HOME  


This interview features maybe the most influential person in Germaican History, Dean Fraser. The A+ Saxophone player, responsible for getting Germaican Records founder Pionear on the scene in Jamaica, speaks with Nadine about Dancehall, the split and reunion with Luciano and about the business within the business.

Germaican Observer: Why and how did you come to play the Saxophone?
General Degree: Its something we had to do as recreation in the evenings as kids to stay out of trouble… I never did look at it from no money point of view, it was just time was hard and living was hard and I just had to get something to do and that's what I did.

G.O.: How did being a part of the Sonny Bradshaw band come about?
D.F.: My teacher was also a member of that group and although I wasn't ready to be a part of that group, I wasn't up to scratch, but he and also Mr. Bradshaw thought that I will learn and I will learn quickly, so I did…

G.O.: What was that like and why did you decide to go solo?
D.F.: Being a part of that group taught me everything career wise, it taught me everything that any young musician should learn… it was like a big educational institute for me. After spending about 8 years in that band I decided it was time to go out there yuh nuh, so I was leaving
solid pay and work to go out there and 'fen' for myself.
I was ready fi starve likkle so I just went ahead and do what I wanted to do, so leaving that I went to the Studios, "Joe Gibbs Studio", "Channel 1 Studio" and I stand there every day for about a year and hope that one day I would play on a song and here I am.

G.O.: You are referred to as a 'Saxophonist extraordinaire,' do you see yourself as being that?
D.F.: No sah, not necessarily… I've been called that since I was a youth so it is not something that you would say yuh really get hype or anything over that, no really.
Compliment is great but that is something that can lead you astray.

G.O.: What is the feeling you get when you play...
D.F.: I don't know I just a play and just a express myself and that's just what I do.

G.O.: You have played with almost everybody in Reggae and Dancehall...
D.F.: I think I have covered everybody and if they are brand new I think I will cover them sooner or later, most of the people I have wanted to work with I have had the opportunity to and I do like the part of the businees that I'm in I do get the opportunity with almost anybody I want to work with and that is satisfying.

G.O.: You had stopped working with Luciano and now you're working together again, what had happened?
D.F.: That was just a little misunderstanding between himself and a couple of other people in the band and I took a stand mainly because I thought he handled the situation shabby that was basically it. I was no animosity or anything it's just that something happened and I think he could have handled the situation much better and dealt with the whole procedure much better… I took a stand mainly because I did not like how he handled the business yuh understand me, because yuh have to remember the business of music first before you take certain stands. It's the business of music and career, so if yuh handle yuh business of music and career like that then it seems as if you're not interested… and if you are not interested then I don't think that I should work with you so I had to take a stand to show him that is not how you approach or how you handle certain situations.

G.O.: What are the major changes that have taken place in the over 20 years that you have been in the business?
D.F.: One thing about the business that has changed for the better is the business of the business…

G.O.: What does that mean?
D.F.: The business part of our music has changed for the better, when I say the business part I mean like yuh nuh we have better management these days, everybody is doing a little paper work and all a dat which is good for the business aspect of it.
The music aspect of it I think has deteriorated a little in the sense where, the music itself should have been doing better as a music and that is the part of it that I think we need to do something to improve.
The improvement on the business aspect of it makes it difficult these days to see a Singer or a DeeJay turning out to perform and no have nothing like the old days when all of the so-called producers of the old days stole all the money from the Singers and all that and left them to be just some very ordinary likkle people yuh nuh… but these days our Singers and DeeJays are being paid well and all a dat and that is good.

G.O.: Almost all Riddims coming out today are "computer-built" and not like in the old days, how do you feel about that?
D.F.: Well it depends on what the song wants and what the person wants, this is a different age, this is a different era and yuh just have to fall in line… everything is a cycle and goes around and comes around, yuh can play live music into the computer now, so everything has come right back around so it's just a matter of being current...

G.O.: You started out playing Jazz and you do mostly Reggae music now, how do do you feel about Dancehall music?
D.F.: Dancehall is great… Dancehall is a music that we as a people should accept and get behind because Dancehall is the new popmusic of the world. It is the most potent right now and if yuh notice the young people are just 'hawking' up the Dancehall music, even the Americans right now are switching to what they call the 'Jamaica Flava,' it's a music to reckon wid right now and we just need to recognise that and get wid it.

G.O.: You will hear a child in Jamaica say "I want to be a singer or a deejay when I grow up," but almost never want to be a saxophonist or pianist, don't you think there needs to be more done like a musical...
D.F.: That is a saying that keeps going round and round and round, but really and truly we need really to improve on that… that can be very far away because of the economic situation right now but the most that we can do is what we can do. If they expose them to the things they will want to do it, yuh just need to show them the instrument and let them get interested in playing it, as soon as we get some of these programs in place… we have been talking about this for a very long time but it hasn't manifested but as soon as we get that in place we will be able to do that...


Dean Fraser "SAx Of Life"
(VP Records)

G.O.: At the end of the day can you actually live and live comfortably from what you do?
D.F.: Me personally don't wah live better than how mi live right now, as long as mi live and able fi do the things mi wah fi do and when me feel like and all a dat…that's basically me, mi no really come fi have a whole heap a money and have people a fight over it and over me mi no really interested inna dat. Mi just wah do mi work and live.

G.O.: You will be touring Germany with Max Romeo...
D.F.: I'm looking forward to that because I've never done a gig like this touring...

G.O.: You put out an album recently…
D.F.: Yeah, I put out a little album last year called "Sax of Life" and that little album is to keep a vibe going, but I've not really sat down yet and meditate on the new stuff that I want to do.

Germaican Observer: Well thanks a lot Dean and hope to see you perform when you're here.
General Degree: Alright my dear...

Nadine Reid/ G.O. Leipzig/Germany


   
to the top
 
Inhalt:
G.O. HOME
INTERVIEW
Dean Fraser
RIDDIM REPORT
Blaze

TAPE OF THE MONTH

Soundquake
"Range Rovin`"


ARCHIVE
G.O. complete
G.O. LINKS
G.O. NEWSLETTER?
your email-address:

subscribe
unsubscribe

e-mail: observer@germaica.net

© February 2004
by TOPP Entertainment
All rights reserved.

 

© 1999 - 2004 Topp Entertainment