Autobiography of Mavado
Gangster For Life…The Symphony of David Brooks
Known to the world as Mavado or more recently “The Gully God”, the
singer behind the eerie wails of “Anywayyy!” and “Gangsta for life!”
which have dominated the airwaves was born David Constantine Brooks
on November 30, 1981 in the micro-ghetto community “Cassava Piece”
within Kingston, Jamaica. Before getting his break in the music
business, Brooks worked as a barber and his two main influences on
the direction of his young life were his grandmother and the music
of Bounty Killer. “To tell the truth” he explains, “it was me
grandmother that first really bring me in the studio, ‘cause she
bring me in the church to sing. She always tell me to sing for her
and that really give Mavado the courage to get to love music.” But
if the sweet sounds of gospel provided the motivation, it was the
gruff voice of Bounty Killer that proved to be the more powerful
influence. “As a youth, Sanchez and Wayne Wonder were really my two
singers, Sanchez have the voice of an angel. But me and my friend
always say ‘Yo, Killer is the wickedest!’ So long as it’s Killer,
it’s just my song, trust me!”
Idolization became mentorship when local reggae selector Foota Hype
introduced the young singer to his hero. To Mavado’s amazement,
“Killer start to show we the ropes” of the music business,
introducing him to the Daseca production crew. “Them are the youth
which really bust Mavado, them come up with the Anger Management
riddim, I sing for it, Killer endorse it and the thing just work.”
Indeed, “Real McKoy”--Mavado’s 2004 debut single on the Anger
Management riddim—made him an overnight sensation in the Jamaican
dancehall and established the blueprint for his future success; a
sweetly melodic voice combined with a persona more like a gangsta
rapper. Dressed in “full black” and speaking to the harsh reality
ghetto youth could understand, but in haunting, otherworldly tones,
Mavado carved out a inimitable style somewhere between the angel and
the warlord. It was the next tune “Weh Dem a Do” with it’s “fly-ay
ay up to the sky” hook over the club-tempo Red Bull & Guinness
riddim that brought that voice to the overseas market, and earned
him magazine covers like The Fader as well as adds to mainstream
stations like New York’s Hot 97 and the #27 position on the
Billboard’s Hot R&B/Hip Hop Chart.
The string of successful 45s continued with “Dreamin” but although
Mavado’s star rose in synch with his crew the Alliance, including
fellow Bounty Killer protégés Daseca and Busy Signal, success did
not come without some turbulence. Dramas were played out in the
media eye, such as the murder of his Rastafarian father in
Switzerland and an incident wherein Mavado was pushed through a
plate glass window at the Constant Spring police station, almost
losing several fingers on his left hand.
Mavado’s first full-length album, Gangster for Life: the Symphony of
David Brooks, was an ambitious opus which followed the whole up and
down arc of this life story. The album has remained in the Top 25
Billboard Reggae charts since its debut in July 2007. Opening with
his earlier singles that brought him fame, interludes like and
“Cassava Piece Radio” weaved the songs into a coherent musical saga.
His father’s death was spoken to on the one-drop tune “Sadness,”
while “Pon The Gully Side” and “Last Night” documented the singer’s
rough upbringing even as they showcased the more angelic side of his
gangster gospel. The album’s hot single “Dying,” a version built
around a tribute to Tupac rhymes, was redone with the original lines
and showed a new sophistication and a lyrical edge as sharp as any
rapper’s.
And rappers soon caught on to his unique disposition. Mavado became
the most sought after reggae artist to jump on hip hop records. In
2007, he delivered hypnotizing hooks and witty verses for Uncle
Murda’s “Informer,” Wyclef Jean’s “Welcome To The East” and Foxy
Brown’s “We Are On Fire” off her latest Brooklyn’s Don Diva album.
The following year, icon Jay-Z blessed a verse on the remix of
Mavado’s popular “On The Rock”. Lil Kim featured Mavado on her hot
song “Caribbean Connection,” and 50 Cent’s G-Unit selected Mavado as
the only guest feature on their latest album Terminate on Sight.
His ability to voice his experiences and capture the imagination of
Jamaican youth every step of the way caught the ears and eyes of a
new and broader fan base. He knew exactly how to make his emotional
appeal universal.
Mr. Brooks…A Better Tomorrow
On the brink of a bright future, there was still trouble ahead for
the “Gully God.” In March 2008, accusations from the Jamaican police
force were plaguing him once again. Charges were dropped in July
2008, but in the meantime countries like Guyana, St Vincent and
Grenadines had banned him from their countries due to his notorious
reputation. Also British police shut down his show after receiving
“a credible security threat,” one of his entourage members was
critically injured at his show in Miami and then the United States
denied him entry when he tried to set foot in New York City. With
his visa problems still looming, he missed out on a series of shows
including arguably one of his most important career opportunities -
the chance to perform alongside with hip hop mogul Jay-Z at Madison
Square Garden.
However despite controversial attention, there was no stopping
Mavado. Just like clockwork the indomitable force kept on ticking to
make sure he remained the topic of good conversation. Mavado
continued to make generous donations to an organization that helped
battered women and for his recently launched charity Connect
Jamaica, which donated computers to underprivileged schools across
Jamaica.
His music was also crossing new boundaries. The dancehall luminary
landed his single “Real McKoy" as the theme song for the fourth
Grand Theft Auto trailer entitled "Everyone's a Rat." The hit song
was also used in the Grand Theft Auto IV in-game radio station,
Massive B Sound system. For the U.S presidential campaign, Mavado
cleverly flipped his popular “On The Rock” to “We Need Barack” for
tycoon Russell Simmons and Green Lantern’s official Barack Obama
mixtape. According to the UK’s Guardian, Mavado’s tune was “the most
interesting of the compilation's contributors.” Mavado was also
selected for a special Nike 2008 Olympics campaign, where Mavado
made an exclusive track “On The Go (Faster Than Bullet)” for Olympic
sprinter Asafa Powell’s Train for Speed, a 35-minute interval
workout sold on I-Tunes which is coached by the track superstar over
a reggae/dancehall soundtrack. Nike also created an exclusive custom
sneaker for the dancehall star which represented his neighborhood
Cassava Piece.
The newfound celebrity caught the attention of more mainstream
media. Rolling Stone Magazine rated Mavado as the “Best Reggae
Artist” in their Best of Rock April 2008 issue. Also Billboard
Magazine noted the significance of his collaboration with hip hop
mogul Jay-Z. “When Jay Z, who has never recorded on a reggae track,
rhymed on a remix of singer Mavado's current hit, On The Rock, it
became arguably the greatest endorsement ever given to any dancehall
record,” Pat Meschino stated in the article.
Mavado made dancehall an on-screen production in October 2008 when
he took home his first major award for Best New Reggae Artist at the
prestigious MOBO (Music of Black Origin) ceremony held annually in
London.
At the top of 2009, the rising superstar unveils the second chapter
of his stirring street narrative Mr Brooks…A Better Tomorrow on VP
Records. The talented singjay has crafted his strongest album yet —
a bittersweet struggle over the dichotomies in his world — past vs.
present, good vs. evil, hope vs. despair, and freedom from strife.
It is a true reflection of who Mavado (David Brooks) is today.
This sophomore installment of his latest hits and daring exploits
are built on apocalyptic synthesizer progressions to which Mavado
chats and sings simplistic yet profound lyrics with strong
conviction and ease. His contagious hook and clever outlaw antics
from the album’s first single “So Special” (produced by Linton “TJ”
White) has already turned this #1 Jamaican and U.K. smash in into a
U.S. commercial radio hit remaining on Billboard’s Top 100 Hot
R&B/Hip Hop Airplay and Song chart for over a month (peaking at
#52).
The chart toppers do not end there, Mavado pours out his heart and
soul on every track from his new diary. While his community is
plagued by violence and corruption, Mavado unites the ghetto youth
on rally cry anthems like “Overcome” (produced by Stephen McGregor)
& “Don’t Worry” (produced by Daseca) and gives thanks to Jah for all
his good fortunes on “So Blessed” (produced by Stephen McGregor).
And a Mavado album would not be complete without a steamy track like
“In Di Car Back” (produced by Stephen McGregor), where sexual
escapades and desires run rampant on this spicy melody.
Mavado has gone from obscurity to ghetto super stardom with his
enigmatic gangster façade. Part prophet, part superhero and part
fugitive, Mavado is the voice of the streets and represents
dancehall for the next generation.
Slide Show
Reflecting on a big win!
WORLD CLASH NOW THERE ARE 4 SOUNDS LEFT WHO COULD GO TO WOLRD
CLASH BLACK REACTION: They are the Boxing Day FITNESS Champions
and have represented Canada before for Irish & Chin in the 45
Blaze Out night of last year’s New York’s World Clash. So they
passed on Last Sound Standing, and have not clashed since
December 26th of last year. I am awaiting their answer, and will
respect whatever decision they make. In essence, they have
already eliminated themselves, as their deadline for a decision
was 12:00 midnight last night, and I still am awaiting their
call. UPDATE: Rootsman just called and said to put them back in
the clash! Sticky on Black Reaction now, as we need 4 sounds,
not 5. SOUNDS CONFIRMED: LEXUS SUPREME: This sound just won the
most difficult Soundclash in Toronto Soundclash history, they
had to beat 4 sounds and they did it without loosing even 1
single round of 1 single clash, plus they were Night One Fully
Loaded Finalists last year, eventually loosing to Rootsman in a
tune-fi-tune. They are the new Canadian heroes, but when asked
to clash, they 1st hesitated, as they had a few good points; a.
Exposing the Canadian sound so close to World Clash will give
the competing sounds an advantage; they’ll study the tapes and
show no mercy in killing our sounds. b. Lexus Supreme just had 4
clashes, just spent $XXX thousand dollars and now has to spend
it again not just for 1 clash but for 2 (possibly). People just
saw a lot of what’s in their box, and they usually don’t take
clashes without 2 months notice. c. Just like Double 6, Lexus
also felt I should just pick 2 sounds and send them to World
Clash, but just like every other sound in the top 7, felt their
sound should be one of the sounds chosen, they’ve earned the
right. d. This sound had more good points, but I don’t remember
all of them. After going back and forth for 2 days, Lexus only
decided to do the clash because I put things in a take it or
leave in context. I suggested that because they had won $3,250
for LSS, the biggest trophy, the greatest notoriety, etc., maybe
because of the bad timing of the offer, they could afford to let
go of the opportunity. Lexus disagreed, and had a meeting, and
ultimately, because it was ultimately coming down to a
take-it-or-leave it offer, decided to take it, so we’ll see them
in the clash! DESERT STORM: Desert Storm has never said no to
this, they’ve always been one of Canada’s hungriest and most
talented sounds. Despite loosing to King Klepto in Last Sound
Standing, I’ve still picked Desert Storm to represent because I
love King Sharp’s vibe, he’s got the potential to truly
represent and he’s done it before internationally in Global Cup
where he’s taken on Mighty Crown and nearly won. Not much to say
here, it’s just something I know. The only thing flopping Desert
Storm’s chances is their bad rap with di splice tune ting. KING
TURBO: Ricky Turbo is ready to come back, and claims that
despite the critics who say “where has King Turbo been lately in
the clash scene”, Turbo is ready to represent Canada. Some of
today’s generation may need to be reminded of this, but King
Turbo is a sound with real “belly”. That’s why they qualify,
plus for being one of our original champion clash sounds over
the years. The work and clashes they’ve done has helped paved
the way to the things being the way they are today.