Josey Wales | |
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Birth name | Joseph Winston Sterling |
Also known as |
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Born | [lower-alpha 1] | October 9, 1958
Origin | St. Mary, Jamaica |
Genres | Dancehall Toasting Reggae |
Years active | 1975-present[lower-alpha 2] |
Josey Wales OD (born Joseph Winston Sterling[lower-alpha 3], October 9, 1958, in St. Mary, Jamaica) is a Jamaican dancehall deejay. He has been called, along with Brigadier Jerry, Yellowman and sound system partner Charlie Chaplin, one of the best Jamaican dancehall deejays of the 1980s.[1] Wales is named after the 1976 Western movie character from The Outlaw Josey Wales, played by Clint Eastwood, and subsequently nicknamed "The Outlaw".
His career began in the late 1970s, first starting as a deejay on the Roots Unlimited sound-system where he often sparred with Burro Banton, and later performing over U-Roy-owned King Sturgav sound system.[2] He gained even more popularity in the early 1980s performing over Henry "Junjo" Lawes's Volcano sound system, and recording singles such as "Bobo Dread" and "Leggo Mi Hand" for Lawes' label of the same name, as well as later hits for George Phang's Power House label, most noticeably "Undercover Lover".[3]
He was shot and robbed in a Kingston bar in 1997, an incident that he dealt with in the country and western song "Bushwacked".[3] He survived the robbery, and after his discharge from a hospital, he went to the United States and bought an ambulance to donate for the Kingston Public Hospital.
He appeared in Shaggy's "Bad Man Don't Cry" video, and by 2014 had begun recording new material.[3]
In October 2017, he was awarded the Order of Distinction by the Jamaican government.[4][lower-alpha 4]
Personal life
Josey is a Rastafarian and has been since 1975 but also retains a major influence of Christianity. He was baptized in May 1959. He currently resides in Kingston.
Discography
This discography is incomplete; you can help by adding missing albums/singles.[lower-alpha 5]
Albums
- 1983 – Josie Wales Meets Early-B
- 1983 – Outlaw, also called The Outlaw Josey Wales
- 1983 – King Yellowman Meets The Mighty Josey Wales [lower-alpha 6]
- 1984 – No Way No Better Than Yard
- 1984 – Two Giants Clash (split with Yellowman)
- 1985 – Undercover Lover
- 1986 – Rules, also called Ruling
- 1986 – Ha Fi Say So
- 1988 – Special Prayer
- 1988 – Na Lef Jamaica
- 1989 – How Yu Mouth Tan So
- 1994 – Outlaw (reissue)
- 1994 – Charlie Chaplin and Josey Wales – Kings Of The Dancehall
- 1994 – Cowboy Style
- 2001 – Rulin (reissue)
- 2015 – "Loving Pauper" w/ Sista Sensi
Notes
- ↑ Josey has several birth-dates: In some news/social media posts it is October 9, others June 24. In the song Bible Never Fail Me Yet, he claims he was born in June.
- ↑ His first official release was in 1982, but his career dates back to 1975 when he joined the sound-system Roots Unlimited.
- ↑ In some ASCAP records, he is credited as Joseph Alphonso Sterling.
- ↑ His official status has never been disputed since 2017, although: In several live-performances dating back earliest to 1987 at the Bigga Ford Xmas Show, Wales often chatted that he had the Order of Distinction from the Governor-General. (then Florizel Glasspole)
- ↑ Due to many singles and LPs released by different sound-systems/labels and considering the amount of publishing in the 1980s in Jamaica, it is hard to identify the full amount of works Wales has created. His most-complete discography is available on Discogs.
- ↑ Jamaican import version of Two Giants Clash, features majority of the same songs.
References
- ↑ allmusic ((( Josey Wales > Biography )))
- ↑ "Reggaepedia / Josey Wales". Reggaepedia. Retrieved 3 July 2021.
- 1 2 3 Jackson, Kevin (2014) "The return of Josey Wales", Jamaica Observer, 4 April 2014. Retrieved 5 April 2014
- ↑ Johnson, Richard (2017) "With Distinction: Arts, entertainment fraternity members honoured at King's House Archived 3 March 2021 at the Wayback Machine", Jamaica Observer, 17 October 2017. Retrieved 18 October 2017
External links