ROCK’N’ROLLCONFIDENTIAL
KING JAMMY
The reggae producer and dub master talks King Tubby, dancehall rivalry and the Sleng Teng rhythm.
Mighty ruler: Lloyd ‘King Jammy’
James’s love for the music is eternal.
David Corio/Getty
A LIVING LINK to reggae’s golden age, engineer, producer and writer Lloyd ‘King Jammy’ James was born in Montego Bay, Jamaica, in 1947. Founding his first soundsystem in his early teens, in his twenties he worked as a technician for mighty dub architect Osbourne ‘King Tubby’ Ruddock. From 1977 he struck out on his own as Prince Jammy, producing artists including Sugar Minott, Junior Delgado and Johnny Osbourne. Known for capturing the dancehall on vinyl, in 1985 he produced Wayne Smith’s gamechanging Under Me Sleng Teng, and reggae’s digital era had begun. With his latest LP King Jammy’s Unites The Nations With Dub out last November, he’s still sustaining: when MOJO calls, he’s due at a session at his studio in rough and ready Waterhouse in Kingston.A