Prince Far I

Prince Far I

Person from Jamaica

Genres: reggae, dub, roots reggae, roots, jamaica

Prince Far I

About Prince Far I

Prince Far I was born Michael James Williams in Spanish Town, Jamaica in 1945. In his teens he assumed the role of lead DJ with the Sir Mike the Musical Dragon Sound System. Bunny Lee first recorded Far I in the early 70's with a tune called "The Great Booga Wooga". He went on to cut tunes for Coxsone, notably "Natty Farmyard" and a version of "Queen of the Minstrel". In 1973 the Cordell's "Simpleton" appeared on the Lion label, with the flip being a strange half-sung half-chanted version by the Prince entitled "Simpleton Skank". In 1974 he voiced "Let Jah arise" for Enos McLeod at King Tubbys, and it is Enos who can be credited with renaming the DJ as Prince Far I. After some self-productions which appeared on Pete Weston's Micron outlet, Prince Far I hit a period which included two of reggae's greatest DJ albums. Firstly the "Psalms for I" collection, a straight chant of bible word. The second landmark album was "Under Heavy Manners" for producer Joe Gibbs, engineered by Erroll Thompson. It contained the Prince's first big Jamaican hit single, "Heavy Manners", on the rhythm of Naggo Morris' "Su Su Pon Rasta". In 1976 Prince Far I set up his own label in Jamaica -- Cry Tuff. That label issued Far I's productions in Jamaica. His UK business ran through the fledgling label Hit Run, created by Adrian Sherwood. This arrangement was almost one of master and pupil, as the Arabs/Roots Radics became Dub Syndicate with Sherwood learning the studio craft as both producer and engineer. The rhythm tracks were laid in Jamaica by Style Scott & Co, the mix and overdubs taken care of in London. "Cry Tuff Dub Encounter Chapter III" by Prince Far I and the Arabs was originally released in the UK by that most avuncular of record shop proprietors Keith Stone of Daddy Kool. It marked the handing on of the producer's baton from Far I to Sherwood, soon to launch On U Sound at a time when many critics considered reggae to be a finished force. Prince Far I was shot dead in Jamaica, September 15, 1983.

Taken from Last.fm

133,657 listeners  ·  1,259,795 plays via Last.fm

On RadioStar

37
stations playing
11
countries
91
tracks tracked
most active station (The Russian Federation)

Radio Stations sorted by tracks on rotation

Onedrop
2 tracks on rotation
MP3 : 128
27 Likes


KFJC
1 track on rotation
MP3 : 128
40 Likes

Radio Laser
1 track on rotation
MP3 : 192
29 Likes

M2 JAZZ
1 track on rotation
MP3 : 160
24 Likes

Prince Far I — Top 30 songs of 91

Artist Song title Like / Dislike
Prince Far I Bendel Dub
Prince Far I Jah Dub Version
Prince Far I Plant Up
Prince Far I Silver & Gold
Prince Far I Brother Joe
Prince Far I Throw Away Your Gun (1991 Digital Remaster)
Prince Far I Under Heavy Manners
Prince Far I Deck of Cards
Prince Far I Internal Dub
Prince Far I Kaduna Dub
Prince Far I Tribute to Bob Marley
Prince Far I Ask Ask
Prince Far I Farmyard
Prince Far I Heavy Manners
Prince Far I Leave Babylon
Prince Far I Rain A Fall
Prince Far I Talking Rights
Prince Far I The Will to Run
Prince Far I Final Chapter
Prince Far I Different Dagger
Prince Far I Ten Commandments
Prince Far I Ask Ask
Prince Far I Deck Of Life
Prince Far I Mount Zion
Prince Far I So Long
Prince Far I Live In Manchester, England [13Te]
Prince Far I Tribute To Michael Holding [Ttb]
Prince Far I Natty Champion
Prince Far I Prison Descipline
Prince Far I Road A Chapter
Bendel Dub
Jah Dub Version
Silver & Gold
Brother Joe
Throw Away Your Gun (1991 Digital Remaster)
Under Heavy Manners
Deck of Cards
Internal Dub
Kaduna Dub
Tribute to Bob Marley
Heavy Manners
Leave Babylon
Rain A Fall
Talking Rights
The Will to Run
Final Chapter
Different Dagger
Ten Commandments
Deck Of Life
Mount Zion
Live In Manchester, England [13Te]
Tribute To Michael Holding [Ttb]
Natty Champion
Prison Descipline
Road A Chapter