Theophilus Beckford

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Easy Snappin' 00:00 Tools
Walking Down King Street 00:00 Tools
Easy Snapping 00:00 Tools
Take Your Time 00:00 Tools
Bullo Man (A Come) 00:00 Tools
Ungrateful People 00:00 Tools
Trojan Battlefield 00:00 Tools
That's Me 00:00 Tools
Seven Long Years 00:00 Tools
What A Woe 00:00 Tools
Mr. Down Presser 00:00 Tools
Jack And Jill Shuffle 00:00 Tools
Now That You're Dead 00:00 Tools
Georgie And The Old Shoe 00:00 Tools
Snappin' Is Back 00:00 Tools
Drink Rum 00:00 Tools
Boller Man 00:00 Tools
Trench Town People 00:00 Tools
Daphney 00:00 Tools
Now that Your Dead 00:00 Tools
If Life Was A Thing 00:00 Tools
Grudgeful People 00:00 Tools
Bajan Girl 00:00 Tools
Bringing in the Sheaves 00:00 Tools
Love Me Or Leave Me 00:00 Tools
On Your Knees 00:00 Tools
COME ON MY PEOPLE 00:00 Tools
Good Morning Miss Laura 00:00 Tools
Mr. Downpressor 00:00 Tools
Mr Down Presser 00:00 Tools
Easy Snappin´ 02:50 Tools
Snapping is Back 00:00 Tools
Back Biter 00:00 Tools
The Clock 00:00 Tools
Naked Truth 00:00 Tools
1.Walking down King Street. 00:00 Tools
Power 00:00 Tools
Easy Snappin’ 00:00 Tools
Yes I Know 00:00 Tools
Streets of Glory 00:00 Tools
Ska-Ta-Brain 00:00 Tools
Walking Down King Stre 00:00 Tools
Brother Nathan 00:00 Tools
Easy Snappin' (BB 15 - 1960) 00:00 Tools
Mr. Downpresser 00:00 Tools
True Musical 00:00 Tools
Good Morning Miss Laur 00:00 Tools
Now You´re Gone 00:00 Tools
Bajan Gal 00:00 Tools
Hit You Let You Feel I 00:00 Tools
Easy Snappinґ 00:00 Tools
Snappin Is Back 00:00 Tools
Brother Ram Goat 00:00 Tools
Little Lady 00:00 Tools
Now That you`re Dead 00:00 Tools
The Horse 00:00 Tools
I'm So Glad 00:00 Tools
Going Home 00:00 Tools
Mr Downpressor 00:00 Tools
Easy Snappi 00:00 Tools
Boiler Man 00:00 Tools
She's Gone 00:00 Tools
Runaway 00:00 Tools
Tell me little lady 00:00 Tools
Boller Man A Come 00:00 Tools
Don't Have A Ticket Don't Worry 00:00 Tools
Daphne 00:00 Tools
Jack & Jill Shuffle 00:00 Tools
Georgie and the Old Shoe (with The City Slickers) 00:00 Tools
I'll Be There 00:00 Tools
Jack & Jill Shuffle - blue beat 33 shuffle ska 00:00 Tools
Easy Snapping - Theo Beckford 00:00 Tools
Walking Down King Street aka Flip, Flop & Fly 00:00 Tools
Flip Flip And Fly 00:00 Tools
Take Your Time (Bonus Track) 00:00 Tools
What A Woe (Bonus Track) 00:00 Tools
Run Away 00:00 Tools
01 - Easy Snapping 00:00 Tools
I Don't Want You 00:00 Tools
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Theophilus Beckford Composer, singer, and pianist Theophilus Beckford has been immortalized as "Easy Snappin'," a nickname given to him after the epochal song he composed in the late '50s. This groundbreaking hit has resonated throughout reggae, with many critics considering it to be the first quintessentially Jamaican pop song. However, Beckford failed to capitalize on the song's success, both monetarily and musically; he never scored another major hit and died still struggling to collect his due. While he always stayed active in the island's music industry, either as a session musician, arranger, or mentor, he is still remembered simply as "Snappin'." Theophilus Beckford was born in 1935 in Kingston, Jamaica. Although his father played in the Jamaican Military Band, the younger Beckford was chided for playing the family piano, and he was forced to learn music first at Kingston's Boys Town School and then with two private tutors. By the mid-'50s, he purchased his own piano, and played backup on calypso tracks for Count Lasher and Lord Flea, with Stanley Motta producing. In 1956, Beckford was working with Clement "Sir Coxsone Downbeat" Dodd, spending long hours in the studio rehearsing and experimenting. Despite his classical training, Beckford took inspiration from the jump blues of Rosco Gordon, as well as the music of Fats Domino, Lloyd Price, and Patti Page. Out of these sessions came "Easy Snappin'," the laid-back boogie shuffle whose emphasis on the off-beats has led many critics (including Beckford himself) to argue that ska and consequently Jamaican music began with this song. While the more conservative would argue that it is somewhere between ska and American R&B, its influence is indisputable. For three years Dodd only played the acetate at his sound-system dances, despite Beckford's pleas to release the record to the public. When the single was finally issued in 1959, the song became an instant hit, skyrocketing to number one and remaining on the charts for an unparalleled 18 months. But Beckford saw little tangible evidence of "Easy Snappin'"'s success, receiving royalties for neither the song's initial Jamaican release nor its re-release on the English Blue Beat label. He continued to release more tracks for Dodd, including "Georgia and the Old Shoes," "Jack and Jill Shuffle," and "Tell Them, Little Lady," but in the early '60s he severed his ties with Downbeat, as immortalized on the song, "Mr. Downpressor." Beckford then recorded vocal tracks for King Edwards, Duke Reid, and Prince Buster, and provided piano backing for many popular ska acts. Seeking broader financial control over his music, he formed the King Pioneer label in 1963, for which he released some of his own Jamaican folk material, as well as records by Basil Gabbidon, Lloyd Clarke, and the Tennors. Most records achieved little success, however, except for the moderate hit "Boller Man a Come." Throughout the rocksteady and reggae years, Beckford continued life as a session musician, recording for Lee Perry, Bunny Lee, and for Leslie Kong as one of Beverly's All Stars. He also backed such vocalists as Toots & the Maytals, Desmond Dekker, and Eric "Monty" Morris; would later arrange music for Duke Reid, Joe Gibbs, Bunny Lee, and Leslie Kong; and, in 1978, played himself in a cameo for the film Rockers. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.