Sanchez
It's
been over 15 years since that rich, impossibly sensitive voice first
cast its spell on reggae fans with a reinterpretation of Simply Red's
"Lady in Red." When Sanchez takes on a proven R&B hit,
he doesn't just rekindle the torch, he sets the airwaves on fire. Born
Kevin Anthony Jackson, Sanchez grew up in the Stony Hill and Waterhouse
sections of Kingston, Jamaica. Like many of the island's vocal legends,
his first singing experience was in church, specifically St. Catherine
parish's Rehobth Epostlic Church. "I started at age six,"
he recalls. "Then, I was drafted into Sunday school choir at 11."
By 13, he was singing the leads and conducting the Junior Choir. Despite his success with Rambo, Sanchez never let go of his dream to make it as a singer, but Kingston's producers were flooded with hopefuls begging for a chance on a studio mic. "I didn't know any producers and every time I go to a studio to do some form of audition, they would tell me to come back in three weeks time or whatever," he recalls. "I kept going back and forth, but they were hearing so many singers and deejays that another one never mean much." Finally, he got a chance from Redman, who matched his new find to "Lady in Red" and released the happy match in 1986, on his Redman International label. The tune went straight to number 18 on local charts. "Then all those people who told me to come back started asking me to sing this and that," Sanchez recalls, laughing. Among the top studio men wanting to use that glorious instrument to create their own hits were Winston Riley of the Techniques label and Xterminator's Phillip "Fatis" Burrell. A slew of number one’s quickly took over Jamaican radio and dance halls, then spread throughout Planet Jamaica, including "Sad Song" for Techniques, and "Loneliness," which was the biggest song both locally and overseas during the '87 to '88 season, earning Sanchez multiple awards. In '87, he took Singer of the Year, Best New Artist, Best Song, and even Best Dressed, an award he won four years straight, thanks to the designing skills of his wife, Monica Williams Jackson. Sanchez
hasn't stopped since, and his unique and necessary presence continues
to sweeten the music, no matter what the current dancehall fashion.
His soaring, Afro-erotic sound is both powerful and versatile, a vehicle
for devotion to God and girls alike. Hits like '88's "Sweetest
Girl" and "Impossible," '91-2's "Bring Back the
Love" and "I Can't Wait," '94's "Missing You,"
and '95's "Praise Him," "Never Dis the Man," and
"Never Keeping Secrets" represent a fraction of the numerous
boomshots that keep this rare talent at the forefront of the international
reggae scene. So far, he has turned out a staggering 15-plus albums
for King Jammy, his son John John, Bobby Digital, and Sanchez himself
(he produced his '99 "Who Is This Man?" CD). Those titles
include 88's "Loneliness," "Sweetest Girl," and
"Impossible"; '89's "Wild Sanchez"; 89-90's "Sanchez
in Fine Style"; 91-2's "I Can't Wait"; '91's "Bring
Back the Love" (for English producer Morris Johnson's World Records";
91-2's "Number One"; 93-4's Boom Boom Bye Bye (No, not THE
Buju Banton tune); '95's "Praise Him"; '97's "Missing
You"; and '98's "Perilous Time." |