| Wayne Marshall
Wayne Marshall’s story is one of rites of passage. Born Wayne Mitchell, one of Dancehall’s ‘young giants’ recently celebrated his 21st birthday; the roller coaster ride that has made up his young life is what drives Wayne Marshall the artiste. Early years were spent in the Barbican area of Kingston, until his Father - a self-made successful businessman – relocated the family uptown. Destiny moved the Mitchell family 3 doors away from the front gate of the Father of digital Dancehall, Lloyd “King Jammy” James. The King had sons of young Wayne’s age group, so the Waterhouse studio soon became a pre-ordained second home for the music-loving teenager. “Automatically we get a piece of the ghetto inna we too,” he tells me from my passenger seat, trying to absorb the fast-fading cool of the A/C in my whip. “We deh deep inna di ghetto a day time at the studio, so we get to realize the livety and we get fi soak in wid the ghetto people and ketch dem mentality to a level,” he adds, acknowledging the importance of the ghetto education he received at ‘Jammin’s’ studio. Sparring with the big man’s offspring meant that the studio was at their disposal, causing Wayne to “start checking music on a serious level” from an early age. It was early ‘94 and Bounty Killer was as hot as Hell. Marshall recalls Elephant Man in tear-up clothes, Determine begging. Big artists came and went all day long. “At King Jammy’s I got to know the ropes in the deep heart of Dancehall - dub plate style!” Using his pass to the Mecca of Dancehall wisely, Wayne began copying Bounty Killer’s style and pattern at school. “Because I was at Jammy’s I would always have strictly pre-release Bounty Killer material and done the place! Any new tune that Jammy’s released for Bounty I learnt them straight away and was ready to pop it off anytime anyone asked me at school - all day, every day, 1st verse, 2nd verse, anything you want.” The fruits of that labor are tangible in Wayne Marshall the artist and Wayne Mitchell the acclaimed songwriter. “From young I saw the channel of originality I should run through,” enthuses Marshall, forgetting the failing A/C for a moment. “That desire to be original, to be an artiste, was directly from Bounty Killer. His levels of meditation and the standard he brought the lyrics to made me realize it was something I should be a part of.” Age difference and Bounty’s fearsome rep for being unapproachable kept the two entertainer’s paths apart. For the time being. Marshall’s
abounding self-confidence allows him to freely acknowledge his skillz,
and he recognised his own talent for lyical construction as soon as,
he started penning soulful lyrics at 14. “From I was 7 years old
I always dreamed, visioned, of performing in front of huge crowds of
people,” smiles Marshall, “until I realised I could sing
and make the girls dem cry, so I just sang and made the girls dem cry!” Despite
Marshall’s confidence and natural talent, Jammy’s hit factory
still overlooked him. “It was tough because all the flavor yoots
I was around were telling me my shit was the wickedest ting,”
he remembers, “but I just kept writing and holding direct meditation
in myself, to find and bring forth originality out of myself.”
Marshall was bursting to record on wax, so a friend organised an audition
one evening with producer Mikey Bennet, at his studio. After a nervous
introduction Bennet insisted Marshall sing over a track he was listeing
to in the studio, ignoring Marshall’ please to sing something
original. “Sing back weh the singer sing?” Marshall asked Marshall
re-wrote Lauryn Hill’s dedication to her son Zion for Nicholas’
funeral and sang, without tears, like he never sang before. The packed
church was moved physically, spiritually and mentally. “It was
the deepest shit,” Marshall reflects. “I was standing beside
my best friend’s dead body - it was green, it looked a way, who
died in the accident I was in and I projected the song with a clarity
like never before. Everyone present felt the power right there. When
I came home from the funeral that evening my Father told me ‘Yoot,
you don’t make your first million offa singing yet, so do what
you’re doing.’ From me hear that everything was sealed -
it’s the most outstanding thing my Father ever said to me inna
mi life.” Wayne channeled his energy into his music, determined
to repay the confidence Nicholas had shown in his talent. “By
this point in my life” says Marshall, “I had witnessed guns,
tragedy, went to jail for conspiracy of killing an Officer, I came near
to death - I was able to balance life better after all that. I drew
deep within myself and I came up with a thing called When the Smoke
Clears. Straight away I knew that if Killer deejayed the verses nobody
could hold it back, but I didn’t really have a way of getting
him to sit down and listen to the song.” Pointing to the very
spot at the gas station where he first deejayed the song for Renaissance
selector Jazzy T, Marshall tells me Jazzy drove him to Arrows Dub studio
same time, where he voiced the Smoke Clears special on his own. Destiny
conspired again at uptown bash Iceberg, where Jazzy T premiered the
dub. Bounty and his entourage were in effect and witnessed Wayne Marshall
done the place when he touched the mic. “After I worked, Killer
showed me love so I got the courage and put the argument to him about
the song,” says Marshall. “As I brought up the subject Jazzy
T happened to draw for it at the same time.” The dub plate was
saluted with a gunshot - an unprecedented happening at uptown joint
Peppers. “Legal!” shouted Jazzy T and the song burst into
the verse. Killer, being Killer, said nothing. Marshall
spent 6 weeks extensively touring the US with Bounty Killer on his Ghetto
Dictionary Tour earlier this year, an experience that was priceless.
“Killer start show me the real prowl,” Marshall says of
the education he received on tour. “When you tour with the top-a-top
its different to moving with other young artists. You get experience
from the top-a-top, everything The
confidence Marshall left the US with inspired him to give his Jamaican
fans new-brand serial on his return. Bounty Killer’s ‘Its
a Party’ bash was held a week after they touched down. Marshall
let loose ‘Earthquake Shakes’ live for the first time locally;
the positive tidal wave of response that exploded from the audience
audibly shook him. That gargantuan forward was Marshall is never without the pouch he walks with, containing his MD recorder, CD player, pad, pen, stash etc. He can often be found on a secluded ‘ends’ near his home, deep in himself, basking in creativity. “Mi no inna di idle ting no more,” he assures me. I personally didn’t think he ever was. “To how me feel right now, to how I wanna meditate in myself right now I could do a prison term and come ready back and seh onno f**ker onno, mi get some time to myself.” With the war going on in the land, it never was going to be long before Bounty Killer’s rivals drew Marshall into the trenches; Beenie’s homosexual counteraction to Smoke Clears left a lot to be desired, and whilst Marshall has something to destroy it, he is keeping his distance from the war. “Mi par wid the Warlord - not the War Prime Minister or War Minister, not me and the War Head or War Friend - the Warlord, so wi can just make him kill everybody and we will mop up the blood. After the earthquake shake.” |