Here is  lil tribute to a much forgotten and on of my all time favorite Reggae singer - Garnett Silk.  A reggae legend to me.  He died tragically in a fire while trying to save his mother.  RIP.  One Love, One People, Jah Rastafari... 
A bit of info for those that never heard of him (Each One Teach One)
Garnett Silk (born Garnet Damoin Smith; April 2, 1966 – December 9, 1994), was a Jamaican reggae musician and Rastafarian, known for his emotive, powerful and smooth voice.  During the early 1990s he was hailed as a rising talent, but his career  was ended by his early death in 1994, while attempting to save his  mother while the house was on fire.
  Smith was born in Manchester, Jamaica.  His musical career began at the age of twelve, when he performed under the name Little Bimbo.  During the 1990s he worked as a Deejay on Sound Systems such as Conquering Lion, Soul Remembrance, Pepper's Disco, Stereophonic, and Destiny Outernational (where he first met Tony Rebel).   He recorded his first track in 1985, but it would be two years later  before his first single, "Problem Everywhere" was released.  An album of material from this period (Journey) was later released. In 1988, he joined Sugar Minott's  Youth Promotion  label, releasing "No Disrespect", and working regularly with Tony  Rebel, Smith now being billed simply as 'Bimbo' (lol). The pair began  performing as a duo around the sound systems to much acclaim. The Garnett Silk Meets the Conquering Lion: A Dub Plate Selection  album dates from about this time and features a clutch of exclusive  recordings the DJ cut for the sound system from the mid-1980s through  the end of the decade. Rebel, a Rastafarian, eventually converted Smith to his religion with the help of dub poet Yasus Afari, a close friend of both the DJs.
     In 1989, at the suggestion of veteran singer Derrick Morgan,  Smith turned from deejaying to singing, with a recording session at Bunny Lee's studio with Rebel, including tracks recorded separately, as a duo, and with Anthony Selassie, and he began working under his real name. The Heartbat label's Tony Rebel Meets Garnet Silk in a Dancehall Conference  compiles these early Morgan-overseen recordings. The success of this  session led him to continue as a singer, going on to work with producers King Tuby, Prince Jammy, and Donovan Germain, before signing a two-year contract with Steely & Clevie in 1990, recording an album's worth of songs for them. It was the  production duo who decided to change his name to Garnett Silk, in  reference to his smooth voice.  Only one of the tracks recorded during this period, "We Can Be Together", a duet with Clevelle Franflin, was actually released at the time, and discouraged by this, he returned  to Manchester and threw himself into songwriting, often in partnership  with an old friend, Anthony "Fire" Rochester.
  Another encounter with Tony Rebel brought an introduction to Courtney  Cole, owner of the Roof International label. Silk would record a  plethora of songs at the producer's Ocho Rios studio, amongst them were the hits "Mama," "Seven Spanish Angels," and a cover of the Johnny Hash classic "I Can See Clearly Now". Roof International would posthumously  bundle up these early singles and other material recorded at this time  for the Nothing Can Divide Us album, which the VP label picked up for the US. 
     By 1992, Silk was in Kingston in the studio with producer Bobby Digital, recording his debut album It's Growing.  Split between deeply cultural themes, spiritual songs, and romantic  numbers, the album went on to become one of the best selling in Jamaica  that year, and he had his first major hit single with "Hey Mama Africa" (One of my favoriotes and produced by Richard "Bello" Bell) for the Star  Trail label, which was Silk's first international hit, and topped the  reggae chart in Britain!
     Over the next two years, the singer would record with most of the major  name producers on the island, both on his own and in partnership with  Tony Rebel. He cut a swathe of songs with King Jammy, including "Fill Us  Up With Your Mercy" and "Lord Watch Over Our Shoulders".  The latter  track titled a 1994 compilation released by the Greensleeves label in  the U.K. and boasts seven Jammy cuts and a clutch of hits for other  producers.
     1993's Gold, released by the UK.   Charm label, bundled up more hits from this period. Amongst them was  "Zion in a Vision," a Jamaican number one cut with producer Jack  Scorpio, as well as "Hey Mama Africa". he also recorded for Sly & Robbie, including the deeply religious "Thank You, Jah" and the haunting "Green  Line." But the pace was becoming too much and Silk collapsed during a  show at the Ritz in New York City, suffering from low blood pressure and exhaustion.   The exhausted singer was forced to cancel all his scheduled appearances  for the next six months, most crucially of all, what would have been  his debut at Reggae Sumfest.   However, Silk bounced back in 1994 and set back to work. In a show of  good grace, he rejoined Steely & Clevie and cut the "Love Is the  Answer" single, another massive hit. "Fight Back," produced by Richie  Stephens, was next up. By then, the singer was ready to re-take the  stage, which he did with a vengeance, headlining that year's Reggae  Sumfest and Reggae Sunsplash festivals.  His set at the latter event was captured for the Live at Reggae Sunsplash 1994 album, released in 1999 by the Tabou1 label.
     Having signed an international distribution deal with Atlantic records, Silk now entered Tuff Gong studios with producer Errol Brown and the cream of Jamaica's sessionmen (including Aston Barrett, Sly & Robbie, Tyrone Downie, Earl "Chinna" Smith, and Uziah "Sticky" Thompson),  to begin work on his second album. He'd recorded ten songs and the  album was nearing completion when he went home to visit his mother. Silk  had borrowed a pair of guns from his attorney after his home had been  burgled, but had no idea how to use them. Sitting with a couple of  friends at his mother's house in Mandeville, Jamaica, on December 9, one offered to show him how they worked, at which point the gun accidentally misfired, hitting a propane tank and setting the house ablaze.   The singer, his friends, and his two brothers made it out safely, only  to discover that Silk's mother was still trapped inside. The singer  rushed back into the house to save her, but it was too late and both  were lost in the fire.  Since then, Silk's music has been kept alive by several tributes, including Macka B's "Tribute to Garnett Silk" and the Earth Day concert, and numerous  compilation albums, including two collections of his dubplates, Kilamanjaro Remembers Garnett Silk (Jam Down, 1999) and Rule Dem (Trojan/Sanctuary 2006).
In 2000, Atlantic finally released The Definitive Collection, a two-CD set showcasing the ten tracks the singer had recorded during sessions for his unfinished second album.

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