Fabulous Five Inc.
Fabulous Five Inc. | |
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Also known as | Fabulous Five, Fab Five Inc., Fabulous 5 Inc., Fab 5, Fab Five |
Genres | reggae, roots reggae, soca |
Years active | 1970 | –present
Labels | Trojan, Jaywax |
Associated acts | Johnny Nash |
Website |
www |
Members | Grub Cooper |
The Fabulous Five Inc. (Fab 5) are a reggae and soca band formed in Jamaica in 1970. Over a 45-year career they have released 27 albums, had numerous chart hits including several Number 1 hits in Jamaica, and backed singer Johnny Nash on the reggae tracks on his album I Can See Clearly Now.[1]
They are Jamaica's pre‑eminent popular band, whether measured by record sales at home, hits on the charts, frequency of engagements or major awards won over the years.
Early years
Their first recording was "Come Back And Stay". It was a number one song in Jamaica, in their first three years on the road they won the only available awards: the Swing Awards for best band of 1971‑72, 1972‑73 and 1973‑74. They also took the El Suzie Award as Joint Top Road and Dance Band for 1975‑76 and the RJR Listeners' Award for Best Band in 1980.
They backed Johnny Nash on all the reggae cuts comprising most of his platinum album I Can See Clearly Now. Two singles from that album, "Guava Jelly" and "Stir It Up", established Bob Marley as a major songwriter on the international scene.
Fab 5 have enjoyed an endless succession of hits in Jamaica and the "ethnic" markets of North America. In their early years, such songs as "Chirpy Cheep", "Shaving Cream", "Oh, Dad" and "Love Me For A Reason" and their musicality and showmanship made Fab 5 the rage on the dance and show circuits.
Since then they have been kept on top by the likes of songs such as "Yu Safe", "Ring Road Jam", "Feeling Horny", "Computer Mad", "What The Police High Command Can Do", "Jamaican Woman", "Psalms", "All Night Party", "Mini", "Sweat", "Don't Wear None", "Freeze", "Good Buddy", "Mango" and their "Live" series.
Their 26 albums and first box set have been as successful as their singles, and their multi‑award-winning soca album Yu Safe was the most popular album produced in Jamaica in the decade of the 1980's. A CD of some of their biggest hits 'Fab 5 Greatest Hits' has been released along with five other more recent CD albums 'Good Buddy', the massively successful Fab 5 'Live-The Ultimate Vintage Jamaican Party Mix Part 1' and the equally successful follow-ups of that Part 2, Part 3, Part 4. They also released a Box Set that includes all four discs of 'The Ultimate Vintage Jamaican Party mix' collection. Their soca smash "Shape" is still very popular and the band’s versatility is proved by “Dugu-Dugu”, their all-reggae release, and the preceding all-ska album Ska Time. The late noted musician and journalist Sonny Bradshaw said Fab 5 are the only Jamaican band still playing authentic ska. The 2012 release from the band, a live tribute to Jamaica 50, 50 Years of Jamaican Music 1962-2012, sold quickly.
The busiest band in Jamaica, Fab 5 are in great demand not only for concerts and dances but also in the studio where they are a leading creator of commercial jingles for radio and television, dominating the airwaves and earning a string of prestigious awards, including four Golden Microphones. They have their own recording studio (Stage Studio) and record label and distribution company (Stage Records).They have been the chosen band for almost every national and state occasion since the mid 1970's. In 2003 Fab 5 received the Prime Minister’s Award for Excellence in The Performing Arts for its services to Jamaican music. In 2015 they were given an award for their contribution to Jamaican music by the JCDC (Jamaica Cultural Development Commission).
They have taken their authoritative brand of Jamaican music all over the world. They have shared bandstands with many of the great and famous names of modern popular music, including: Ray Charles; Dizzy Gillespie; the Grateful Dead; Rick James; Linda Ronstadt; the Neville Brothers; Roberta Flack; Fats Domino; Peter, Paul & Mary; Joe Jackson; The Chi‑Lites; Skeeter Davis (with whom they were working on a recording project at the time of her death); the Drifters; Miriam Makeba; Bob Marley; Jimmy Cliff; Chuck Jackson; The Mighty Sparrow; Aretha Franklin; Gladys Knight; Harold Melvin & The Bluenotes; Jerry Butler; the Manhattans; Ray Goodman & Brown; and the Delphonics. They have performed at the Kool Jazz Festival and the New Orleans Jazz Festival and at Japansplash, and have entertained a live audience of one million at an anti‑nuclear concert in New York's Central Park.
They have triumphed not only with the music of Jamaica but also with their own compositions of soca, the music of the Eastern Caribbean. At different times and in diverse settings, they have enchanted audiences with soul, funky, rock, jazz, disco, gospel, and classical music. Their album, made with other Stage Records artistes, Christmas In the Sun is easily the most successful Christmas album by a Jamaican entity and the 2002 follow-up "Fab 5 – A Jamaican Christmas Gift" has proved just as popular.
They have dominated the Jamaican Awards for show and dance bands and demonstrated their supremacy at the Jamaica Band Festival at the Wyndham New Kingston in December 1987. Their collection of major awards, by far the greatest of any entity in Jamaican music, includes 29 between 1986 and 1996, from all principal sources–the JBC, RJR, The Daily Gleaner, The Star, Rockers, the Jamaica Music Industry (JAMI) and the Jamaica Federation of Musicians (JFM), among the most recent being the 1995 Rockers Award for Best Band, the 1996 award for Best Group (Instrumental) at the Jamaica Music Awards, a 1999 Tamika Award, the 2000-2002 JFM Best Show Band Awards, The Reggae Soca Awards Best Soca Band 2002-2003, a 2007 Lifetime Achievement Award from Reggae Sumfest and a 2012 JaRIA Honours Award.
The group has also won several international awards, including the 1996 awards for Best Album and Best Single (both won for "Good Buddy") at the Miami Reggae/Soca Awards and the 1999 "Best International Reggae Album" award at the Canadian Reggae Music Awards for Fab 5 Live - The Ultimate Vintage Jamaican Party Mix ... Part 1. Fab 5 have also won the "Best Soca Album" award at the Reggaesoca Awards in Miami for their 1999 album Shape, thus making them the first group in history to win best album awards for reggae and soca in the same year. In addition, the band's musical director Grub Cooper's CD has won numerous awards in his own right, including the Order of Distinction, Commander Class (CD) 2006 (a national award of the Government of Jamaica), and a special honour award from the JFM (1988) for his outstanding contribution to the development of Jamaican music. He has also been Jamaica's leading theatre musician for more than three decades and a major producer of gospel music. Frankie Campbell – has also received the prestigious OD making Fab 5 the only current Jamaican dance/show/backing band with two such awardees. Fab 5 have also been actively involved in keeping Jamaican music alive, with major representation on the boards of JARIA (Jamaica Reggae Industry Association) (RIAJAM) and the Jamaican Association of Vintage Artistes and Affiliates (JAVAA). The band also works with many charitable organizations.
Musicianship, dedication, integrity and discipline are the hallmarks of Fab 5, who have earned and retained the respect of the music industry, critics and general public over the past 45 years. In July 2011 their performance at the renowned “Celebrate Brooklyn” festival drew sustained applause for over 5 minutes and their performances at the Irie Fest in Toronto during Caribana have become legendary.
Fab 5’s most recent project, 2015's Face to Face, is an album of joint performances between the band and high-profile collaborators including Beres Hammond, Marcia Griffiths, Queen Ifrica, Mr Vegas, Lust, Tarrus Riley and Gem Myers.
Members
The band comprises three 1970 foundation members: manager Frankie Campbell (bass); Harold (Jr) Bailey (guitar, flute and saxophone, now part-time and overseas sound engineer); musical director Grub Cooper (drums and lead vocals); Sidney Thorpe (keyboards), 1979; Donovan Lee Palmer (keyboards), 1991; Romeo Gray (trombone) 1995; Andre Palmer (trumpet) 2006; Andrew Cassanova vocals (2012) who had been working with the band's brother group (the Unique Vision) for over 12 years; and Cleveland Manderson on guitar and vocals (2010), who has been working with the Unique Vision for more than 27 years. Other personnel performs from time to time as part of the wider Stage Records (the band’s recording company) family.
Selected discography
Singles
- "Come Back and Stay" - 9 December 1971
- "Chirpy Chirpy Cheep" (cover version)
- "Oh Dad"
- "Shaving Cream" (cover) — sold over 100,000 copies in Jamaica
- "Married Lady"
- "Love Me For A Reason" (cover version)
- "If I Could Read Your Mind"
- "All I Want"
- "Sweet P"
- "Disco Pot" (disco song)
- "Asking For Love" (slow song - Jamaica’s #1 played vintage home-made soul)
- "Oo? Wa?" (included in many films, including Island Films – Countryman)
- "Yu Safe" (1st Soca hit)
- "Ring Road Jam" (soca)
- "Feeling Horny" (soca)
- "What The Police High Command Can Do" (dancehall)
- "All Night Party" (soca)
- "Jamaican Woman" (dancehall) — based on traditional folk song
- "Psalms"
- "We Want Peace"
- "Mini"
- "Sweat" (soca)
- "Don't Wear None" (soca)
- "reeze" (soca)
- "Soca Train" (soca)
- "Good Buddy" (soca/mento/kumina)
- "Mango" (soca)
- N.B. "Glory Hallelujah" from Christmas In The Sunis now a Christmas gospel classic, sung by choirs everywhere in Jamaica over the Christmas season.
Albums
- Fabulous Five Inc. (1973), New Dimension
- F F One (1975), Tit for Tat
- My Jamaican Girl (1976), Harry J
- Miles and Miles of Music (1985), Stage Records
- Yu Safe (1986)
- Jamaican Woman (1987)
- Stage Records Greatest Hits (1988), Various Artistes - Stage Records
- All Night Party (1989), Stage Records
- Mini (1990), Stage Records
- Christmas In The Sun (1990), Stage Crew (Various Artistes), Stage Records
- Don't Wear None (1993), Stage Records
- Good Buddy (1995), Stage Records
- Fab 5 Live – The Ultimate Vintage Jamaican Party Mix, Part 1 (1998), Stage Records
- Shape (1999), Stage Records
- Dugu-Dugu (2000), Stage Records
- Fab 5 Live – The Ultimate Vintage Jamaican Party Mix, Part 2 (2002), Stage Records
- Jamaica Soca Attack (2002), Various Artistes - Stage Records
- Back To Back (CD compilation of "Yu Safe" and "All Night Party") (2002), Stage Records
- Fab 5 Greatest Hits (2002), Stage Records
- Ska Time (2002) Stage Records
- A Jamaican Christmas Gift (2002), Stage Records
- Fab 5 Live – The Ultimate Vintage Jamaican Party Mix, Part 3 (2004) ,Stage Records
- Fab 5 Live – The Ultimate Vintage Jamaican Party Mix, Part 4 (2007), Stage Records
- Fab 5 Live – The Ultimate Vintage Jamaican Party Mix, BOX SET (Parts 1- 4) (2007), Stage Records
- Fab 5 & Friends Live: 1962-2012... 50 Years of Jamaican Music (2011), Stage Records
- Face to Face (Fab 5 Collabs) (2015) Stage Records
Awards
- Swing Awards, best band of 1971-72, 1972–73 and 1973–74
- El Suzie Award, Joint Top Road and Dance Band for 1975–76
- RJR Listeners' Award, Best Band in 1980
External links
- The Fab Five at Roots Archive
References
- ↑ "The Fabulous Five Inc.- Biography of the Band". 2006. Retrieved 2011-10-14.