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When he stepped out from behind the mixing desk and picked up a microphone, reggae producer Carl Dwyer became Captain Sinbad, a swashbuckling DJ with scant output. Sinbad first appeared on-stage with the Sound of Silence sound system featuring <a href="spotify:artist:6iTD167bhyfYwEd7fd2bGn">Sugar Minott</a>. A few late-'70s albums for Henry "Junjo" Lawes were released before his 1980 single with a young <a href="spotify:artist:5bNXBeR6aWZC2SrZL0oNFh">Little John</a>, "51 Storm," became a Jamaican dancehall favorite. The year 1982 saw the release of the full-length The Seven Voyages of Captain Sinbad on Greensleeves, while 1983 found him on <a href="spotify:artist:5J69edy1luLIzbgyl4u1Dv">Dillinger</a>'s Oak label for the "Hotter Reggae Music" single and the CSA label for half of the Sinbad & the Metric System album (the other half belonged to <a href="spotify:artist:7F31l6z8yA1CK6m97PwED4">Peter Metro</a>). The Oak compilation Again arrived a year later and then Captain Sinbad disappeared, with Dwyer shifting his focus to production. ~ David Jeffries, Rovi

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