The Star (Jamaica)

Bust of ‘Scratch’ Perry for Hanover as part of ‘Jamaica 60’

- YASMINE PERU STAR Writer

Abust of dub pioneer Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry will be erected in Hanover as part of the Jamaica 60 Diamond Jubilee celebratio­ns “as a fitting tribute to one of the parishes greatest sons”.

Olivia ‘Babsy’ Grange, minister of culture, gender, entertainm­ent and sport, made the announceme­nt through her message at Perry’s homegoing celebratio­ns on Thursday.

She was represente­d by Tamika Davis, member of parliament for Hanover Western, at the ceremony on private property in Cauldwell. Perry was born and raised in Hanover.

She remembered Perry as a “one in a generation soul that the world was blessed with”.

“Any reflection on his work, his music, his innovation­s, his mixing of sounds, can only conclude that he was a genius. Indeed, Scratch can be considered the Mozart of Jamaican contempora­ry music, in that he mastered the fundamenta­ls of his craft, harmony and instrument­ation, and then built on them. With his technical abilities, he simply could manipulate sound and created the early soundtrack of an independen­t nation,” Grange’s message said.

“In search of his own sound, his own beats, Scratch would experiment with drum machines; he would fire and record the sounds of guns, glass being broken, blow ganja smoke on to tapes (to enhance the sound quality), even sample noises made by animals. This approach earned him a reputation as an eccentric but we would all agree that ‘genius’ is never confined to the mundane or to a specific set of rules.”

The short service, in keeping with the government’s COVID-19 protocols, was led by Pastor Andrew Johnson and included a short bio by Perry’s widow Mireille.

Perry passed away on Saturday, August 28, while on his way to the Noel Holmes Hospital in Lucea, Hanover. The cause of death has still not yet been revealed.

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