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Post by rasadam on Nov 16, 2012 3:37:51 GMT
someone on B&F said Bertram "Ranchie" McLean just passed away. He must have left a large discography Prayers to his fam & friends a
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Post by rasadam on Nov 18, 2012 4:55:18 GMT
any confirmation? Appears on
Strictly Drum And Bass
As a musician Guitar
Baba Dread - Earthman Connection [1978-79] Burning Spear - Marcus Children [1978] Chantells - Waiting In The Park [1978] Chantells & Friends - Children Of Jah [1977-79] Culture - Cumbolo [1979] Culture - Harder Than The Rest [1978] Culture - Trod On [197X] Desi Roots - Doing It Right [1980] Don Carlos vs Earl Cunningham - Prison Oval Clash [1980] Earl Sixteen - Songs For A Reason [1983] Freddie McKay - Harsh Words [1982] Gladiators - Naturality [1979] Glen Brown & King Tubby - Termination Dub [1973-79] Gregory Isaacs - Cool Ruler [1978] I Roy - Cancer [1979] Impact All Stars - Randy's Dub [1975] Itals - Early Recording [1971-79] Jimmy London - Hold On [1977] Jimmy London - The Jimmy London Collection [197X] King Tubby & Errol Thompson - The Black Foundation In Dub [197X] Knowledge - Rasta Don't Take Bribe [1978X] Larry Marshall & King Tubby - I Admire You In Dub [1975] Lloyd Parks - Loving You [1976] Mexicano - Move Up Starsky [1977] Mighty Diamonds - Heads Of Government [198X] Osbert Maddo - You Wanna Turn Me On [1982] Revolutionaries - Top Ranking Dub [1978] Royals - Moving On [1981] Royals - Pick Up The Pieces [1977] Royals - Ten Years After [1978] Scientist - Crucial Cuts Vol 2 [1984] Sly Dunbar & Robbie Shakespeare & Various Artists - Unmetered Taxi [198X] Techniques - Techniques In Dub [197X] U Roy - Jah Son Of Africa [1978] Various Artists - 17 North Parade [1972-75] Various Artists - International Rockers [1975] Various Artists - Sly & Robbie's Taxi Sound [198X] Various Artists - Sunsplash Showcase [1981] Winston Jarrett - Wise Man [1979] Winston Wright - Grass Roots [1977] Yabby You & King Tubby - King Tubby's Prophesy Of Dub [1976] Yabby You & Various Artists - Jesus Dread [1972-77]
Lead Guitar
Al Campbell - Rainy Days [1978] Alton Ellis - Many Moods Of Alton Ellis [1978-80] Black Uhuru - Red [1981] Don Carlos & Gold - Raving Tonight [1983] Earl Morgan - D.C. Dub Connection [1982] Inturns - Consider Yourself [1978] Jimmy London - It Ain't Easy Living In The Ghetto [1980] Keith Poppin - Pop Inn [1977] Lambert Douglas - Living Man [1977] Larry Marshall - Throw Mi Corn [197X] Owen Gray - Watch This Sound [198X] Ranking Trevor & Trinity - Three Piece Chicken & Chips [1978] U Brown - Repatriation [1979] U Roy - Rasta Ambassador [1977] Winston Jarrett & Righteous Flames - Man Of The Ghetto [1977] Winston Jarrett & Righteous Flames - Ranking Ghetto Style [1980]
Bass
Al Campbell - Rainy Days [1978] Alton Ellis & Heptones - Mr Ska Bean'a [1980] Augustus Pablo - Authentic Golden Melodies [1974-79] B.B. Seaton - I'm Aware Of Love [1979] Barry Brown - Far East [1982] Bim Sherman Meets Horace Andy And U Black - In A Rub A Dub Style [1982] Bob Andy - Lots Of Love & I [1977] Clint Eastwood - Death In The Arena [1978] Culture - Cumbolo [1979] Culture - Trod On [197X] Derrick Harriott & Revolutionaries - Reggae Chart Busters Seventies Style [1977] Desi Roots - Children In Exile [1982] Dillinger - 24 Karat Gold Ragnampiza [197X] Dillinger - Bionic Dread [1976] Dillinger - CB 200 [1976] Earl Morgan - D.C. Dub Connection [1982] Earl Sixteen - Reggae Sound [1981] General Echo - Tribute To General Echo [1983] Horace Martin - Pozitive Vibez [1983-85] Ja-Man All Stars - In The Dub Zone [1976-79] Jah Ruby - Dread Affairs [1977] Jah Woosh - Religious Dread [1978] Jimmy Cliff - Special [1982] Junior Reid & Don Carlos - Firehouse Clash [1986] K.C. White - Try A Little Happiness [1982] K.C. White - Try A Little Happiness [198X] King Sounds - Come Zion Side Happiness [1979] Lacksley Castell - Princess Lady [1983] Lambert Douglas - Living Man [1977] Leroy Smart - Ballistic Affair [1977] Leroy Smart - Let Everyman Survive [1979] Leroy Smart - The Best Of Leroy Smart [197X] Lincoln Thompson & Rasses - Natural Wild [1980] Manzie & Ranking Barnabas - King's Dub [1980] Marcia Griffiths - Naturally [1978] Martin Mandingo Williams - Afrikan History [1983] Meditations - Guidance [1978] Mighty Diamonds - Right Time [1976] Mighty Diamonds - Stand Up To Your Judgment [1978] Mighty Diamonds - Tell Me What's Wrong [1978] Mikey Dread - African Anthem [1979] Mikey Dread - Evolutionary Rockers [1979] Nathan Skyers - Dem A Fight I [1983] Prince Far I - Health & Strength [1978-79] Prince Lincoln & Rasses - Vortex Dub [197X-8X] Ranking Joe - Weakheart Fadeaway [1978] Ranking Trevor - In Fine Style [1978] Ranking Trevor & Trinity - Three Piece Chicken & Chips [1978] Ras Midas - Rastaman In Exile [1980] Ras Midas - Stand Up Wise Up [1984] Revolutionaries - Jonkanoo Dub [1978] Revolutionaries - Reaction In Dub [1978] Revolutionaries - Revival [1973-76] Revolutionaries - Revolutionaries Sounds Vol 2 [1976] Revolutionaries - The Revolutionaries [1976] Sir Lee & Illie P. - The Twinkle Brothers DJ Selection [198X] Skin, Flesh & Bones - Dub In Blood Vol 2 [1976] Sly Dunbar & Various Artists - Simple Sly Man [1978] Sly & Revolutionaries - Don't Underestimate The Force, The Force Is Within You [1977] Sly & Revolutionaries - Go Deh Wid Riddim [1977] Soferno B - Soferno B In Dub 1980 Style [1979] Sonia Spence - Pure Love [198X] Sonya Spence - In The Dark [197X] Trevor Hartley - Innocent Lover [1979] Twinkle Brothers - Enter Zion [1984] Twinkle Brothers - Love [1978] Twinkle Brothers - Praise Jah [1979] U Brown - Weather Baloon [1978] Various Artists - Allform [1983] Wailing Souls - Wailing Souls At Channel One [197X] Winston Jarrett & Righteous Flames - Ranking Ghetto Style [1980]
Rhythm Guitar
Al Campbell - Rainy Days [1978] Black Uhuru - Red [1981] Black Uhuru - Sinsemilla [1980] Burning Spear - Dry And Heavy [1977] Dillinger - Cup Of Tea [1980] Don Carlos - Harvest Time [1982] Don Carlos & Gold - Raving Tonight [1983] Earth & Stone - Kool Roots [1976-78] Frankie Jones - Them Nice [1985] Junior English - Naturally High [1978] Ken Boothe - Who Gets Your Love [1979] Lambert Douglas - Living Man [1977] Meditations - Greatest Hits [197X] Owen Gray - Watch This Sound [198X] Ranking Joe - Weakheart Fadeaway [1978] Ranking Trevor - In Fine Style [1978] Sly & Robbie - Disco Dub [1979] Sly & Robbie - Dub Rockers Delight [1982] Stanley Beckford & Turbines - Africa [1971-73] The Rolands - Johnny Dollar [1982] Voice Of Progress - Mini Bus Driver [1982]
Wah Wah Guitar
Winston Jarrett & Righteous Flames - Ranking Ghetto Style [1980]
Pick Guitar
Sly & Robbie - Dub Rockers Delight [1982]
[reggaespotlights.blogspot.com]'
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'Ranchie' back onstage - Pays homage to reggae music greats Published: Sunday | December 6, 2009 Contributed Bertram 'Ranchie' McLean Howard Campbell, Gleaner Writer
Back in the 1970s, nothing drove a great reggae song more than a rocking bass line. One of the people behind some of those memorable grooves was Bertram 'Ranchie' McLean, member of the legendary Revolutionaries band. The diminutive McLean, 61, made his stage comeback yesterday on the Dub Show in St Andrew. Along with drummer Leroy 'Horsemouth' Wallace, guitarist Earl 'Chinna' Smith and keyboardist Ansel Collins, he paid homage to dub masters Augustus Pablo, Osbourne 'King Tubby' Ruddock and Lee 'Scratch' Perry.
It had been some time since McLean played live. He came out of retirement last year to play bass on a recording session for roots-reggae veterans The Meditations, best known for the Channel One classic, Woman Is Like A Shadow.
"A still practise when mi ready, but mi have a different line of work now so that tek up most of mi time," McLean said during a recent interview with The Sunday Gleaner. "I had a little accident some years ago an' it kinda set mi back."
That "accident" was a stroke McLean suffered in 1998. It severely weakened the left side of his body and prevented him from playing for more than three years.
No embarassment
"Mi couldn't lift up this (a piece of paper) so mi didn't even think 'bout play a instrument 'cause mi neva waan embarrass miself," he said.
For nearly 10 years McLean was a member of the Revolutionaries, the house band at Channel One, a studio in Whitfield Town run by the Hoo Kim brothers, Jo Jo and Ernest. Collins, drummer Sly Dunbar, bass player Lloyd Parkes and percussionist Uzziah 'Sticky' Thompson were other core members of the Revolutionaries. Their stripped-down sound was complemented by various horn players including saxophonist Tommy McCook.
McLean and Dunbar were childhood friends from the Compound area of Olympic Gardens. He started out as a guitarist, playing on Hong Kong Flu by the Ethiopians at Federal Records and also did sessions at Studio One.
Along with Dunbar, Collins and Parkes, he was a member of Skin, Flesh and Bones, resident band at the Tit For Tat club along the then hip Red Hills Road strip in St Andrew. When Channel One opened in 1973, they were among the musicians approached to help get it off the ground.
Parkes would leave around 1976 to head the Professionals, house band of rival producer Joe Gibbs. McLean said it was during a recording date with singer Delroy Wilson that he inadvertently switched to bass.
"Somebody was playing the bass but dem (producers) didn't like the pattern, so mi tek it an' decide fi mek a line (makes a bassy sound) which was Have Some Mercy," McLean recalled. "From dat, dem sey 'A you wi waan play bass pon the song dem'."
McLean played bass and guitar on many hits at Channel One including Woman Is Like A Shadow, Right Time by the Mighty Diamonds, Things And Time (the Wailing Souls), Ballistic Affair (Leroy Smart), Up Park Camp (John Holt) and the rocking instrumental Death In The Arena.
He also played bass on many sessions for Sonia Pottinger, reggae's first female producer. His best known tracks for her include Marcia Griffiths' timeless rendition of Dreamland and Culture's Money Girl.
McLean toured as well, backing Peter Tosh, Burning Spear and Jimmy Cliff, with whom he stayed longest. He played on Cliff's 1982 Special album, writing the song Rub-A-Dub Partner.
poker-machine business
After recovering from the stroke, McLean left music behind, joining his old boss, Jo Jo Hoo Kim, in the poker-machine business. Currently, he services gaming boxes, mainly in Kingston.
Singer Jefferey Starr, one of his eight children, has followed his musical footsteps. He had a minor hit song two years ago with I'm Sorry.
McLean says he lives a quiet life in the Portland Cottage area of Clarendon. He listens to contemporary dancehall/reggae but is not impressed.
"What happening now is not music," he said. "A lot of it is like a man listen to a commercial an' mek a song. There's no creativity."
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Post by rasadam on Nov 20, 2012 21:57:39 GMT
www.jamaicaobserver.com/entertainment/-Ranchie--McLean-is-dead_13044689'Ranchie' McLean is dead Howard Campbell Tuesday, November 20, 2012 Print this page Email A Friend! BASS player Bertram 'Ranchie' McLean, who played on seminal hit songs like I Need a Roof and Dreamland, died last Wednesday at the University Hospital of the West Indies in St Andrew. He was 64. His son, Antonie McLean, told the Jamaica Observer that his father had been ill for some time. He had surgery for prostate cancer two years ago and was wheelchair-bound for the last year. [Hide Description] Bertram ‘Ranchie’ McLean [Restore Description] 1/1 Bassist Lloyd Parks, who knew McLean for over 40 years, said he was a "very talented person" who made the successful transition from guitar to bass. "One of the great things about Ranchie was that he caught on quickly as a musician. He played some great lines," said Parks. Parks, McLean, keyboardist Ansel Collins and drummer Sly Dunbar were the mainstay of the Skin, Flesh and Bones band that played the popular club scene along Red Hills Road in the late 1960s. Later, they became the nucleus of The Revolutionaries, house band at the Channel One studio which was launched by the Hoo Kim brothers in 1972. McLean had played guitar at Studio One, recording with the Ethiopians and Jacob Miller during his stay at producer Clement 'Coxson' Dodd's base. But he made his mark at Channel One, the hottest recording studio in Jamaica in the 1970s. He started out on guitar but in a 2010 interview, said he switched to bass after the Hoo Kims heard him play on The Mighty Diamonds' Have Mercy. McLean never looked back, recording numerous hits at Channel One including I Need a Roof, Right Time and Africa (The Mighty Diamonds), Woman is Like a Shadow (The Meditations), Ballistic Affair (Leroy Smart) and John Holt's Up Park Camp. He also had a good run with producer Sonia Pottinger and Burning Spear. He played on two of Pottinger's biggest hits, Dreamland and Stepping Outa Babylon by Marcia Griffiths, and was guitarist on Spear's 1976 album, Man In The Hills. In the early 1980s, McLean recorded and toured with Jimmy Cliff as a member of the singer's Oneness band. He co-wrote Rub a Dub Partner from Cliff's 1982 album, Special, and the following year played on his big hit, Reggae Nights. McLean and Dunbar both hailed from the Olympic Gardens community in St Andrew. In 1974, they launched the short-lived Taxi label which Dunbar revived in 1978 with bass player Robbie Shakespeare. McLean suffered a stroke in 1998 which effectively ended his career as a musician. He is survived by eight children and several grandchildren. Read more: www.jamaicaobserver.com/entertainment/-Ranchie--McLean-is-dead_13044689#ixzz2Cnp1doBv
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