By: Jo-Ann Greene,
He was born
Winston Hubert McIntosh on October 19, 1944, in the
small rural village of Grange Hill, Jamaica. Like so
many young island teens searching for a better life,
he left home at 15 and headed for Kingston. Once
there, he made his way to Joe Higgs' tenement yard,
joining other aspiring youths eager for the vocal
coaching lessons the singing star provided to local
teens. Amongst these youthful wannabes were Bunny,
Bob Marley, and the much younger Junior Braithwaite;
the four, buttressed by backing vocalists Cherry
Green and Beverley Kelso, joined forces initially as
the Teenagers before eventually settling on the
moniker the Wailers.
Success was
immediate; the group's debut single, "Simmer Down,"
was an instant hit, and the band's career was off
and running. Tosh's talent didn't end with his vocal
skills as he was also an excellent guitarist; his
playing was first showcased in 1963 on The Wailers'
single "I'm Going Home." He was also a gifted
songwriter, as was Bunny Livingston, which helped
the band survive Marley's hiatus from the group
while he went to work in the U.S. in 1966. The
Wailers, by then reduced to a trio with the
departure of Braithwaite, Green, and Kelso,
continued on without him. During this time, the
remaining duo, with Constance "Dream" Walker filling
in, continued releasing singles now credited to
either the Wailers, Tosh, or Livingston alone. Thus,
over the next year, Tosh's dance-friendly "Hoot
Nanny Hoot," "The Jerk," a cover of Sir Lancelot's
calypso hit "Shame and Scandal in the Family," the
R&B-fired "Making Love," and "It's Only Love," a
duet with Rita Marley, all arrived from Studio One.
"Rasta Shook Them Up" celebrated Haile Selassie's
Jamaican visit, while Tosh also offered up the rudie-fueled
"The Toughest."
With Marley's
return, the Wailers departed Studio One and launched
their own short-lived Wail'n'Soul'M label. With its
demise, they returned to the studio circuit.
Sessions with producer Bunny Lee went nowhere, but
Lee and Tosh had a rapport, and between 1969 and
1970, the Wailers cut a string of instrumentals for
the producer and released them under the alias Peter
Touch. Tosh was now attempting to learn to
play the melodica, and the singles chart his
progress on the instrument. "Crimson Pirate," "Sun
Valley," the almost psychedelic "Pepper Seed," "The
Return of Al Capone," "Selassie Serenade" (actually
a rather frenetic version of "Blue Moon") and more,
were the end results.
However, in
1971, Tosh made the momentous decision to pursue a
true solo career in conjunction with his work with
The Wailers. His debut single, "Maga Dog," was
cut with producer Joe Gibbs. The song had
initially been recorded by The Wailers with Coxsone
Dodd, and in its original rhythm arrangement was
suspiciously similar to "Simmer Down."
Gibbs would
totally re-create it, slowing the tempo down and
creating a rhythm perfect for the latest dance rage,
the John Crow skank. The single was a major hit and
became a favorite of the DJs, with a flood of
versions quickly following. The equally hard-hitting
"Dem Ha Fe Get a Beating" arrived soon after. In the
brief period Tosh spent with Gibbs, he recorded a
clutch of seminal numbers, including "Arise
Blackman," "Black Dignity," and "Here Comes the
Judge." The latter track was built around the
haunting rhythm from the Abyssinians' "Satta Massa
Gana," but lyrically hearkened back to Prince
Buster's "Judge Dread," as Tosh's magistrate tries
and convicts Christopher Columbus, Sir Francis
Drake, and Vasco da Gama for myriad of crimes
against black people. Even on a cover of "Nobody's
Business," Tosh's militancy shines through,
with the line "Leave my business and mind your own,"
carrying a definite hint of menace in the delivery.
Jumping on the current bandwagon for golden oldie
medleys, the singer also delivered up a trio of rude
boy hits, Desmond Dekker's "Rude Boy Train" and "007
Shanty Town," and his own, "I'm the Toughest." Tosh
split with Gibbs before the end of the year,
allegedly over the lack of money he'd received from
"Maga Dog." The artist's retaliation was swift and
the self-produced "Once Bitten" was allegedly aimed
directly at the producer. That single utilized the "Maga
Dog" rhythm, as did its follow-up, "Dog Teeth."
Initially, Tosh was releasing his latest
self-produced solo singles via the Wailers' own Tuff
Gong label, but soon the artist set up his own
label, Intel Diplo HIM (Intelligent Diplomat for His
Imperial Majesty Haile Selassie). The label was
inaugurated with "Dog Teeth," with "Ketchy Shrub"
following before the end of 1971.
As the
Wailers' international breakthrough began,
Tosh had less and less time to devote to his solo
career. However, a few singles did arrive during
1972, including "No Mercy" and "Can't Blame the
Youth." More followed in 1973, among them "Mark of
the Beast," "Foundation," "What You Gonna Do," and a
re-recording of "Pound Get a Blow," originally a
single released by the Wailers back in 1968. At the
end of the Wailers 1973 U.K. tour, Livingston
announced he would no longer tour outside of Jamaica
with the band. The group initially carried on
without him, completing a tour of the States, then a
second tour of Britain. Tensions were already high
between Tosh and Marley, and the situation finally
came to a head on November 30, in Northampton. It
ended with a punch up and Tosh quitting the band.
Although the Wailers reunited six months later for a
benefit show, and again in late 1975 for another
benefit concert, the group itself was now defunct,
and the Wailers went their separate ways.
Tosh's first
post-Wailers solo single, "Brand New Secondhand,"
was a new version of a song initially recorded by
the Wailers for Lee Perry. However, it was
Tosh's follow-up, "Legalize It," that packed the
greatest punch and swiftly becoming a ganja anthem
even though the single was slapped with a radio ban.
In 1975 Tosh
signed to the Columbia label in the U.S., and began
work on his first solo album. Sessions were held in
Kingston at Treasure Isle studio, Miami, and even in
Tulsa, OK. A number of the tracks were new versions
of old songs, including "Burial" and "Ketchy Shuby."
The resulting album, Legalize It, arrived in 1976 to
acclaim both at home and abroad. With interest
running high, Tosh set off on tour, accompanied by a
band comprised of the Sly & Robbie rhythm section,
keyboardists Earl "Wire" Lindo and Errol "Tarzan"
Nelson, and guitarists Donald Kinsey and American Al
Anderson. Sony/Legacy's Live & Dangerous album
captured one of the band's steaming shows in Boston
during this tour. Like Marley, Tosh was moving
effortlessly into a hybrid style that paid homage to
American rock, but was still shot through with
strong Jamaican roots. However, Tosh's lyrical
vision was much darker than his former band mate's.
Love always ended in tears, as on "Why Must I Cry"
and the country & western-tinged "Til Your Well Runs
Dry," both updated Wailers' numbers; while "Burial,"
ostensibly about a gangster but with pointed
political overtones, was never going to endear him
to the mass market. Tosh's follow-up album,
Equal Rights, was even more uncompromising.
Recording began just a few months after its
predecessor was completed and again featured the
deep dread rhythms of sly & Robbie, Earl Lindo's
atmospheric keyboards, and Anderson's funky rock
guitar, amongst a host of other guest Jamaican
session men. Bunny Livingston also joined his
former band mate on backing vocals; Tosh himself had
guest starred on Livingston's own solo album, 1976's
Black Man Heart. More focused than Legalize It,
Equal Rights revolved around the themes of the
plight of blacks around the world, and particularly
in South Africa and Rhodesia. A new version of "Downpressor
Man," the original cut coming with Lee Perry earlier
in the decade, was turned into a dread classic.
However, the most seminal tracks were the new songs
-- the anthemic "Get Up, Stand Up," the menacing
rocker "Stepping Razor," and the artist's personal
manifesto, "Equal Rights." This was to be Tosh's
final album for Columbia. In Jamaica, events were
spinning out of control, politically inspired
violence was rampant, and gang warfare had reached a
level so extreme that a rogue army unit decided to
put a permanent end to the combatants. In late 1977,
they gunned down ten members of the Skull gang,
whose members were mostly Rastafarians, killing
five. This event, known as the Green Bay Massacre,
so shocked the island that, for a brief moment, the
gangs put aside their differences and called a
truce. The One Love Peace Concert was organized to
help cement this cessation of violence with a
billing headed by Marley, who returned to the island
for the show.
The concert
was held on April 22, 1978, and Tosh was slated to
appear right before his former band mate. His
performance was captured for posterity on the Live
at the One Love Peace Concert released in 2001.
Tosh's set comprised his most militant numbers --
"400 Years," "Stepping Razor," "Burial," "Equal
Rights," "Legalize It," and "Get Up, Stand
Up," and if that was not enough, between songs he
spoke at length in a series of uncompromising
speeches that scathingly attacked the government,
the opposition, and the concept of peace itself.
Although the audience appreciated his words, the
government and the press did not, and the Jamaican
papers the next day were filled with rabid
condemnations. The singer, however, remained
unrepentant. Tosh's performance had also
impressed visiting British rock star Mick Jagger,
who'd been backstage that night. The Jamaican now
signed to the Rolling stones' own label, and that
summer toured the States opening for the band. The
two singers joined forces on a cover of the
Temptations 'You Gotta Walk And) Don't Look Back,' a
song Tosh had previously recorded with the Wailers.
Tosh would also briefly unite with Marley during the
latter's Burbank, CA, concert for a show-stopping
"Get Up Stand Up."
Back in
Jamaica that autumn, Tosh was arrested for drug
possession, taken to jail, and beaten so badly he
required 30 stitches to close the gaping wounds in
his cracked skull. Even with these severe injuries,
the artist began work on his next album, Bush
Doctor, co-produced with Robbie Shakespeare. A
much more "Jamaican" album than its predecessors,
the record featured the exquisite Tamlins on backing
vocals, and some of the island's top session men,
led of course by Sly & Robbie, but boasting Keith
Richards' seminal guitar on two tracks. Musically,
the album may have sounded less dread, but new
versions of "I'm the Toughest" and "Dem Ha Fi Get a
Beating" suggested that Tosh wasn't going soft.
However, thematically Bush Doctor was less a
cultural album than a religious one. Mystic Man
arrived in 1979, and again featured a lighter touch,
although songs like "Rumours of War" and "Jah Seh
No" were as tough as anything Tosh had offered up in
the past. The year also saw the release of the
wittily titled "Buk-In-Hamm Palace" single and a
re-recorded "Stepping Razor" for the soundtrack for
the legendary film Rockers. The highlight of 1980
was a spectacular appearance at Reggae Sunsplash,
and the year also brought the excellent "Bombo Klaat"
single, a Jamaican-only single released on Tosh's
revived Intel Diplo HIM label. A duet with Gwen
Guthrie, "Nothing but Love," was offered up to the
rest of the world. The slowing output was deliberate
as Tosh needed the time off to continue his recovery
from the beating he'd received at the hands of the
police.
However, he
returned with a vengeance in 1981, releasing the
Wanted Dread & Alive album, which shot into the
lower reaches of the U.S. chart, and toured both the
U.S. and Europe. After all that activity, the artist
took the next year off, returning in 1983, with a
phenomenal cover of "Johnny B. Goode" which landed
in the lower reaches of the U.S. Top 50. The single
was a taster for his new album, Mama Africa, which
also arrived that year. Another tour followed,
including a concert in Swaziland and headlining
appearances at the Reggae Superjam festival in
Kingston. Captured Live, released the following
year, was recorded during these tours. Tosh
then disappeared off the musical map for the next
three years, and it wasn't until 1987 that a new
single, "In My Song," arrived. In September,
it was joined by the album No Nuclear War.
Staying at
Tosh's home during this time was an old friend of
the Wailers, Dennis Lobban. However, he left in a
fury after an argument with Tosh's girlfriend,
Marlene Brown, returning a few days later on
September 11, with a gang of friends. Lobban later
claimed he had merely intended to threaten the
artist, and perhaps rob him, but panicked. The end
result was that Tosh and all six of his friends who
were hanging out in the room were shot in the head.
Tosh lay dead, as did the radio DJ Jeff "Free I"
Dixon and a third friend. Marlene Brown, ex-Soul
Syndicate drummer Carlton 'Santa' Davis, and two
other of Tosh's friends miraculously survived.
Lobban was arrested and sentenced to death. Jamaica
had forever lost one of its most talented artists
and eloquent spokesmen. However, Tosh's legacy
remains undiminished, and since his death a number
of compilations have appeared to safeguard his
memory. Heartbeat's The Toughest focuses exclusively
on early recordings with Dodd and Lee Perry, while
Trojan's Arise Black Man picks up the story with
cuts for Bunny Lee, Perry and Gibbs. Columbia
remastered both Tosh's albums for release in 1999,
and two years earlier compiled the Honorary Citizen
three-CD box set. This boasts a disc devoted to
singles released only in Jamaica, a second disc of
songs recorded live, and a third of hits and
favorites. Scrolls of the Prophets, released in
1999, is a compilation drawn from Tosh's major-label
recordings of 1976-1987. Tosh's back catalog
with the Wailers is equally well-served and his
influence, even in death, remains strong.