Ranking Dread: Difference between revisions
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He had been involved with Jamaican gang leader [[Claude Massop]], and was wanted by Jamaican police in connection with over thirty murders. He travelled to the [[United Kingdom]], where he lived under several aliases including Errol Codling, became the head of a [[London Borough of Hackney|Hackney]] [[drug-dealing]] and [[armed robbery]] gang,<ref name="Pitts">Pitts, John (2008) ''Reluctant Gangsters: The Changing Face of Youth Crime'', Willan Publishing, {{ISBN|978-1-84392-365-7}}, p. 86.</ref> and was wanted by the police there. He was arrested at an illegal drinking club in 1988 and found to be in possession of illegal drugs and deported later that year, officially for entering the country illegally,<ref name="Hansard">{{cite web|author=Department of the Official Report (Hansard), House of Commons, Westminster |url=https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm198889/cmhansrd/1988-12-01/Writtens-8.html |title=House of Commons Hansard Debates for 1 Dec 1988 |website=Publications.parliament.uk |access-date=24 December 2015}}</ref> after being branded the most dangerous foreign national living in Britain.<ref name="OHanlon">O'Hanlon, Terry (1996), [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4161/is_19960721/ai_n14452800/ "Storm as Yardie gangsters sneak back into Britain"], ''[[Sunday Mirror]]'', 21 July 1996.</ref> In 1990, after being deported from the United States, he was arrested in [[Canada]] for allegedly slashing his girlfriend's face with a knife after entering the country illegally on a fake passport, and attempted to gain refugee status there, claiming that he feared for his life in Jamaica due to his political affiliations.<ref name="Simcoe">"[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=D4UaAAAAIBAJ&sjid=4SIDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3532,7077439&dq=errol-codling Refugee Reject Passes Our Test]", ''[[Simcoe Reformer]]'', 21 March 1990.</ref> |
He had been involved with Jamaican gang leader [[Claude Massop]], and was wanted by Jamaican police in connection with over thirty murders. He travelled to the [[United Kingdom]], where he lived under several aliases including Errol Codling, became the head of a [[London Borough of Hackney|Hackney]] [[drug-dealing]] and [[armed robbery]] gang,<ref name="Pitts">Pitts, John (2008) ''Reluctant Gangsters: The Changing Face of Youth Crime'', Willan Publishing, {{ISBN|978-1-84392-365-7}}, p. 86.</ref> and was wanted by the police there. He was arrested at an illegal drinking club in 1988 and found to be in possession of illegal drugs and deported later that year, officially for entering the country illegally,<ref name="Hansard">{{cite web|author=Department of the Official Report (Hansard), House of Commons, Westminster |url=https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm198889/cmhansrd/1988-12-01/Writtens-8.html |title=House of Commons Hansard Debates for 1 Dec 1988 |website=Publications.parliament.uk |access-date=24 December 2015}}</ref> after being branded the most dangerous foreign national living in Britain.<ref name="OHanlon">O'Hanlon, Terry (1996), [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4161/is_19960721/ai_n14452800/ "Storm as Yardie gangsters sneak back into Britain"], ''[[Sunday Mirror]]'', 21 July 1996.</ref> In 1990, after being deported from the United States, he was arrested in [[Canada]] for allegedly slashing his girlfriend's face with a knife after entering the country illegally on a fake passport, and attempted to gain refugee status there, claiming that he feared for his life in Jamaica due to his political affiliations.<ref name="Simcoe">"[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=D4UaAAAAIBAJ&sjid=4SIDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3532,7077439&dq=errol-codling Refugee Reject Passes Our Test]", ''[[Simcoe Reformer]]'', 21 March 1990.</ref> |
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He was eventually extradited back to Jamaica where he died in prison in 1996. |
He was eventually extradited back to Jamaica where he died in prison in 1996.<ref>https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=-aQyEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA156</ref> |
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==Discography== |
==Discography== |
Revision as of 21:45, 2 October 2022
Ranking Dread | |
---|---|
Birth name | Winston Brown |
Also known as | Robert Blackwood, Errol Codling, Michael Dicks, Boyark |
Born | 9 May 1956 Trelawny Parish, Jamaica |
Origin | Kingston, Jamaica |
Died | 1996 (aged 40–41) |
Genres | Reggae, dancehall |
Occupation | Deejay |
Years active | Mid-1970s–early 1980s |
Labels | Burning Sounds, Greensleeves |
Ranking Dread (born Winston Brown; c. 1955 – 1996)[1][2][3] was a Jamaican reggae deejay and was born in the Jamaican parish of Trelawny but grew up in the Kingston ghettos of Rema and Tivoli. He became famous for his work with the Ray Symbolic sound system in the 1970s. His later years in the UK and North America were dogged by legal issues.
Biography
Ranking Dread first became known as a deejay on the Ray Symbolic sound system in Jamaica, but by the late 1970s he had moved to London, where he worked with Lloyd Coxsone's sound system.[2] He released four albums starting with Girls Fiesta in 1978, produced by Linval Thompson, and worked with producer Sugar Minott on his third album, Lots of Loving.[1] He had a minor UK hit in the early 1980s with "Fattie Boom Boom", but in the mid-1980s, he faded from the music scene and became more notorious for his criminal activities, where he was labelled "the most dangerous man in Britain and the number one Yardie Godfather".[4] This was backed up by his appearance on a British television programme in the late 1980s entitled The Cook Report. However, when interviewed by TV Journalist Ben Chin in 1990 for a Canadian TV documentary, he denied all allegations put to him.[5]
He had been involved with Jamaican gang leader Claude Massop, and was wanted by Jamaican police in connection with over thirty murders. He travelled to the United Kingdom, where he lived under several aliases including Errol Codling, became the head of a Hackney drug-dealing and armed robbery gang,[6] and was wanted by the police there. He was arrested at an illegal drinking club in 1988 and found to be in possession of illegal drugs and deported later that year, officially for entering the country illegally,[7] after being branded the most dangerous foreign national living in Britain.[8] In 1990, after being deported from the United States, he was arrested in Canada for allegedly slashing his girlfriend's face with a knife after entering the country illegally on a fake passport, and attempted to gain refugee status there, claiming that he feared for his life in Jamaica due to his political affiliations.[9]
He was eventually extradited back to Jamaica where he died in prison in 1996.[10]
Discography
Albums
- Girls Fiesta (1978), Burning Sounds
- Kunta Kinte Roots (1979), Burning Sounds
- Lots of Loving (1980), Stand Firm
- Ranking Dread in Dub (1982), Silver Camel
- 2 Dread Inna Babylon (2006), Silver Kamel (with Massive Dread)
- Most Wanted (2007), Greensleeves
Singles
- Disco E.P. Showcase (EP) (1980), Art & Craft
- "I Don't Want To Be No General" (1980), D.E.B.
- "Fattie Boom Boom" (1981), Greensleeves
- "Poor Man Story" (1981), Live And Love
- "Wah We Do" (1981), Live And Love
- "My Mammy" (1982), Greensleeves
- "Shut Me Mouth" (1982), Greensleeves
- "Stylelily" (1998), High Power Music
- "Love A Dub" (2007), Greensleeves
References
- ^ a b Moskowitz, David V. (2006) Caribbean Music: an Encyclopedia of Reggae, Mento, Ska, Rock Steady, and Dancehall, Greenwood Press, ISBN 0-313-33158-8, p. 246.
- ^ a b Barrow, Steve & Dalton, Peter (2003) The Rough Guide to Reggae, 3rd edn, Rough Guides, ISBN 1-84353-329-4, p. 274.
- ^ "'Yardie' charged on arrival", The Daily Gleaner, 11 November 1988, p. 1.
- ^ Thompson, Tony (2001), "Two more die on 'murder mile'", The Guardian, 22 April 2001.
- ^ [1] [dead link ]
- ^ Pitts, John (2008) Reluctant Gangsters: The Changing Face of Youth Crime, Willan Publishing, ISBN 978-1-84392-365-7, p. 86.
- ^ Department of the Official Report (Hansard), House of Commons, Westminster. "House of Commons Hansard Debates for 1 Dec 1988". Publications.parliament.uk. Retrieved 24 December 2015.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ O'Hanlon, Terry (1996), "Storm as Yardie gangsters sneak back into Britain", Sunday Mirror, 21 July 1996.
- ^ "Refugee Reject Passes Our Test", Simcoe Reformer, 21 March 1990.
- ^ https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=-aQyEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA156
External links
- Discography
- Ranking Dread at Roots Archives