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The
worldwide ambassador of dancehall reggae, Sean Paul, is back
with "THE TRINITY," the highly anticipated follow-up
to his six-million-selling, Grammy-winning breakthrough album,
"DUTTY ROCK."
The music scene just hasn't been the same since Kingston,
Jamaica-born Sean Paul Henriques blazed a firestorm of hit
tunes - from "Gimme The Light" to "Get Busy"
to "Like Glue" - that went straight from the hardcore
dancehall audience to the international market with no remix
required. Then came Sean's massive duets, "Baby Boy"
(with Beyoncé) and "I'm Still In Love With You"
(with Sasha), which kept the flame burning bright and swelled
the ranks of believers even more. Carrying on the work of
dancehall superstars like Yellowman, Shabba Ranks, Super Cat,
and Beenie Man in bringing the infectious sound of the Kingston
streets to a wider audience, Sean Paul proved once and for
all that authentic Jamaican dancehall reggae could be embraced
as popular music on a global scale.
Besides containing five smash singles, "DUTTY ROCK"
was certified RIAA double-platinum in the United States and
sold nearly six million copies worldwide. In the wake of the
album's groundbreaking success, Sean racked up numerous prestigious
awards, including the Grammy for Best Reggae Album - redefining
the category in the process - along with nominations in the
Best Male Rap Solo Performance and Best New Artist categories.
He won MTV Europe's Best New Artist Award, while earning MTV
Video Music Award and American Music Award nominations. He
gathered multiple ASCAP/PRS kudos in pop, R&B, hip-hop,
rap, and reggae categories, and earned Source, MOBO, Juno,
Much Music, and International Reggae and World Music awards
The worldwide ambassador of dancehall reggae, Sean Paul,
is back with "THE TRINITY," the highly anticipated
follow-up to his six-million-selling, Grammy-winning breakthrough
album, "DUTTY ROCK."
Looking back from this moment in 2005, it's easy to forget
that just a few years ago, raw uncut Jamaican dancehall was
still considered "underground" music. It's hard
to remember a time when hip-hop stars weren't rocking Rasta
colors and R&B idols weren't jumping on reggae beats.
But that's the way it was just a few years back, before Sean
Paul's landmark "DUTTY ROCK" (VP/Atlantic) changed
the game.
"We flip the switch and the game just change,"
as Sean rhymes on the new album. "Dutty Cup music drive
them insane." And now it's time for him to "Change
The Game" all over again.
The music scene just hasn't been the same since Kingston,
Jamaica-born Sean Paul Henriques blazed a firestorm of hit
tunes - from "Gimme The Light" to "Get Busy"
to "Like Glue" - that went straight from the hardcore
dancehall audience to the international market with no remix
required. Then came Sean's massive duets, "Baby Boy"
(with Beyoncé) and "I'm Still In Love With You"
(with Sasha), which kept the flame burning bright and swelled
the ranks of believers even more. Carrying on the work of
dancehall superstars like Yellowman, Shabba Ranks, Super Cat,
and Beenie Man in bringing the infectious sound of the Kingston
streets to a wider audience, Sean Paul proved once and for
all that authentic Jamaican dancehall reggae could be embraced
as popular music on a global scale.
Besides containing five smash singles, "DUTTY ROCK"
was certified RIAA double-platinum in the United States and
sold nearly six million copies worldwide. In the wake of the
album's groundbreaking success, Sean racked up numerous prestigious
awards, including the Grammy for Best Reggae Album - redefining
the category in the process - along with nominations in the
Best Male Rap Solo Performance and Best New Artist categories.
He won MTV Europe's Best New Artist Award, while earning MTV
Video Music Award and American Music Award nominations. He
gathered multiple ASCAP/PRS kudos in pop, R&B, hip-hop,
rap, and reggae categories, and earned Source, MOBO, Juno,
Much Music, and International Reggae and World Music awards.
Sean Paul represented Jamaica on numerous television programs
around the world and became the first reggae artist to appear
on the cover of VIBE magazine, dressed in the national colors.
He took his explosive live show on the road, rocking stadium-sized
venues from Vegas to Ethiopia, and then celebrated by visiting
the pyramids of Egypt. The amazing part is that nobody saw
it coming, not even Sean himself.
"Sometimes I almost have to sit down and ask myself,
'Did we really do all that?'" says Sean, posted up behind
the mixing board inside the Kingston headquarters of 2 Hard
Productions. "Almost six million records sold? That's
crazy! Years ago that was just a dream. Well, it's time to
make it happen again."
With "THE TRINITY," Sean Paul's set to do that
and then some. Working with some of the hottest young producers
on the Jamaican dancehall circuit - Steven "Lenky"
Marsden, Don Corleone, Renaissance Crew, and Snowcone, to
name a few - Sean spent three years completing his third album.
And although many of the biggest names in hip-hop wanted to
work with him, Sean is proud to say that "it was all
done right here in the Third World." Hence "trinity,"
a spiritual concept that signifies a unity of three in one.
It's been said that three is a magic number, and "THE
TRINITY" is definitely a blessed piece of work. Sean
possesses an almost supernatural ability to create irresistible
hooks that can fill up any dance floor.
Maybe that's why the ladies love them some Sean Paul. "As
the world turns and as time burns, girl you know I'm gonna
be there," Sean pledges on "Ever Blazin',"
a track that reunites him with Lenky, producer of his number
one smash, "Get Busy." Lenky's dreamy "Masterpiece"
riddim provides the backdrop as Sean testifies about "a
love that's never-ending." On the old-school dancehall
romp "Yardie Bone," Sean joins forces with rising
dancehall star Wayne Marshall, spitting game in full papi
chulo mode. "Internationally speaking," as Sean
puts it, "we got the girls them tweaking."
The Latin fan base has had Sean's back from day one, and
he's always shown love in return, even releasing a Spanish
version of "Punkie" on his last album. Since then,
the Spanish-language dancehall hybrid known as reggaetón
has become muy caliente on urban radio. "I see reggaetón
as just another cousin to reggae music," says Sean, who
teamed up with Puerto Rican sensation Daddy Yankee for a track
on "THE TRINITY." Sean got to know reggaetón
artists like Tego Calderón, Ivy Queen, and Don Omar
when they were all coming up in New York's Latin clubs. "I
wish them all the best, and I definitely represent with them,"
he says. "But I'm not gonna change my style for anybody.
I'm a dancehall artist all the way."
"THE TRINITY" finds Sean Paul doing what he's always
done best. "You done know we got to take care of the
ladies," he says," and I'm still giving you those
party vibes." But this time out he's also expanding his
artistic reach, with a marked growth in terms of composition
and production. "'Gimme the Light' had like two verses
and a chorus," Sean observes. "Most of these songs
have three verses with a bridge part. So there's growth that
way, and also in the deepness of some of the tunes. I can
still do songs like 'Breakout' and 'Give It Up To Me' and
the hype things for the ladies, but on the more serious side
now, you got a song like 'I'll Take You There.' It's still
a party tune, but there's a violin on the track that sounds
sad to me, and I think it perfectly matches what I'm saying
about how we're all tired of the killing and blood spilling.
Cause we reach a place where all over the world, people are
just tired of that. And we still wanna live life. We still
wanna party and socialize and do we thing in a safe environment.
And I remembered that Staples Singers song, so I say, 'Yo,
I'll take you to that dream place where you can be as free
as you wanna be. Let's party there.'"
But at home and abroad, planet earth seems to be stuck in
a state of war and fear. "We had 600 people killed here
in Jamaica in the last six months," says Sean. "I
can't stop talking about it, and I will keep talking about
it. This is not Iraq where they're fighting about oil. Brothers
have been fighting and killing each other for a few dollars.
It's madness." But the message coming through "THE
TRINITY" is that even in the darkest times, people have
to find a way to enjoy their lives. "Life is a gift and
you must treasure it," he says. "We're all here
for a certain period of time, and we're definitely gonna leave
one day. Butterflies have two weeks, we have sometimes 90
years, sometimes 30 - we just don't know, but we're definitely
going somewhere after this. In the meantime, the important
thing is to make the most of the time we have without taking
away from anybody else."
Such deep meditations found their way onto "THE TRINITY"
in songs like "Never Gonna Be The Same," Sean's
tribute to his friend Daddigon, who was gunned down earlier
this year on the streets of Kingston. "He was one of
my best friends in the first three or four years of my career,"
says Sean. "One of the first youth we used to roll spliff
with and whatnot. It's not gonna be the same without him."
During one of their freestyle sessions in 1994, Daddigon came
up with the name of The Dutty Cup Crew, which Sean has represented
ever since.
"If that youth wasn't there, who knows what would have
happened?" Sean contemplates. "Without Daddigon
freestyling about 'Dutty Cup' I wouldn't have named my album
Dutty Rock. I wouldn't have said 'Dutty yeah.' I don't know
what would have come
" Although Sean and Daddigon
parted ways in 1998, whenever the old friends crossed paths,
they would make plans to get together. Somehow they never
quite got around to it. Then, in early 2005, Sean got a call
from his manager Jeremy Harding informing him that Daddigon
had been murdered. After a period of intense mourning, he
decided to pen a song in tribute to his friend.
"One day I tried to just take that sadness and all that
energy and express it," Sean says. "So I took a
couple weeks to sit down and write that tribute song for Daddigon.
I mention some other people too, like [the slain Jamaican
dancehall icon] Bogle, and I mention Peter Cargill and Shorty
Malcolm, who were two of the biggest footballers on the Reggae
Boys team who died. And I mention my aunt who died in a car
crash, and another sister named Nicole who was one of my first
girlfriends. She died from a brain tumor. That song is basically
for all the people we've lost. And it's saying, 'We gonna
miss your legacy - all of y'all. But we'll keep burning up
the flame in your memory. Cause you weren't here for nothing.
Nobody's gonna take nuttin' from you.'"
"THE TRINITY" represents the third leg of a journey
that began with Sean Paul's 1999 album, "STAGE ONE,"
a straight-up dancehall release on VP Records that spawned
the urban radio hits "Deport Them" and "Hot
Gal Today" with Mr. Vegas. Sean got another chance to
shine on the 2000 "BELLY" soundtrack alongside Mr.
Vegas and DMX. Then came his 2002 breakthrough hit, "Gimme
The Light," which started rocking on street corners before
the video directed by Lil' X got the whole world trying to
learn those sexy dance steps. The next single was "Get
Busy," which combined Sean Paul's energetic flow with
Lenky's massive "Diwali" riddim to create the first
100% Jamaican-produced number one pop single in history.
Meanwhile, his collaborations with The Clipse on the "Grindin'"
remix and Busta Rhymes on the remixes for "Make It Clap"
and "Gimme The Light" generated plenty of street
heat. "Baby Boy," Sean's duet with Beyoncé,
shot to the top of the pop charts in November 2003. The following
year, it was Sean Paul and Sasha's slow and sexy rub-a-dub
classic "I'm Still In Love With You" that became
a staple of urban and pop radio. Since then Sean has kept
his core audience happy with juggling joints like "Get
With It Girl" and "Straight Up." He recently
blessed The Neptunes' new single with rap duo The Clipse,
and applied his golden touch to the Tony Touch collabo "Ay
Ay Ay."
With "We Be Burnin'," the first single from the
new album, impacting at radio and video outlets, and with
"THE TRINITY" set to drop, Sean Paul is ready to
rock the world the only way he knows how to rock it - Dutty
style.
"My first album was much more dancehall than anything
else," Sean recalls. "No reggae on it, not even
a one drop. The second album, "DUTTY ROCK," did
kinda blend those three sounds: It sound like dancehall, it
sound like reggae, it sound like hip-hop. Now we come back
round to this album here. We got the girls tunes, the one
drop tunes, the fast kick-up stuff, and just everything
But basically 'THE TRINITY" is a mixture of those three
elements. I'll just stick to that. I ain't gonna try and say,
'Okay, I'm gonna have a total R&B track now, or we need
to go reggaetón or whatever. In Jamaica we have the
real reggae, the real dancehall, which is the roots of hip-hop.
So why not just make it run and keep on doing it?"
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