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I remember the day Mc Norman (Official HD video Ugandan reggae star - When Lucky Dube died, it seems he took with him not only his rare legacy, but reggae as a whole.
Few musician even dare to do reggae songs these days and yet it is still a relevant genre because young international musos such as Melanie Fiona and Rihanna are still releasing a reggae song or two on their albums.
The Marley brothers still tour and if Lauryn Hill gets over what made
her leave the game, even she could drop an instant reggae hit.
Yet no one on the local scene is willing to try out the Jamaican sound, well, until Mc Norman (pictured) stepped onto the scene.
The
Ugandan singer, who is based in South Africa, emerged on the scene when
the music industry needed a hero. Let's face it, we have all the house,
rock and hip hop music to last last a couple of years.
With Jah
Seed seemingly retired from the music scene it is a little gloomy for
the conscious reggae heads.Which is why it is refreshing to have a new
voice to the dying genre who is set to change things in a big way.
His album Lover's Rock boasts 11 tracks that have deep reggae roots yet are tweaked to meet current musical trends.
"I write music from things that I experience in my life," said the animated singer.
"I
write a song so many times as therapy for the things that I go through.
As we speak I have about 275 unreleased songs that just came from stuff
I was going through."
If you have a listen to the refreshing
Lover's Rock you will wish you had the 275 cuts on one CD, but for now
we have to be patient.
The album starts off with I Remember The
Day, a well put together joint that speaks of reminiscing of a time when
love first started.
"No matter how hard you try, you can never
forget the first time you met the one you love. This is where I took the
idea of this song from. The first meeting is always a special one
because everyone is still curious and they don't know much about each
other so they enjoy the curiosity," he said.
For someone who is
not originally from Jamaica it is interesting that his patois is on
point. You would think Buju Banton or Beanie Man was on the mic.
But
being born to Eddy and Rossette Ganja in Uganda in 1975, when reggae
and ragga were the staple sounds, there was no escape for the young Mc
Norman.
He grew up with a rich background in break dancing and
soon shifted his talents to songwriting and singing. After deciding to
move to South Africa, Mc Norman soon discovered that he had found a
niche with his sound.
"I am not competing with kwaito,R&B, or Afro-pop. I am just doing something totally different.
"People love reggae and, let's face it, no one is doing it," he explained.
To
make his presence felt and perhaps spread the appreciation of his
genre, Mc Norman has been working at incorporating local artists.
"I have been communicating with the Lucky Dube Band and there may be something coming out of that.
"Also,
I am working hard at establishing the culture of karaoke in South
Africa because in Jamaica that helps people appreciate new music there."
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