| Reggae Sumfest team to pay tribute to Sugar Minott |
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| Friday, 23 July 2010 16:01 | |
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JOHNNY Gourzoung of SummerFest Productions has indicated that his organisation will honour the late Sugar Minott with a special tribute and musical dedication on International Night Two Saturday, July 24. Minott passed away on Saturday, July 10 from an undisclosed illness, sending the music fraternity into shockwaves. The Reggae Sumfest team, aware of his influence and impact on the Reggae genre, felt it was appropriate to honour the musical giant because of his immense contribution to Reggae music.
"Reggae Sumfest is about celebrating good music, and Sugar Minott is unquestionably one of Jamaica's treasures in terms of providing good music. It was only fitting that we made this dedication to him," stated Gourzong, executive producer of the show. "His contribution to the musical landscape is huge and commendable, and this is our way of saying thank you." International Night Two will be dedicated to his memory, and there will be a brief musical tribute from artistes who ruled the stage alongside Sugar Minott in Reggae's earlier development. The dedication will feature Tristan Palmer, Jimmy Riley, Little John and Tony Tuff, close associates of Sugar Minott. The backing band and musical selections will be arranged by Dean Fraser, another veteran in the music business, a personal friend of Sugar Minott who watched him grow musically. "I have known Sugar Minott since childhood, so it's special on a personal level, because we go far back, so that is why I personally chose to be a part of this," explained Dean. "We ended up in the music together, plus there is a lot of respect for Sugar himself, because this is a man who has done plenty in the business. He did even more than people realise. At one time he was the biggest thing in the UK, no other singer had the kind of respect that he had in the UK. Sugar did a lot, he was one of the pioneers in the Japanese markets, he is a big icon in this business and he has done well." Sugar Minott got his break in the business through the sound system circuit with tunes such as Ruff Ole Life, River Jordan, Vanity and Mr DC. In the 1980s, he began working with established producers such as Sly Dunbar and Robbie Shakespeare, and Winston 'Niney' Holness. Herbsman Hustling, produced by the former, became his first big radio, but arguably his biggest seller was a cover of the Jackson Five's Good Thing Going which peaked at number four on the British national charts in 1981.
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