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DON CORNELIUS, 'SOUL TRAIN' CREATOR IS DEAD

On Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Producer and host who created the dance show 'Soul Train', Don Cornelius has died. He was shot dead in his Los Angeles home in what appears to be a suicide. Reports are that ne...

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Adamari (Qedamawi or Qadamawi) is Ethiopian for 'first', and may also mean 'old' or 'holy'. Haile Selassie was often reffered to as Qadamawi Haile Selassie I, The First, by reknown artists such as Bob Marley, Dennis Brown & Garnett Silk. Adamari is dedicated to the immediate and futuristic reinvention of mainstream dancehall music, reggae music, soca music, punta music, hip-hop music and other Urban or Caribbean music. As a young company owned and operated by young entrepreneurs, it is Adamari's ultimate ambition to serve as a popular catalyst for the present & future generations of musical entertainment & event production & digital distribution of popular music. [MORE...]

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Busy Signal http://www.adamari.net/busysignal   
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BIOGRAPHY
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Busy Signal has released 5 Singles & CDs, 10 Videos, 2 News Articles on Adamari.Net.

The sound of young Jamaica has been a constantly evolving, musical feast ever since local recordings began. Styles and faces come and go but every so often a singer or deejay will free themselves from the pack and define an era. Such artists are lightning rods. Their music tells a people (and now a worldwide community of dancehall followers) who they are, where they’ve been and where they’re headed.

Busy Signal is still in his early twenties. He’s only been a professional artist for little over four years, and yet his songs and the way he expresses them are now the pulse by which modern-day dancehall is measured. Witness for example, the power of “Jail”, which he wrote about his own brief stay in a US jail – an episode he’s now transformed into a master class for others.

“If they could teach Shakespeare and things like that in music, then everybody would pass and there wouldn’t be a dull student in the world,” he says, “because once you have good music teaching some kind of message, then people catch onto it that much easier. Music is that powerful.”

“Jail” now appears on Busy’s groundbreaking second album Loaded, released by VP Records on September 9th. This eagerly awaited landmark contains other hits like “These Are The Days,” “Real Jamaican” with Michael Rose and the gloriously infectious “Unknown Number.” All have been taking dancehall charts by storm, despite their obvious differences in style. That’s one of Busy’s trademarks, and driven by his outstanding mic technique and restless creativity, Loaded brims with versatility. His sense of fun and mischief is allowed full rein on dancehall tracks like “Wine Pon De Edge”, “Hey Girl”, “Tic Toc” and “Cool It Baby”, which Busy programmed himself. Yet it’s his powerful commentaries on the ghetto lifestyle, like “These Are The Days”, that have lent Busy Signal’s art its raw edge, and made him into such a potent mouthpiece for the disenfranchised youth of Jamaica and beyond. “Knocking At Your Door”, “People So Evil” and “Curfew”, which he wrote after witnessing the Kingston police attempting to shut down local dances, are the latest examples of this, whereupon real life and his talent for storytelling combine to often spine-chilling effect.

Busy’s already proved a trendsetter after slowing the beat down on “These Are The Days” and deejaying a form of consciousness founded in reality, rather than religion. Its success paved the way for similar, symphonic ghetto hymns by Demarco, Mavado and others – songs that reflect the times and places we’re living in just as vividly as any movie. Busy’s roots are in dancehall, and after spending part of his upbringing in Tivoli Gardens , Standpipe and Papine, his ghetto credentials could never be in doubt. Yet Busy’s music is all about growth and with new management behind him – Juke Boxx’s Shane Brown – it’s no surprise to discover that he’s recently been keeping company with artists of a rather different stature, like Damian Marley, Morgan Heritage, Alborosie, former Black Uhuru singer Michael Rose and the Queen of Reggae, Marcia Griffiths.

“I’ve been longing to make songs with some of those veteran artists,” he explains. “It’s a real experience being in the studio with artists like those. They know so much, and they are also bringing out the positive side of me as a dancehall act. I’m learning from them because they set the t’ing, and I try and keep it on that kind of level right now. I’m looking to talk about a wider range of things, more than just guns and girls. I want to make songs that are more conscious, and have a more positive feel to them, y’know? I want to be giving them more topics, and also voicing on different kinds of music as well.”

It takes courage to embrace change and push back the boundaries, but that’s what Busy Signal has done throughout his career. He’s transcended everything bad and negative the ghetto lifestyle has thrown at him, and seems to redefine dancehall music every time he steps into a studio, or visits a local school and presents it with badly needed computer equipment. Already, some believe this is the album that’ll take Busy Signal to a next level, and become a milestone of dancehall history, just like Buju Banton’s Til Shiloh a generation or so ago. That’s because as well as honing his musical skills, he’s responded to what’s happening around him with a degree of integrity that cannot help but uplift and inspire others.

Busy rose to prominence as a member of Bounty Killer’s Alliance and it shows. This was an aggregate of artists designed to strengthen and highlight the talented youngsters – like Busy and Mavado – who looked to Bounty as their chief inspiration and mentor. Busy, real name Reanno Gordon, was born and schooled in Brown’s Town before moving to Kingston with his mother and two brothers as a teenager. His mother raised her three sons alone, and has been a practising Christian all her life. Busy’s first musical experiences came from singing alongside her in a church choir, but it was in the dancehalls where he heard the music that made his spirits soar most. At thirteen, he’d sneak out of the house to hear sound-systems like Bass Odyysey, Star Force and Stone Love, and thrill to the sound of Bounty Killer’s stentorian voice booming out of the speakers.

Later .. being named Busy by a friend who marvelled at his eagerness to be everywhere at once, he gained a little studio experience by voicing dubplates for Kilimanjaro and Renaissance. It was at that stage he learnt about voice projection, breath control, timing and all the other skills that would one day bring him international recognition, although it was Bounty Killer who first introduced him to dancehall crowds in Jamaica, by inviting him on stage, and giving him the royal stamp of approval.

Busy’s debut tune, “Shake It Fast”, was shared with a singer called Kenny and voiced over Renaissance’s Tunda Clap rhythm. This was in 2004, and songs for Fire Linx, Blaxx, Legends, Stainless, Yellow Moon and Black Chiney, among others, soon followed. “It’s All Because Of You”, with Tami Chyn, and Step Out, produced by Gravi T, then provided him with breakthrough hits in 2005, together with another Renaissance side, “Not Going Down”. By now, it was already apparent that Busy was an outstanding prospect. “Born and Grow” was the first of his striking ghetto narratives, and his live act began attracting widespread acclaim as he made show-stealing appearances at all the major Jamaican stage shows, including the Smirnoff Experience, Island Explosion, Camp Fire, West Kingston Jamboree, Sting and Reggae Sumfest 2006, where he performed solo on Dancehall Night and was also called up by G Unit on International Night.

Greensleeves released Busy’s debut album, Step Out, that same year. Warmly welcomed by fans and media alike, it featured hits like “Born And Grow” and “Not Going Down”, and guest appearances from Bounty Killer, Alaine, Kris Kelly and Mavado, who traded lyrics with Busy on the gangster tunes “Badman Place” and “Full Clip”. It was an auspicious beginning, and also heralded the initiation of Busy’s own label, Network Records, and his debut as a producer (on the title track and “Where I’m From”.)

With the album still flying out the stores, Busy continued voicing apace, and for younger, progressive producers like Don Corleon, H20, Arif Cooper, Fresh Ear (Up Into The Club), Stephen McGregor (Power Cut) and Stephen “Lenky” Marsden. Their releases – together with Busy’s teardown combination with Papoose on K. Salaam & Beatnick’s Whose World Is This? project – proved influential in Busy being crowned as the most exciting and creative dancehall artist of his generation, but it’s the new album that represents this next, crucial stage of Busy Signal’s development best of all, and that’ll spread his talent far and wide, way beyond the confines of his original audience.

MySpace: myspace.com/onebusysignal
 
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MUSIC RELEASES

5 Releases Total  
 
Busy Signal - D.o.b
D.o.b
Busy Signal
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Busy Signal - One More Night
One More Night
Busy Signal
1 Credits
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Busy Signal - Night Shiff
Night Shiff
Busy Signal
1 Credits
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Busy Signal - Like A Shaker
Like A Shaker
Busy Signal
1 Credits
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Busy Signal - Any Gal Mi Want
Any Gal Mi Want
Busy Signal
1 Credits
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VIDEOS ON ADAMARI TV

10 Videos Total  
 
Tic Toc - Adamari TV
Tic Toc
Fri. Dec 5, 08
Pleasure - Adamari TV
Pleasure
Fri. Nov 21, 08
Bakka Di House (kamasutra Riddim) - Adamari TV
Bakka Di House (kamasutra Riddim)
Fri. Jan 15, 10
Little Piece - Adamari TV
Little Piece
Fri. Jan 8, 10
 
Bed - Adamari TV
Bed
Fri. Jan 8, 10
Night Shift // One More Night - Adamari TV
Night Shift // One More Night
Mon. Jan 25, 10
Good Good - Adamari TV
Good Good
Tue. Jan 26, 10
Nah Answer - Adamari TV
Nah Answer
Tue. Feb 2, 10
 
Unknown Number - Adamari TV
Unknown Number
Tue. Feb 2, 10
Jail - Adamari TV
Jail
Tue. Feb 2, 10
  
 

NEWS PERTAINING TO Busy Signal

2 News Articles Total  
 
Elephant Man, Kartel, Topnominee Slate Set For Emes - Adamari News
Elephant Man, Kartel, Topnominee Slate Set For Emes
Wed. Jan 17, 07
Busy Signal Hoping Whole World Answers His Dancehall Call - Adamari News
Busy Signal Hoping Whole World Answers His Dancehall Call
Mon. Aug 30, 10
  
 
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Adamari was established July 2007 and represents the fruition of creative and groundbreaking genius in musical entertainment, reggae music production and reggae music event management. Boasting a strategic reggae music marketing and reggae music production team with collective experience and expertise of over 70 years, Adamari Empire is comprised of 3 mainstays that allows, it as an entity, to saturate all facets of its target market: Adamari Studios - event brokerage and event production; Adamari Records - artist management and recording label; and Adamari Distribution - online digital sales of popular audio, video, and mobile content.


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