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The Jamaicans (Tommy Cowan, <a href="spotify:artist:1QXk9YoVlKgsSNzPxTU5qm">Norris Weir</a>, Martin Williams) burst on the scene in 1967 by winning the second Jamaican Festival song contest with a bit of nonsensical rocksteady called "Ba Ba Boom," a piece that had been written by Cowan and <a href="spotify:artist:1QXk9YoVlKgsSNzPxTU5qm">Weir</a>. The pair continued to write, and the group had a middling successful career between 1967 and 1972 recording their frequently novelty-tinged songs (they sang "ba ba" in myriad different ways, sometimes even inventively) for producer <a href="spotify:artist:5xMbd0qOdrycmi9KQZMmQF">Duke Reid</a> and his legendary Treasure Isle label, scoring hits with "Ba Ba Boom" and the poignant "Things You Say You Love." One of their best tracks was a solid cover of <a href="spotify:artist:2AV6XDIs32ofIJhkkDevjm">Curtis Mayfield</a>'s "Dedicate My Song to You," while their original "Black Girl" was a hit for <a href="spotify:artist:54R6Y0I7jGUCveDTtI21nb">Boney M</a> when re-recorded in 1978. The Jamaicans fall right at the cusp between ska and rocksteady, and slowed-down horn charts figure heavily in most of their tracks. When the group disbanded, Cowan went on to a successful career as a producer, as well as becoming a popular Sunsplash MC. ~ Steve Leggett, Rovi

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