
Max Romeo was a great social commentator, railing against inequality and discord
Best known for War Ina Babylon, a playful commentary on the factionalism that blighted Jamaican society during the mid-1970s, and Chase the Devil, on which he vowed to banish Satan to outer space, Romeo enjoyed repeated chart success in Jamaica during his long and varied career. Collaborating with the Rolling Stones in the early 1980s, he later opened a recording studio at his home in the Jamaican countryside, helping a younger generation of artists to come to prominence, including his daughter Xana and son Azizi.
Born Maxwell Smith in 1944 in Alexandria, a hillside hamlet below Browns Town in northern Jamaica, he moved to Kingston at 10 years old to live with his father following his mother's emigration, but clashed with his stepmother and absconded; moving between the disparate homes of extended family members, he was partly raised by strangers after enduring periods of homelessness. In the rocksteady era he began working as a record salesman for Ken Lack's Caltone label and made his first set of recordings for the label fronting the Emotions harmony trio, the love song I'll Buy You a Rainbow reaching the Jamaican Top 10 in March 1967.
His determined courtship of a local girl earned him the nickname Romeo and after the Emotions disbanded, he got his first taste of international fame through the ribald Wet Dream, produced by Bunny Lee, which hit the UK Top 10 in November 1969, despite a BBC ban for its suggestive lyrics. The saucy hit brought Romeo to London for his first overseas performances, including at the Caribbean Music Festival held at the Empire Pool with Desmond Dekker and Johnny Nash, the bulk of Romeo's innuendo-laden debut album A Dream recorded in London with the Rudies backing band.
Back in Jamaica, Romeo began focusing on social commentary, sometimes setting his lyrics to adapted folk songs or spirituals. Macabee Version referenced his newfound Rastafari faith and Black Equality attacked the Eurocentric mindset of postcolonial Jamaica; Chi Chi Bud used coded metaphors to decry the island's pervasive inequalities. Appearing on the bandwagons that helped bring Michael Manley of the leftist People's National party to power in 1972, Romeo recorded songs like Let the Power Fall and Press Along Joshua to signal his support for Manley's vision, but when change was slow to come after Manley took office, Romeo responded with the critical No Joshua No.
After working on the Revelation Time album with arranger Geoffrey Chung at Lee 'Scratch' Perry's Black Ark studio in 1975, Romeo began working more concertedly with Perry, the single War Ina Babylon attracting Chris Blackwell's interest; the resultant album of the same name was released by Island Records overseas, introducing Romeo to a broader international audience. The follow-up, Reconstruction, was self-produced, with the censorious Melt Away its most outstanding number, but the album was rapidly deleted after financial disputes and the momentum further interrupted when Romeo moved to New York to star in a musical called Reggae, which flopped at the box office. He was an uncredited backing vocalist on the Rolling Stones' album Emotional Rescue in 1980 and Keith Richards subsequently appeared on Romeo's Holding Out My Love To You, a crossover attempt that broadened his fanbase in Japan, but failed to ignite in the US.
Sign up to Sleeve Notes
Get music news, bold reviews and unexpected extras. Every genre, every era, every week
after newsletter promotion
I remember him appearing in London in the late 1980s, where he had a galvanising effect on Lee 'Scratch' Perry. It was a fallow period for each of them and the meeting sparked a new determination to get back on track. Romeo abandoned the courier service he had run in New York for several years to make ends meet and returned to Jamaica shortly before the sensational success of the Prodigy's Out Of Space, which sampled Chase the Devil, sparking renewed interest in his work; a decade later, Kanye West mined Chase the Devil for Jay Z's Lucifer, cementing Romeo's original in the global consciousness. In the interim, albums for Jah Shaka, Mafia & Fluxy and Mad Professor made him a regular on festival stages throughout Europe and North America; the studio he opened at his home in Treadways, near Linstead, enabled his children to launch their own musical careers.
Max Romeo undertook his final tour in 2023, performing in 56 cities throughout Britian and Europe, shortly after he filed a $15m lawsuit against Universal Music Group and Polygram Publishing for unpaid royalties (the companies later sought to have it dismissed). I remember Max as pragmatic, politically engaged and open minded, a thoughtful person with a strong sense of humour whose obvious intelligence and drive belied a lack of formal education. He is survived by his wife, Charm, and several children.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
7 hours ago
- The Guardian
Flaco Jiménez obituary
Flaco Jiménez, who has died aged 86, was a master accordion player who transformed the Tex-Mex music scene in the US. A virtuoso performer of tejano conjunto – a fusion of Mexican styles and the polkas of German immigrants to the south-western states – he updated the form by adding rock, blues or country influences. He said he wanted the accordion to 'yell and scream, and make it happy'. He worked as a soloist, with his own bands including the supergroup the Texas Tornados, which he co-founded, and with a remarkable range of musicians, including Ry Cooder, Bob Dylan and the Rolling Stones. His many accolades included five Grammys, one of which was a lifetime achievement award in 2015. Jiménez's 70-year career started out in the dance halls and bars of his hometown, San Antonio, Texas, and along the Mexican border. He became a regional celebrity but grew bored with 'playing the same way for years'. Doug Sahm, a fellow Texan and the adventurous former leader of the country-rock band Sir Douglas Quintet, changed all that when he began working with Jiménez and invited him to play on his 1973 album Doug Sahm and Band – joining a celebrity cast that included Dylan and the New Orleans pianist Dr John. The album begins, suitably enough, with the upbeat (Is Anybody Goin' to) San Antone and includes a rousing Jiménez accordion solo on Poison Love. Then came Cooder, who invited Jiménez to play on his gloriously inventive 1976 album Chicken Skin Music. 'He tracked me down,' Jiménez said. 'I had never heard of him but he opened my eyes.' He toured the UK with Cooder and his band, and recorded a memorable concert with them for the BBC's Old Grey Whistle Test in 1977 that included accordion-backed reworkings of the folk song Goodnight Irene and the Jim Reeves country classic He'll Have to Go. The musical partnership would continue for decades. Jiménez's many recordings with Cooder included Get Rhythm (1987) and Pull Up Some Dust and Sit Down (2011). Helped by the collaborations, Jiménez's solo career flourished. His first solo album was released in 1972 on the San Antonio DLB label; more than 25 would follow, including several for Arhoolie Records, run by Chris Strachwitz, famed for promoting American roots styles. Jiménez's 1985 recording Ay te Dejo en San Antonio, made with the singer Toby Torres, won Arhoolie a Grammy. During the 1980s he also toured with the bluegrass star Peter Rowan, with whom he recorded the witty and defiant ballad The Free Mexican Airforce (from the album of the same title), and played on the country stars Dwight Yoakam and Buck Owens's single Streets of Bakersfield, taken from Yoakam's 1988 album Buenas Noches From a Lonely Room. Rowan later appeared, along with Cooder, on Jiménez's album Flaco's Amigos (1989). In the same year he was reunited with Sahm, along with Augie Meyers and Freddy Fender, in the Texas Tornados, who won a Grammy for the song Soy de San Luis, written by Jiménez's father, which appeared on their debut album. A popular touring band, they went on to release half a dozen more albums, including two live sets. In 1990 he was reunited with Dylan, whom he joined at the Montreux jazz festival to perform Across the Borderline, co-written by Cooder. He returned to the song (this time with vocals from John Hiatt) on his 1992 album Partners, which also included contributions from Stephen Stills, Cooder and Linda Ronstadt. The album was selected for the US Library of Congress Recording Registry for recordings deemed 'of special historical significance'. His least expected collaboration came in 1994, when he was on tour in San Francisco and was invited to record with the Rolling Stones. He went to the studio, played along with the song Sweethearts Together, then said he was ready to record – only to be told by Mick Jagger that they had already recorded what he was doing. The result can be heard on the Voodoo Lounge album. In 1995 he played on the Mavericks hit All You Ever Do Is Bring Me Down, and in 1998 won another Grammy with another supergroup, Los Super Seven, in which he was joined once again by Sahm and Fender, along with Joe Ely and members of Los Lobos. In 2000 he teamed up with Sahm yet again, this time on his own album Sleepytown, which also included Yoakam and Owens. Born Leonardo Jiménez in San Antonio, he was known since childhood as Flaco (Spanish for skinny). He was the son of Santiago Jiménez, a successful accordion player, and his wife, Luisa (known as Mena), who ran a home filled with music. His grandfather, Patricio, had played conjunto, as did his father, who recorded several regional hits. Flaco started out playing bajo sexto guitar, a 12-stringed Mexican instrument, then switched to the accordion when he was seven. At 15 he started a band, Los Caporales, and began playing on local radio stations at the start of a career that would transform Texan music. He slowed down in his later years, but continued to mix recording and performing. In 2020 he was reunited with the Mavericks on their first all-Spanish album, En Español, and in May 2024 he gave his last performance at the annual Tejanto Conjunto festival in San Antonio. He is survived by his wife, Adela, whom he married in 1969 and with whom he once ran a food truck, Taco Jiménez, by their children, Raquel, Rebecca, Cynthia, Gilbert, David, Leonardo, Arturo and Norma, and his brother, Santiago Jr, another celebrated accordion player. Flaco (Leonardo) Jiménez, musician, born 11 March 1939; died 31 July 2025


Wales Online
8 hours ago
- Wales Online
'Masterpiece' BBC period drama hailed one of the 'greatest' series of all time
'Masterpiece' BBC period drama hailed one of the 'greatest' series of all time The BBC series, which is based on a novel of the same name by Andrea Levy, has a 7.5 star rating on IMDB and has won critical acclaim from fans and critics alike Small Island fans have been 'close to tears' after tuning in (Image: Ruby Film) Small Island, a cult classic novel has been transformed into a riveting BBC drama, captivating viewers on iPlayer. Starring Benedict Cumberbatch and Ruth Wilson, the series has earned an impressive 7.5 stars on IMDB, with fans lauding it as "truly one of the greatest" BBC dramas and describing it as "incredible viewing." Angela Levy's narrative focuses on Hortense (Naomi Harris), a bright and ambitious girl born out of wedlock in Jamaica in 1939. She grows up with the charismatic Michael (Ashley Walters), who joins the Air Force as conflict erupts and heads to England. Post-war, Hortense, now a trained teacher, enters a marriage of convenience with Gilbert Joseph, funding his move to England under the agreement that he will later send for her. She yearns for a reunion with Michael and is convinced that Britain holds better opportunities for her. However, upon her arrival in London in 1948, Hortense is confronted with the harsh realities of a tiny shared room and pervasive racial prejudice. Fans have left rave reviews after binge-watching the entire series Queenie, their progressive landlady, has also experienced disappointments, having married the dependable but dull Bernard to escape her family's farm life, according to the Express. With Bernard missing in action after serving in the Air Force, Queenie began hosting lodgers from the military, including Michael, with whom she has a history of sexual encounters, reports the Mirror. Small Island fans have hailed the series the "greatest" ever (Image: Ruby Television Production in as) A viewer who was thoroughly impressed with Small Island gave it a glowing review, saying: "Small Island is a truly incredible drama, it gives the story of the lives of a group of people from Jamaica during the second world war, the effects they have on one another, and on a group of locals." The same individual continued their high praise for the series, adding: "It tells the journey the brave Jamaican fighters undertook, and the gut wrenching racism they had from the people they bravely fought to defend. "Some scenes in the second part will have you close to tears, and some will have you chuckling away, it's an incredible balance." They went on to say: "I have watched many dramas over the years, and I'd have to say this is one of the most powerful I've seen, it tells a story that's often never told, but in light of the Windrush scandal it has an even more powerful impact." Regarding the cast's performance, the fan commented: "The acting is benchmark standard, it is no surprise that awards followed, Naomie Harris is a revelation, but all concerned are sensational, too many performances to note, but David Oyelowo will near bring you to tears." Another person penned: "This compelling two-part Masterpiece Theatre offering is another reason why people should support public television." As a third hailed: "Small Island is a truly incredible drama, it gives the story of the lives of a group of people from Jamaica during the second world war, the effects they have on one another, and on a group of locals." Article continues below A fourth review read: "Close to perfect. A story about post WW2 Jamaican immigrants to England, about working with reality to bring dreams to life, and how sometimes it just doesn't work out. The script was wonderful, skipping between Jamaica and London, showing how different these two were. Acting from everyone 10/10. I learnt a lot into the bargain." The acclaimed series Small Island, which stars Benedict Cumberbatch as Bernard in two 90-minute episodes, can be streamed on BBC iPlayer.


Daily Record
8 hours ago
- Daily Record
'Near perfect' BBC period drama sees fans 'close to tears' as they leave rave reviews
A BBC drama based on the novel by Andrea Levy, which features an all-star cast including Benedict Cumberbatch and Ruth Wilson, has received rave reviews from fans Small Island, a cult novel adapted into a compelling BBC drama, has mesmerised viewers on iPlayer. The programme, starring Benedict Cumberbatch and Ruth Wilson, holds an outstanding 7.5-star rating on IMDB. Viewers have lauded the series as "truly one of the greatest" BBC dramas and described it as "incredible viewing." The tale crafted by Angela Levy follows Hortense (Naomi Harris), who in 1939 is an illegitimate yet clever and determined young woman being brought up in Jamaica. Hortense matures alongside the charismatic and spirited Michael (Ashley Walters), who joins the Air Force when war erupts and heads off to England, reports the Mirror. Following the conflict, Hortense, now a qualified educator, consents to a marriage of convenience with Gilbert Joseph, funding his journey to England on the understanding that he will arrange for her to join him later. She yearns not only to be reunited with Michael but also holds firm beliefs that existence in Britain will offer her superior opportunities. However, upon her arrival in London in 1948, Hortense feels deeply let down by their confined single-room accommodation and the blatant racial prejudice she encounters. Queenie, their broad-minded landlady, has endured her own disappointments, having wed the dependable yet dull and unromantic Bernard to escape her family's farm, reports the Express. Whilst Bernard, who is now believed to be missing, was serving with the Air Force during the war, Queenie began accommodating military lodgers for companionship, including Michael, with whom she shares an intimate history. A viewer who awarded the series top marks gushed: "Small Island is a truly incredible drama, it gives the story of the lives of a group of people from Jamaica during the second world war, the effects they have on one another, and on a group of locals." They went on to heap praise on the programme, declaring: "It tells the journey the brave Jamaican fighters undertook, and the gut wrenching racism they had from the people they bravely fought to defend. Some scenes in the second part will have you close to tears, and some will have you chuckling away, it's an incredible balance." The same admirer noted: "I have watched many dramas over the years, and I'd have to say this is one of the most powerful I've seen, it tells a story that's often never told, but in light of the Windrush scandal it has an even more powerful impact." Discussing the performances, they observed: "The acting is benchmark standard, it is no surprise that awards followed, Naomie Harris is a revelation, but all concerned are sensational, too many performances to note, but David Oyelowo will near bring you to tears." Another person penned: "This compelling two-part Masterpiece Theatre offering is another reason why people should support public television." As a third hailed: "Small Island is a truly incredible drama, it gives the story of the lives of a group of people from Jamaica during the second world war, the effects they have on one another, and on a group of locals." A fourth review read: "Close to perfect. A story about post WW2 Jamaican immigrants to England, about working with reality to bring dreams to life, and how sometimes it just doesn't work out. The script was wonderful, skipping between Jamaica and London, showing how different these two were. Acting from everyone 10/10. I learnt a lot into the bargain." Small Island, starring Benedict Cumberbatch as Bernard throughout two 90-minute episodes, can currently be watched on BBC iPlayer.