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Toots
Hibbert and the Maytals
Click the PLAY button to tune-in to a concert at The House of Blues in Chicago from April 2, 2004.
Grammy-winning
“Skafather” Toots Hibbert made his reputation in
The golden age of
reggae began with the first mention of the word, albeit misspelled, in the title
of the Maytals’ 1968 smash, “Do the Reggay”.
Toots remembers, “I say, let’s do the reggae, and that’s the way it
is. Coming from the soul, from
consciousness, life and living. Reggae is a God music, coming from the vibes of
the Rastafari, it’s coming from the dreadlocks.”
Reggae was brought explosively to the world in large part through Perry Henzell’s ground-breaking film The Harder They Come, which featured a pair of tracks from the Maytals, and a broiling studio session from the trio that alerted foreigners to Toots’ prowess. His back catalog led to thousands of new fans and international tours. When Island Records signed him in 1975 and released Reggae Got Soul, the Who invited the Maytals to be their opening act on the road.
Many songs
featured during his tumultuous eye-opening live shows in the ‘70s and ‘80s
are given thrilling new interpretations on Light
Your Light, including “Pain in My Heart,” “I Got A Woman,” and
“Premature.” The album
also features an incredible new take on “Johnny Cool Man” which, Toots says
“never got the kind of attention it should have.”
He goes on, “’Johnny Coolman’ was a nickname I made up for some
fans who didn’t know who I was. Funny
though, he was an actual person. An
outlaw in
“I Got A Woman” and “Pain in My Heart” underlie Toots’ on-going affection for the progenitors of R&B. When discussing the R&B flavor on the new album, Toots says, “I listen to Otis, Ray Charles….I learned a lot of things from them. They were my teachers.” Toots paid homage to his teachers in 1988 with the release of Toots in Memphis, an album which garnered him his first Grammy nomination.
A love of American soul music was evident on 1976’s Reggae Got Soul, on which “Premature” first appeared. In its reincarnation on Light Your Light, Toots is reunited with one of his biggest fans, the vivacious Bonnie Raitt, on vocals and slide guitar. “She loves me to life,” says Toots, “and I love her to life. She’s a beautiful lady.”
After
reforming the Maytals in the early 90’s, Toots went on to release a few more
albums including 2004’s True Love,
which finally got him his Grammy award. The
album featured collaborations with Bonnie Raitt, Keith Richards, Jeff Beck, Ben
Harper, No Doubt, Eric Clapton, The Roots, Willie Nelson and many more.
As the follow-up to his Grammy-award winning album, Fantasy records will release Light Your Light, his debut album for the label. He is joined by his touring band on the album including Jackie Jackson (bass), Paul Douglas (drums), Dougie Bryan (rhythm guitar), Carl Harvey (lead guitar) and Charles Farquharson (keyboard).
Asked why he has
been and remains so successful, Toots told reggae historian Hank Holmes,
“Because of love. It is because of love that I could retain, and I could gain
whatever is good for me, and whatever makes my audience happy. I am not a man
who you’re going to hear about today and not hear about tomorrow. I’m a
constant man. Do what I do. I live.”