Leo Graham

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Want A Wine 00:00 Tools
A Win Them 00:00 Tools
Black Candle 00:00 Tools
News Flash 00:00 Tools
Three Blind Mice 00:00 Tools
Big Tongue Buster 00:00 Tools
My Little Sandra 00:00 Tools
Voodooism 00:00 Tools
Doctor Demand 00:00 Tools
Voodooism (12" Mix) 00:00 Tools
Flashing Echo 00:00 Tools
Jump It 00:00 Tools
Woodooism 00:00 Tools
Three Blind Mice/Three Times Three 00:00 Tools
Revelation Time 00:00 Tools
Not giving up 00:00 Tools
News Splash 00:00 Tools
Want-a-Wine 00:00 Tools
Voodooism - Leo Graham 00:00 Tools
Double Attack 00:00 Tools
Blessed Brazil 00:00 Tools
Irie Irie 00:00 Tools
Bread And Butter 00:00 Tools
Giving Up Version 00:00 Tools
Big Tongue Buster [Alternate Mix][#] 00:00 Tools
Hard Times 00:00 Tools
Doctor Demon 00:00 Tools
Perilous Time 00:00 Tools
Leo Graham / Three Blind Mice 00:00 Tools
Greedy Gal 00:00 Tools
Dubbing Sandra 00:00 Tools
Want A Wine -- Leo Graham 00:00 Tools
Voodooism [12" mix] 00:00 Tools
A Win Them/ News Carrier 00:00 Tools
News Carrier 00:00 Tools
Voodooism (12 Inch Mix) 00:00 Tools
A Win Them - Leo Graham 00:00 Tools
Voodooism (12'' mix) 00:00 Tools
Voodooism - Leo Graham - Atomik 00:00 Tools
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Leo Graham began his recording career as a member of the Jamaican harmony trio the Bleechers (with Wesley Martin and a third singer known only as Sammy) around 1968, when the group reportedly did some studio work for producer J.J. Johnson. The Bleechers are best remembered, though, for work they did with legendary auteur Lee "Scratch" Perry a year later, including Check Him Out which was a literal musical advertisement giving directions to a record store that Perry owned at the time on Charles Street in Kingston. When the group disbanded, Graham continued to record for Perry, including the track Voodooism which was to give its name to a CD anthology of Perry-produced Black Ark rarities some 30 years later. Graham also did work with producer Joe Gibbs in the late '70s, but the musical landscape of Jamaica had begun to change, and Graham opted to follow other pursuits, and he left the music business behind. He is father of reggae artist Daweh Congo. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.