Records |
Alive & Fighting | 1997 | Mediacom Records |
At Studio One: Bongo Red | 1998 | Heartbeat Records |
Sold Out | 2000 | M10 Records |
Live in San Francisco | 2003 | 2B1 Records |
Europe Tour 2006: Live in Paris | 2006 | Unknown |
References
edit- ^ a b The Gladiators – The Story Retrieved on 25 March 2008
- ^ a b c allmusic.com Biography Retrieved on 25 March 2008
- ^ a b c d e f g Colin Larkin, ed. (1992). The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music (First ed.). Guinness Publishing. p. 981. ISBN 0-85112-939-0.
- ^ Last fm: Studio One Presenting the Gladiators
- ^ Allmusic: Ragga genre
- ^ "Roots Reggae Revival". Jamaica Gleaner. 7 July 2008. Archived from the original on 4 August 2009.
- ^ Morgan, Simone (2013) "The Gladiators back in arena", Jamaica Observer, 16 June 2013. Retrieved 20 June 2013
External links
edit- The Gladiators discography at Discogs
- The Gladiators discography at Discogs as The Gladiators Band