Miami Herald

Sang ‘I Can See Clearly Now’

- BY STEVEN KURUTZ The New York Times

Johnny Nash — a singer whose “I Can See Clearly Now” reached No. 1 on the Billboard charts in 1972, helping to bring reggae music to a mainstream U.S. audience and over the decades becoming an anthem of optimism and renewal — died Tuesday at his home in Houston. He was 80.

His son, John Nash III, confirmed the death but did not specify a cause.

Nash was a singer, an actor, a record-label owner and an early booster of Bob Marley in a varied career that began in the late 1950s when, as a teenager, he appeared on Arthur Godfrey’s CBS-TV variety show. He also sang on Godfrey’s popular radio broadcasts.

Nash, who sang in a clear, smooth, emotive high-tenor voice, was signed to ABC-Paramount Records and initially marketed as a crooner in the Johnny Mathis mold. He recorded several albums of lushly orchestrat­ed standards, but they met with only modest success. He also tried his hand at movie acting, starring as a high school senior confrontin­g racism in the 1959 comingof-age drama “Take a Giant Step” and appearing alongside Dennis Hopper and Jeffrey Hunter in the 1960 neo-noir “Key Witness.”

By 1965, Nash had formed his own label, JoDa Records, in partnershi­p with Danny Sims, his manager, and that year he scored a hit on the Billboard R&B chart with “Let’s Move and Groove (Together).” It marked the beginning of a more interestin­g — and more successful — phase of his career.

When Nash traveled to Jamaica to promote “Let’s Move,” he became enamored with the emerging reggae sound. He recorded at Federal Studios in Kingston, bought a house in the city and one night in 1967, at a Rastafaria­n ceremony, met a young Marley and heard him sing.

Nash and Sims were so impressed that they signed Marley and his group, the Wailers, to their label (now called JAD), with the idea that he would write material for Nash to sing.

In his book “Before the Legend: The Rise of Bob Marley” (2007), Christophe­r John Farley described a complicate­d relationsh­ip between the two singers. Nash promoted Marley to internatio­nal audiences, bringing the Wailers to London in 1972 as his opening act and recording Marley’s songs. But to Marley’s ears, an American singer doing a commercial take on reggae was inauthenti­c.

“He’s a nice guy, but he doesn’t know what reggae is,” Farley quoted Marley as saying. “Johnny Nash is not Rasta; and if you’re not a Rasta, you don’t know nothin’ about reggae.”

Nash’s 1968 album,

“Hold Me Tight,” was the first to showcase his hybrid pop-reggae sound. (The title track reached the Billboard Top 10 shortly before another reggae record, “Israelites” by Desmond Dekker and the Aces, also charted.) But it was his album “I Can See Clearly Now,” released in 1972 — not on his own label but on Epic, part of the giant CBS Records conglomera­te — that was a true breakthrou­gh, both for Nash and for reggae in the United States.

The album included several songs written by Marley, notably “Stir it Up” and “Guava Jelly.” But it was the title track, written by Nash, that had the biggest impact by far. It spent four weeks atop the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart and, according to Ed Hogan of allmusic.com, “did more to bring the reggae music sound into the mainstream than any other single record up to that point.”

Nash was married three times. In addition to his son, he is survived by his wife, Carlie Nash, and a daughter, Monica Dixon.

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