Nora Dean

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Barbwire 02:21 Tools
The Valet 03:28 Tools
Must Get a Man 02:52 Tools
Peace Begins Within 00:00 Tools
Angie La La 00:00 Tools
Scorpion 00:00 Tools
Peace Begins With 00:00 Tools
Barbwire - Original 00:00 Tools
Oh Mama 00:00 Tools
Angie la la (ay ay ay) 00:00 Tools
Ay Ay Ay 00:00 Tools
Barbwire (O mama) 00:00 Tools
Ay Ay Ay Ay (Angle-Lala) 00:00 Tools
Mama 00:00 Tools
Barb Wire 00:00 Tools
The Same Thing That You Gave to Daddy 00:00 Tools
Mojo Girl 00:00 Tools
Scorpion in Her Pants 00:00 Tools
O Mama 00:00 Tools
(Me) Want Man 00:00 Tools
Scorpion In Her Underpants 00:00 Tools
26 - Nora Dean - Barbwire 00:00 Tools
24-Nora_Dean-Barbwire 02:19 Tools
Barwire 02:16 Tools
Que Sera Sera 00:00 Tools
Night Food Reggae 00:00 Tools
Harmonica Dub 00:00 Tools
Don't Let Me Know 00:00 Tools
Caught In A Trap 00:00 Tools
Dry Up Your Tears 00:00 Tools
Written All Over Your Face 00:00 Tools
Ever Know About Him 00:00 Tools
‘Barbwire’ 00:00 Tools
How Could You Do This 02:40 Tools
Greedy Boy 00:00 Tools
Play Me A Love Song 03:00 Tools
125-nora_dean_-_barbwire-lsp 00:00 Tools
Fingertrack 579 00:00 Tools
24 - Barbwire 00:00 Tools
Beautiful Morning 00:00 Tools
Never Be Mine 00:00 Tools
No Time To Loose 00:00 Tools
Kiss Me Honey 00:00 Tools
AY AY AY AY 03:05 Tools
Ahmad-Jamal 00:00 Tools
Que Sera Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be) 00:00 Tools
Oh Mamma 00:00 Tools
Eddie My Love 00:00 Tools
Bless the Name of Jesus 00:00 Tools
Untrue Love 00:00 Tools
I'll Fly Away 00:00 Tools
Love Of A Boy 00:00 Tools
Heartaches 00:00 Tools
Nora Dean - Barbwire - Nora Dean - Barbwire 00:00 Tools
Man A Walk And Talk 00:00 Tools
Valet 00:00 Tools
Spread The Message 00:00 Tools
He Set Me Free 00:00 Tools
Oh My Love 00:00 Tools
Nora Dean - Barbwire 00:00 Tools
angie la la psych reggae 60s weird 00:00 Tools
Battlefield 00:00 Tools
My Soul Loves Jesus 00:00 Tools
I'm on the Battle Field 00:00 Tools
Scorpion In His Underpants 00:00 Tools
Barbwire (in his underpants) 00:00 Tools
How Long 00:00 Tools
Dub Of My Life 00:00 Tools
Peace Bigins Within 00:00 Tools
Never Grow Old 00:00 Tools
Broken Vessel 00:00 Tools
Thank God For Saving Me 00:00 Tools
I've found The Answer 00:00 Tools
The Love Of God 00:00 Tools
Barbwire (with Tommy McCook & The Supersonics) - Alternate Version 00:00 Tools
Angie Laa Laa 00:00 Tools
Cloude Less Day 00:00 Tools
Well Done 00:00 Tools
No Charge 00:00 Tools
Angle-LaLa 00:00 Tools
Scorpion Version 00:00 Tools
Silent Night 00:00 Tools
Take My Sins away 00:00 Tools
Album Of My Life 00:00 Tools
Angle La La 00:00 Tools
26 26 - Nora Dean - Barbwire 00:00 Tools
Break Through 00:00 Tools
I'm Going Through 00:00 Tools
Count Your Blessings 00:00 Tools
Grace and Money 00:00 Tools
The Same Thing That You Gave To Daddy - Bonus Track 00:00 Tools
Let Me Lose Myself 00:00 Tools
Lord Help Me 00:00 Tools
Medley 00:00 Tools
It Will Be Worth It 00:00 Tools
Glory, Glory 00:00 Tools
My Guide 00:00 Tools
It Will Be Worth it All 00:00 Tools
Calvary 00:00 Tools
I Must Tell Jesus 00:00 Tools
Down On My Knees 00:00 Tools
Music-longtime Ago 00:00 Tools
Barbwine (Rmx) 00:00 Tools
The Same Woman 00:00 Tools
Other Side Of The Tracks 00:00 Tools
When He Reaches 00:00 Tools
Drive The Nail In His Hand 00:00 Tools
Christmas Version 00:00 Tools
Que Sera Sera (whatever Will Be Will Be) 00:00 Tools
For All the World 00:00 Tools
Little Town Of Bethlehem 00:00 Tools
Barbwire - Original 1969 00:00 Tools
While Shepards Watched 00:00 Tools
Long & Winding Road 00:00 Tools
Night Food Reggae kuky3 00:00 Tools
That's Why I'm Happy 00:00 Tools
Barbwire (alternate version) 00:00 Tools
O Mama - Original 00:00 Tools
Nora Dean - Barbwire - 00:00 Tools
He Is No Further 00:00 Tools
Angie LaLa (Ay Ay Ay Ay) 00:00 Tools
The Loin Of judah 00:00 Tools
The Same Thing That You Gave To Daddy (Bonus Track) 00:00 Tools
I Dedicate 00:00 Tools
Hark the Angel 00:00 Tools
Kay Sarah - Original 00:00 Tools
Glory Glory 00:00 Tools
Meledy 00:00 Tools
Barbwire - Edit 00:00 Tools
Angle Lala 00:00 Tools
My Love For You 00:00 Tools
26 26 26 - Nora Dean - Barbwire 00:00 Tools
You Gotta Pray 00:00 Tools
Nora Dean - Angie-la-la 00:00 Tools
Just Goes To Show You 00:00 Tools
Healing Flow 00:00 Tools
Shake The Dust Off My Feet 00:00 Tools
Tear This Old House Down 00:00 Tools
Jesus Love Me 00:00 Tools
While Shepherd Watch 00:00 Tools
Miss Anny Oh 00:00 Tools
At Calvary 00:00 Tools
Who am I 00:00 Tools
Jesus Is There Right Now 00:00 Tools
Que Sera, Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be) 00:00 Tools
Scorpion (Version) 00:00 Tools
Barbwire (Oh Mamma) 00:00 Tools
Nora Dean - The Valet 00:00 Tools
It's My Life 00:00 Tools
I Found the Lord 00:00 Tools
It's Over 00:00 Tools
Barbwire (Oh Mama) 00:00 Tools
Good Blues 00:00 Tools
He Is My daddy 00:00 Tools
Let Me Tell You Boy 00:00 Tools
The Same Thing That You Gave to Daddy [#] 00:00 Tools
That Why I Am Happy 00:00 Tools
Merry Xmas 00:00 Tools
Come All Ye Faith 00:00 Tools
Why Won't You Praise Him 00:00 Tools
Hark The Herald Angels 00:00 Tools
Long Time Ago 00:00 Tools
How Could You Do This To Me 00:00 Tools
Barbwire "O Mama" 00:00 Tools
Joy to the World 00:00 Tools
Why Wont You Praise Him 00:00 Tools
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Letetia Leonora McLean best known as Nora Dean (January 8, 1944 – 29 September 2016) was a Jamaican reggae and later gospel recording artist, best known for her 1970 hit "Barbwire". Born in St. Catherine, Jamaica, Nora Dean recorded as a member of The Soulettes (with Rita Marley) and The Ebony Sisters before recording as a solo artist. She recorded for Lee "Scratch" Perry, including the 1969 single "The Same Thing That You Gave to Daddy". Dean had her first hit in 1970 for producer Byron Smith with "Barbwire", based on The Techniques' "You Don't Care". She enjoyed further success with "Night Food Reggae". She went on to record for Sonia Pottinger, Harry Mudie ("Let Me Tell You Boy"), and Bunny Lee, including a version of "Que Sera Sera", retitled "Kay Sarah". She contributed backing vocals to Jimmy Cliff's 1973 album Unlimited. Dean moved to New York City in the mid-1970s, where she married. After several years away from music she returned in the 1980s, singing in a lovers rock style. In the 1990s she began recording again, now concentrating on gospel music, releasing several albums in the years that followed. Dean moved to Connecticut in 2010, and died there on 29 September 2016, aged 72. Nora Dean is one of reggae’s greatest mysteries. She sang solo as well as being a member of The Ebony Sisters, The Soul Sisters and The Soulettes. She did backing vocals on some recordings by Jimmy Cliff. Although she was not a prolific artist (especially by reggae standards), a number of her songs are very fondly remembered by fans of Jamaican music as true reggae classics. This is because Nora Dean brought something extra to her best songs, making them unusual and endlessly enjoyable. And yet, there is little biographical information about her anywhere. No interviews with her have ever been published. Photos seemed to be non-existent. Go through every reggae book, documentary, and liner note of the dozens of compilations her classic tracks appear on; you’ll learn that Nora Dean was born in 1952, and nothing more. Google until the search results are exhausted and, all you’ll learn is how many people share her name. Somehow, the mystery is fitting for such an unusual singer. Nora Dean is one of reggae’s best female vocalists. Listening to her music, it is immediately apparent that she has a great Jamaican voice. What might be slightly less obvious are the rich depths of her singing. This is what makes many of her recordings so special. An unexpected turn of melody, a well placed use of sounds instead of words, an emotional intensity and complexity that is very expressive. These are the hallmarks of the Nora Dean sound. Her songs are made all the more memorable by recording with some of Jamaica’s best producers, musicians and riddims. Oh, and there's also the sex. In all of her most memorable songs, there is sexuality. Each song presents a very different, unusual situation and the sexuality is always surprising. There's not a conventional love song in the bunch. In “Barbwire” she plays babyishly naïve about a man’s advances. In “Mojo Girl”, she is serenely in full control. She lays down the law to her man, threatening him with black magic reprisals. In “Wreck A Buddy”, she is in desperate carnal need, with explicit lyrics to the melody of “Little Drummer Boy”. In “The Same Thing You Gave To Daddy”, she is in a battle of wills with her little boy, who won't go to sleep until he gets what Nora gave his daddy the night before. “Oh, no, no, no”, indeed! And in “Ay Ay Ay”, the music is deconstructed from reggae to a drone. Narrative is abandoned in favor of free association, and words become invocations that are supplemented with kisses, bird cries and groans of pure ecstasy. But to be fair to the artist, Nora Dean would argue the point. She is a religious, righteous woman, who was born again in the late 1981. Some of her songs, she explained in early 2006, thought to be sexual in nature are actually misunderstood. In some cases, as a young girl she was pressured by producers to act outside of her character. (She was only about 15 when she started recording.) And at least one scandalous song, a cover of the mento song Night Food, Nora insists she did not record. She is upset that her name was affixed to a song she finds so repugnant. The lyrical content aside, what is universally accepted is superb vocals and the enormous contribution that Nora Dean made to reggae music. From www.noradean.com Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.