Geoffrey Aloysius Chung | |
---|---|
Born | 1950 |
Origin | Kingston, Jamaica |
Died | [1] | October 13, 1995 (aged 44)
Genres | Reggae, dub, ska, rocksteady |
Occupation(s) | Musician, recording engineer, record producer |
Instrument(s) | Keyboards |
Years active | Late 1960s–1995 |
Geoffrey Aloysius Chung (1950 – 13 October 1995) was a Jamaican musician, recording engineer, and record producer.
Chung was born in 1950 in Kingston, Jamaica. [2] He worked as a session keyboard player and guitarist in the 1960s, as a member of The Mighty Mystics and the Now Generation Band, both of which also included his brother, guitarist Mikey Chung, and Lee "Scratch" Perry's band The Upsetters, among others. [3] [4] He began working as a producer in the 1970s, initially with Sharon Forrester on her debut album, and set up his Edge productions company in 1974. [3] His productions included work by The Abyssinians, The Heptones, and Marcia Griffiths. [3] He also worked with Ras Michael's Sons of Negus band, on the 1975 album Rastafari Dub, playing synthesizer, organ and piano, [5] and worked regularly with singer Pablo Moses, both as keyboard player and producer, including his first and best-known recording "I Man a Grasshopper". [2] [6] Chung also produced the recordings that would be released as the first two albums from Ijahman Levi. [7] In the early 1980s he became resident engineer at the Dynamic studios, where he mixed several albums by Peter Tosh, and he co-produced early recordings by Frankie Paul. [3] In the late 1980s he relocated to Miami, where he established his own recording studio. [3] In 1991 he produced and engineered Maxi Priest's Best of Me album. Geoffrey died in 1995 of liver failure. [8] [9] Geoffrey's work continues to be released since his death such as the 2003 release of Everton Blender's King Man album where he played clavinet and acted as engineer. [2] [9]
"Mental Disorder" vinyl EP by Pressure Drop Records