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Larry Lawrence

Real Name:Clifton "Larry" Lawrence
Profile:

Reggae producer.
Born in Jamaica in 1947, died August 2008 in London, UK.

Larry began his career in the music business while still in his teens, cutting ‘Garden Of Eden’ for Leslie Kong’s Beverley’s Records in 1963. Two years later he moved to the UK where he found employment as a lorry driver while also launching his own sound system, eventually making his mark as a producer with a number of sides by London-based singer, Junior English that saw issue on Trojan’s Big Shot in the Spring of 1970.

Over the next year or so, he continued to produce local talent for Trojan (his output being issued on the company’s Big Shot, Jackpot and Duke imprints), while also licensing material to newly formed labels, Torpedo (owned by Equals’ front-man, Eddy Grant) and Junior Lincoln’s Bamboo operations, along with Emile Shalit’s long-established Melodisc Records.

Throughout this time, Larry also acted as an unofficial road manager for various Jamaican performers (including Lee Perry & the Upsetters), a role he continued to undertake for the remainder of the decade, ensuring the requirements of such visiting luminaries as Bob Marley & the Wailers were always met. This role led to a close association with Bruce White & Tony Cousins who operated Commercial Entertainments, a music artists agency that specialised in handling touring Jamaican acts, and after the pair launched Creole Records they secured his services as their in-house producer. Among his productions from this period were a number of superior recordings with Dave Barker and Bobby Davis of the Sensations, many of which later saw issue on the Trojan LP, ‘In The Ghetto’.

In 1973, Larry established retail outlets in North London’s Kensal Green and Kilburn High Road and launched his own Ethnic label, on which he primarily released his own productions as well as those by Lee Perry. Among the more successful of his works from this time were the Selectors’ ‘Rock Back’ and ‘Jenny Jenny’, Jimmy Strathden’s ‘So Long Baby’, his own ‘King Boxer’ (on which he accredited himself as King Duke) and two fine sides by former Mohawks’ front-man, Sidney Rogers: ‘Miracle Worker’ and ‘Another Lonely Night’.

A year after launching Ethnic, Larry started a second imprint, Fight, which after cutting distribution ties with Creole and EMI, merged with the former to create Ethnic Fight, which continued to operate into the eighties. The new label continued to focus much of its output upon his own productions and Jamaican-produced works by the likes of Lloyd Campbell and Lee Perry, the latter supplying such notable singles as George Faith’s ‘To Be A Lover’, Leo Graham’s ‘Pampas Judas’ and the excellent ‘Mumbling And Grumbling’ by Junior Byles.

Larry moved his business to Coldharbour Lane in Brixton in 1976, South London remaining his base for the remainder of his life with the record shop later being converted into a popular West Indian restaurant. Although he went on to launch Larrys Records, by the nineties he had grown disillusioned with the direction of Jamaican music and rather than highlight new material, much of the new label’s output highlighted his earlier output.

Aliases:Duke Larry, Larry Ethnic, Soldier Larry
Variations:
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