
His festival song "Fi Wi Island a Boom"
"Stanley! Wha' a gwan Starlight!" When you walk in the streets of Jamaica with Stanley "Starlight" Beckford, you're surprised to notice the appreciation that surrounds this veteran singer, almost unknown outside his own country. It's that at 60, the composer of
hits like "Soldering" and "Wanted Man", the vocalist of historic bands - the enormously celebrated Soul Syndicate, the Starlights, Stanley & the Turbines - is also a popular figure glorified, after some forty years in the business, by three prize-winning songs in
the Festival Song Contest and his innumerable television appearances.
Stanley Beckford has a double career, half mento and half reggae. Born in Portland, on 17th February 1942, he lost his mother when he was an infant, then his father when he was seven. Taken in by his grandparents in Kingston, he grew up between Greenwich Town and Maxfield Avenue. It was a classic path for a child of the Western ghettos (where the majority of Jamaican singers have lived): schooling at the Greenwich Town primary school, then Calabar High and All Saints School (that Bob Marley attended several years later), and a singing apprenticeship in his church, the Church of God, of which he became choir leader. A certain Carlton Smith, a guitarist, taught the instrument to young people of the area. Stanley attended that informal school. He wasn't yet 20 when he entered a famous amateur radio show that had seen every top Jamaican singers - the "Opportunity Hour" of journalist Vere Johns, which stopped off one night close by, at the Theatre Majestic in Spanish Town Road. Named winner by acclamation, Stanley received an envelope containing two pounds - a small fortune at the time - that the journalist waved over the head of each competitor.
In 1968, the year the word "reggae" first appeared and saw the birth of the Wailers, another instrumental group saw the light of day that music fans were to hold in high estime, Soul Syndicate. Stanley Beckford was their initial vocalist. But his distinctive voice, high-pitched and a little nasal, was better suited to the countryside repertoire of mento than to the new town style, the wailing illustrated by Bob Marley and his acolytes. While the excellent Soul Syndicate became one of the most-in-demand session groups, Stanley Beckford remained on the sidelines, depending on his nightwatchman's job to survive. From 1970 to '74, he worked at the telephone company Jamintel, where he spent his working nights playing the guitar and singing. That was where he witnessed the arrest of a wanted hoodlum. The event inspired him to write a song, and in 1973, Alvin Ranglin produced "Wanted Man", Stanley Beckford's first hit for GG Records. The disc's improvised vocal trio was named "Starlights", but its existence was ephemeral, Stanley Beckford continuing solo under the same name. Other recordings for GG followed, but without the success of "Wanted Man". They included "All Day Working", "Slave", "Oh Jah Jah", "Mr Softhand", "Hold My Hand" and "Mama Dee". In 1975, finally, he brought out "Soldering" (a euphemism for copulation) that was banned on radio but not without first winning over the public and engendering dozens of imitations.
(Didn't Bob Marley himself, when asked what he did in life, reply "Welding"? - another word of course for soldering.)
But the success of "Soldering", - coming out during the first full flush of "conscious reggae", while the country was sinking into political violence and Bob Marley was building a reputation in the West with his Rasta rebel image, - wasn't to bring Stanley Beckford the international exposure hoped for, and the singer was forced to fall back on the hotel circuit. In 1980, he created for that purpose a "reggae-calypso" band (as one incorrectly calls mento, by analogy with the music of Trinidad), Stanley & the Turbines. It was with this formation that he recorded "Leave Mi Kisiloo" for Barrington Jeffrey (Dynamic Records) and three or 4 other albums ("Gipsy Woman", "Big Bamboo", etc.) The 1980s saw the decline of reggae roots, and Stanley Beckford had no other recourse but to go on the tourist circuit, travelling as far as the Cayman Islands.
In 1980, he won for the first time the Festival Song Contest, with a song of peace in that bloody election year, "Dreaming Of a New Jamaica (a Land of Peace and Love)". He won again in 1986 with "Dem a Fi Squirm" by Calvin Cameron (Uhuru Records), and a third time in 2000 with "Fi Wi Island a Boom". In the 90s, with dancehall whipping up a storm, he recorded several 45 rpm discs in the same style ("A Wah a Gwan", "Amazon"), but stresses that he never wrote "slack" (vulgar) lyrics, only songs describing reality. He would have the occasion to perform solo or with Rod Dennis, another great mento artist, at the Hilton Hotel. With The Turbines no longer in existence, Stanley Beckford is generally accompanied by the Fab 5, a reggae-calypso group, or by the Blue Glaze Mento Band - the group chosen for this recording by the disc's producers.

Comment