Living history

Osheaga: Jimmy Cliff

http://www.hour.ca/music/music.aspx?iIDArticle=20203

July 29th, 2010
Richard Burnett

Reggae pioneer Jimmy Cliff brings old soul to Osheaga generation

Rock'n'Roll Hall of Fame inductee Jimmy Cliff became reggae's first international star thanks to his lead role in the 1972 movie The Harder They Come. That cult film sympathetically chronicled the rise and fall of a gangster dope dealer in Kingston, a narrative with many similarities to real-life alleged drug kingpin Christopher Coke. "The film did have an influence on gun violence in Jamaica," Cliff recently admitted. "That's very hard for me."

Still, Cliff is still working on a sequel. "The rights are cleared up now, we don't want to do a remake and I want to be in it acting-wise," Cliff told Hour over the phone from his Paris home. ("Oui, je parle français!")

Cliff, 62, was raised in the Somerton district of St-James, Jamaica, and realized as a child that he had a golden voice. "I used to sing at a church where they were serious Christians and they said, 'This boy has a good voice,'" says Cliff, who today is neither a Christian nor a Rasta - he's a Muslim. At 14 he marched into aspiring record producer Leslie Kong's local ice cream parlour and sang an a cappella tune he had written called Dearest Beverly. Kong paid him to record it, along with Cliff's first hit, Hurricane Hattie.

"I remember that night I walked into that parlour. [Kong] wasn't in the music business at the time, so I encouraged him to get into it!"

Over the next four decades, Cliff - on his first North American tour in five years and whose new album, Existence, is his first since 2004's Black Magic - would record a string of classic songs, including Vietnam, which Bob Dylan says is the greatest anti-war song ever written.

"I still perform it today but now I call it Afghanistan," says Cliff, thrilled that his music has reached yet another generation, like the young indie rockers at Osheaga. "I love that, I love that! It makes my blood flow!"

Jimmy Cliff
At Osheaga, July 31

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