Artist's albums
Bridgens
2023 · single
Tobago Chant
2023 · single
Higher Heights
2023 · album
Can't Take My Space (Remastered Version)
2022 · single
Blendem
2022 · single
Babylon No Know This
2022 · compilation
Sound Dead Inna the Arena
2022 · single
White River Reggae Bash (Live)
2022 · album
Cant Take My Space Reggae Dud Wise
2021 · single
Can't Take My Space
2021 · single
Going Down
2021 · single
Going Down
2021 · compilation
Wicked People
2021 · single
Brain Food
2021 · single
Sing Mi a Go Sing
2021 · single
Sing For Jah
2020 · single
Slackness
2020 · single
Ghetto People Song
2020 · single
Long Hair Harry
2020 · single
Lets Party
2018 · single
Rich Man Driving in the Big Van
2017 · single
Where Is the Love
2014 · album
Higher Heights Revolution
2012 · album
EP Vol 1
2012 · EP
Last Train
2012 · single
Teach The Youths Good
2012 · single
Babylon Get A Blow
2011 · single
Teach The Youths Good/Joe Frazer Dub
2011 · single
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Biography
With his smooth, crooning, tenor vocals, up-tempo arrangements, and spiritually uplifting themes, Everton Blender (born Everton Dennis Williams) is one of the top performers of Jamaica's dancehall tradition. In addition to receiving the prestigious Chicago Martins International award, Blender received South Florida Reggae/Soca awards as "most improved entertainer" in 1996 and 1997. According to The St. Louis Dispatch, Blender "evokes memories of classic reggae performers of the past." Rootsworld added "Blender's voice is a friendly, expressive purr, skipping sure-footedly through and around melodies, supported by varied, bouncy, instrumentation rooted in signature booming reggae bass, kept light by lively percussion and bright background vocals." Blender's musical career was launched when he entered an amateur contest at the Bohemia Club, singing Dennis Brown songs under the name "Babbaru." Winning the contest on his second attempt, he began appearing on the Destiny Sound System. Although he released several singles, including "Where Is Love" in 1979 and "Baba Black Sheep" in 1985, his failure to achieve commercial success left him frustrated and disillusioned. For nearly a decade, he remained withdrawn from music. Blender resumed his career in 1995 when Garnett Silk, a former co-worker at the Destiny Sound System, introduced him to record producer Richard Bell. Bell was so impressed by Blender's vocalizing that he signed him to record for his label, Star Trail. One of his first singles for the label, "We No Jus' a Come," became a hit. Blender was equally successful in England where his first album, Lift Up Your Head, reached number four on the Black Echo music chart. The title track was subsequently nominated for a Jamaican Music award. Blender's album, Rootsman Credential, released in 1999, included the hit tune, "Ghetto People Sing." The 14 singles that he recorded after his debut album were compiled on the album, A Piece of da Blender: The Singles, released in 1996. ~ Craig Harris, Rovi