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 Post subject: RIP Alton Ellis
PostPosted: Sat Oct 11, 2008 7:25 am 
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I have been informed by Mr. Owen "Blakka" Ellis that Alton passed away at 4:45 AM
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 Post subject: Re: RIP Alton Ellis
PostPosted: Sat Oct 11, 2008 8:02 am 
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Give thanks for all the sweet music!!
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 Post subject: Re: RIP Alton Ellis
PostPosted: Sat Oct 11, 2008 8:33 am 
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 Post subject: Re: RIP Alton Ellis
PostPosted: Sat Oct 11, 2008 8:49 am 
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Man, that's terrible. I really liked his tunes.

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 Post subject: Re: RIP Alton Ellis
PostPosted: Sat Oct 11, 2008 9:18 am 
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Matt Wixson wrote:
Man, that's terrible. I really liked his tunes.

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 Post subject: Re: RIP Alton Ellis
PostPosted: Sun Oct 12, 2008 7:57 am 
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Legendary Alton Ellis passes on
published: Sunday | October 12, 2008


Alton Ellis - File

ALTON ELLIS, the west Kingston balladeer who defined the lovers' rock genre, died Friday evening at age 70. The singer succumbed to a 10-month fight with lymphatic cancer.

Sandra Ellis, one of his children, told The Sunday Gleaner that her father passed away at the Hammersmith Hospital in London, where he had been receiving treatment for the past two weeks.

Cancer of lymph glands

Ellis had been diagnosed with cancer of the lymph glands in December 2007.

No singer had more success on Jamaican charts during the 1960s than the Trench Town-born Ellis whose first hit song was Muriel, which was done with Eddie Perkins.

Throughout the 1960s, Ellis recorded a series of ska hits for rival producers Arthur 'Duke' Reid and Clement Dodd. These included Dancecrasher, Girl I've Got a Date, I'm Just a Guy and I'm Still in Love.

He immigrated to England in the early 1970s where he remained active musically. He enjoyed a career resurgence in the 1990s when there was a rocksteady revival in Jamaica and Europe.

In 2003, dancehall superstar Sean Paul and singer Sasha had a minor hit in the United States with their cover of I'm Still in Love.

Ellis, who last performed here in June, is survived by wife Judith and over 20 children.

http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/ ... news3.html

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 Post subject: Re: RIP Alton Ellis
PostPosted: Sun Oct 12, 2008 8:08 am 
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http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/lifestyl ... _ICON_.asp

Alton Ellis hailed a musical icon
BY BASIL WALTERS Observer staff reporter waltersb@jamaicaobserver.com
Sunday, October 12, 2008

MEMBERS of the musical fraternity yesterday hailed the late Alton Ellis as a musical legend who will never be forgotten, even as they lauded him for his hard work over more than half a century.

"He always called me 'ska king'. And I always called him 'the great Mr Rock Steady'," said Derrick Morgan, one of Ellis' musical peers for more than 50 years. "A lot of shows, he and I performed in Europe together. The last show I remember he and I did was in June at the National Indoor Sports Centre in Jamaica."
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Alton Ellis (right) and Colin Leslie, consultant in the Ministry of Information and Culture on his arrival for the Get Ready To Rock Steady concert.

Ellis, 64, lost the battle against cancer in a London hospital last Friday night.

Michael Barnett, who along with Keith Brown used to promote the longest running vintage show series called Startime, said Ellis had always been one of his biggest drawing cards.

"Alton was always a favourite artiste of the people from day one. The people just had a love affair with him," he said.

For Lloyd Parks, whose We the People band was the longest backing outfit for Startime, Ellis was a mentor.

"I used to go to Studio One on Brentford Road just to look at Alton and Ken Boothe; and said 'I want to be like them'. It brought joy to me when I started backing them. That brought so much joy to me that when they started labelling me as a vintage band, I just didn't care - even though I back everybody. His passing touched me," said Parks sadly.

Minister of Information, Culture, Sports and Youth Olivia 'Babsy' Grange, for her part, extended condolences to his family, while lauding him as a reggae icon.

"Like thousands of other Jamaicans, I deeply mourned the passing of Jamaica's most famous exponent of rock steady, Alton Ellis," said Grange, adding that it was Ellis and keyboardist, the late Jackie Mittoo, who invented the rock steady beat in the mid-1960s.

One of Ellis' more enduring gems called Why has been immortalised as he is said to have asked why in his final moments. It is a reality that has deepened the sadness of at least one family member.

"My cousin (Uncle Alton's son Clive) tell me that one of the last words he uttered was 'Why'," said Owen 'Blakka' Ellis, comedian and nephew of the trailblazing Jamaican singer. "And I'm asking the Almighty why, why so many good people have to die. I think I feel too numb to think. My heart full and my eyes too tired to cry. I was about to sleep but the news got me out of bed. Now, Uncle Alton's words are stuck in my head."

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 Post subject: Re: RIP Alton Ellis
PostPosted: Sun Oct 12, 2008 8:10 am 
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 Post subject: Re: RIP Alton Ellis
PostPosted: Sun Oct 12, 2008 10:18 am 
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Alton along with Delroy Wilson And the Melodians interviewed by the Ranking Miss P celebrating Alton,s 30th year in jamaican music.
On behalf of Miss P myself and the DBC crew we would like to send condolences to the Ellis family. R I P Alton one of the founding fathers of jamaican music, a really humble person and one of it,s greatest voices.
The interview is about 40 mins and Alton has a lot to say.
https://www.yousendit.com/download/bVlC ... MlZFQlE9PQ
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 Post subject: Re: RIP Alton Ellis
PostPosted: Sun Oct 12, 2008 12:18 pm 
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ras charles is doing a tribute show to the memory of Brother Alton Ellis now from 930-230-pm(est)

http://whrwfm.org

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 Post subject: Re: RIP Alton Ellis
PostPosted: Thu Oct 16, 2008 11:07 am 
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tragic.

alton is legendary and will be missed.

was he 64 or 70...there is a difference of ages among stories here.

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 Post subject: Re: RIP Alton Ellis
PostPosted: Fri Oct 17, 2008 11:04 pm 
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http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/17/arts/ ... ref=slogin
Alton Ellis, Jamaican Singer, Dies at 70

Article Tools Sponsored By
By ROB KENNER
Published: October 16, 2008

Alton Ellis, the smooth Jamaican singer and songwriter known as the Godfather of Rock Steady, died early Saturday morning (local time) in London. He was 70 and had lived in Middlesex, England, for nearly two decades.
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John Kirk/Redferns

Alton Ellis, known as the Godfather of Rock Steady, in 1993. His hits, known for his smooth tenor sound, date from 1959.

The cause was multiple myeloma, a form of bone cancer, said his business manager, Trish De Rosa.

Starting in the 1950s, Mr. Ellis helped lay the foundations of the Jamaican recording industry, singing songs that would profoundly influence global pop music.

“Alton was a bigger artist in Jamaica than Bob Marley,” said Dennis Alcapone, another Jamaican recording artist working in Britain who often performed with Mr. Ellis. “Everybody, even Bob, would love if he could sing like Alton Ellis. All of them would sit back and listen to Alton because Alton was the king.”

Alton Ellis was born and raised in Trenchtown, the same underprivileged Kingston neighborhood that was home to stars like Marley. Mr. Ellis and his younger sister Hortense got their start as schoolchildren competing on Kingston talent shows like “Vere John’s Opportunity Hour.” In 1959, as half of the duo Alton & Eddie, he recorded the R&B-style scorcher “Muriel,” which became one of the first hit records for the pioneering local producer Clement Dodd, known as Coxsone.

Bouncing between Mr. Dodd’s Studio One label and the Treasure Isle label of a rival producer, Arthur Reid, known as Duke, Mr. Ellis blazed a trail with a series of classic love songs like “Girl I’ve Got A Date,” “I’m Just a Guy” and his signature, “Get Ready Rock Steady,” a 1966 dance-craze record that inspired a new era in Jamaican music. (Much later he established his own label, All-Tone.)

Rock steady was a sweeter, slower sound that formed the bridge between the hard-driving brass of ska and the rebel reggae that Marley later spread throughout the world. Rock steady’s easy pace and spare arrangements were the perfect showcase for Mr. Ellis’s soulful tenor, an elegant instrument that fell somewhere between the roughness of Otis Redding and the silkiness of Sam Cooke.

“Alton ruled the rock steady era,” Mr. Alcapone said. But Mr. Ellis’s influence did not stop there.

“Get Ready Rock Steady” was used in 1969 on “Wake the Town,” featuring a Rastafarian D.J. named U-Roy; the track would be described by some as the world’s earliest rap recording. The instrumental track to Mr. Ellis’s composition “Mad Mad” became one of the most covered recordings in reggae history, influencing generations of dancehall and hip-hop artists. And his 1967 composition “I’m Still in Love With You” was covered several times, most recently by the dancehall artists Sean Paul and Sasha, reaching No. 3 on Billboard’s Hot Singles chart in 2004.

Mr. Ellis was awarded Jamaica’s Order of Distinction in 1994 and was inducted into the International Reggae and World Music Hall of Fame in 2006.

Ms. De Rosa said his body would lie in state in the National Arena in Jamaica to accommodate the crowds expected to pay their respects to Mr. Ellis, who never stopped working until he collapsed after a London performance in August. He had juggled demands to perform and record even as he underwent chemotherapy, making a final trip to Jamaica in June.

“My dad did a lot for music, but he didn’t really boast about it like he could have,” said his 23-year-old son Christopher, who often performed with his father and was one of his more than 20 children. “He’s got a lot of respect, and his name is really big, but financially he’s been robbed over the years. He told me, ‘Son, do not let them rob you like they robbed me.’ ”

After a long battle for royalties, Mr. Ellis received a check for “I’m Still in Love With You” a few weeks before he died, Ms. De Rosa said.

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