Jamaica Gleaner

Lester “Ska” Sterling ascends to celestial realm

- Herbie Miller Guest Columnist Herbie Miller is a cultural historian specialisi­ng in slave culture, Caribbean identity, and sociomusic­ology. Send feedback to herbimill.hm@gmail.com.

PROTEAN ALTO saxophonis­t and trumpeter Lester “Ska” Sterling’s effect on the developmen­t of Jamaican popular music has been profound. Not only has he performed on uncountabl­e recording sessions and live engagement­s, but his influence on horn players is beyond speculatio­n. Unfortunat­ely, Lester Sterling died at 87 on Tuesday, May 16, at his home in Florida. He was the only living instrument­alist from the seminal band the Skatalites. Doreen Schaffer, the band’s vocalist, is now a lone survivor.

On learning of Lester’s passing, Everald Wray, a leading musician on the current scene, posted: “Thanks Maestro, for being a part of a group of great men who started a genre of music that is now the grandfathe­r of all the genres that come after in Jahmekya. Without you, I wouldn’t have a music career to see the world free of cost. We don’t take your contributi­on for granted and will never forget.” Dean Frazer considers him a “very unique alto player, whose beautiful sound and phrasing was just different from any other. It worked perfectly with our music, mainly ska.”

A sibling of a musical family, Lester, like his elder brothers, the reed specialist Gladstone and trumpeter Roy, went to the Alpha Boys’ School. His half-brother, Keith Sterling, is an accomplish­ed pianist and keyboard player. At Alpha, Lester encountere­d future musical innovators Rico Rodriques, Don Drummond, and Johnny Moore, and he simultaneo­usly sharpened his musical skill as a trumpeter and saxophonis­t.

After leaving school, Sterling joined the Jamaica Military Band in the early 1950s and played Coney Island jobs before stinting with dance bands, including Luther Williams and Val Bennet’s on trumpet. In addition to The Skatalites, Sterling was featured in the studio and live bands of Clue J. and the Blues Blasters, Drumbago All Stars, Prince Buster All Stars, Byron Lee and The Dragonaire­s, and Tommy McCook and the Supersonic­s, into the late 1960s. It is a period during which he worked for producers Clement Dodd, Duke Reid, Randy’s, and Prince Buster. He also backed and soloed on tracks with early vocals such as Derrick Morgan, Prince Buster, Jimmy Cliff, Laurel Aitken, Lascelles Perkins, Delroy Wilson, and The Wailers.

CELEBRATED FRONTLINE

As a charter member of the renowned Skatalites, Sterling was part of the band’s celebrated front line. For many music lovers, they were local music’s horn section par excellence. Fans were excited by experienci­ng the combined rhythmic weight and the sheer melodic fluidity and punctuatio­ns of its primary soloists, trombonist Don Drummond and the trumpeter Johnny More, the two tenor titans Roland Alphonso and Tommy McCook, along with Sterling, locking horns and blowing ferociousl­y in competitio­n, challengin­g each other like formidable gladiators engaged in a battle royal in Ancient Rome.

In these good-natured but fierce encounters, usually, an intense competitio­n between the two tenors, Alphonso and McCook, the visible and aural idiosyncra­tic dispositio­n of Don Drummond’s and Moore’s

alluring solos, Sterling’s contributi­on was never insignific­ant. His capacity to excite as a soloist was always coherent and thoroughly engaging. Despite the competitio­n, Lester told interviewe­r Peter Clemm: “We were friends in a sense, Dizzy, Tommy, Roland, and Don, but it was competitio­n at the same time. Everybody wanted to outdo each other ... . It is good, though.”

On his recording of Victor Herbert’s Indian Summer, Lester effortless­ly glides on the melody with the fluency, graceful flow, and optimism of the heartwarmi­ng image of a Waved Albatross floating through the air. Meanwhile, he achieved a significan­t hit with Moma No Want No Bangarang, a 1968 collaborat­ion with Stranger Cole for producer Bunny “Striker” Lee that contrasts the refinement of Indian Summer. Under Sterling’s mastership, this 1953 Latin jazz number titled Bongo Chant by the British saxophonis­t Kenny Graham engaged more of a rootsy jump. So instead of copying the original, it was arranged with a native personalit­y, achieved with Cole repeating the title, while Sterling indulges in a series of calls and responses accentuate­d by extended measures of improvised sequences that seize the imaginatio­n of reggae fans.

However, Sterling’s most engaging moment was in a duet encounter with Roland Alphonso on the perenniall­y appealing

Lee Harvey Oswald. This Skatalites recording provides an opportunit­y to explore the contrast in approach between the master tenor saxophonis­t’s brilliantl­y conceived solo and Sterling’s melodic fluency and rhythmic pulse in musical conversati­on to realise one of ska’s most exciting pieces of recorded brilliance and an instant classic. For many who witnessed the Skatalites live, these are adorable musical moments and treasured memories.

LOVED PLAYING JAZZ

Lester loved playing jazz while warming up for a performanc­e and lamented being unable to routinely demonstrat­e his passion for Charlie “Yardbird” Parker. Sometimes we arranged small private sessions for a few close friends who shared that devotion whenever he occasional­ly visited Jamaica. On one occasion at the late Buddy Pouyatt’s Saturday morning backyard get-together, after reminiscin­g about the musical environmen­t of times past, Lester reeled off a series of Bird’s solos, much to the amazement and delight of the old-timers. At other times, we would trade bebop phrases whenever we visited to see who would be the first to lapse into repetitiou­s statements.

In 1988, Lester Sterling was awarded the Order of Distinctio­n for his contributi­on to popularisi­ng ska and reggae music. His industry recognitio­n includes the 1996 Grammy nomination for best album Hi-Bop Ska! The 30th

Anniversar­y Recording. And when the music industry was rewarded for its achievemen­ts since the island’s independen­ce at the Jamaica 50 Chancellor’s Award on December 8, 2012, at the University of Technology, appropriat­ely, as its elder statesman, Lester received the award on behalf of the industry, adding to the other commendati­ons he individual­ly and collective­ly received.

With his transition, we mortals are left with a considerab­le amount of music to entertain and enlighten us as we reflect on the greatness we had witnessed and been part of when inventive musicians like Lester “Ska” Sterling trod among us. He now joins his fellow innovators and instrument­alists in the sacred ranks of the Immortal Skatalites in the celestial realm.

 ?? FILE ?? Lester Sterling plays at the Independen­ce Ball in New York
FILE Lester Sterling plays at the Independen­ce Ball in New York
 ?? ?? STERLING
STERLING

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