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Super Cat

Super Cat

 

Super Cat (born William Maragh in Kingston, Jamaica, 1963) is the originator of the late 1980s and early 1990s dancehall movement. Super Cat was born in Jamaica and was nicknamed Wild Apache. His nickname, the "Wild Apache" was given to him by his mentor Early B. He is the elder brother of reggae star Junior Cat.

Born to an African Jamaican mother and a father of east Indian descent, Super Cat was raised in Kingston’s tough Seivright Gardens neighborhood, then known as Cockburn Pen. "Super Cat was born home delivery," as he tells it, "and I never, ever reached the low-spital (sic)." Cockburn Pen was a hotbed of dancehall reggae and home to ground-breaking deejays like Prince Jazzbo and U-Roy. As a child, Super Cat heard the latest songs by these veterans blasting from local record shops. By the time he was eight years old, he was hanging out at a local club called Bamboo Lawn, assisting the crew of the Soul Imperial sound system and absorbing the dancehall rhymes of deejays like Dillinger, Ranking Trevor and Early B The Doctor.

Super Cat, a.k.a. Don Dada, a.k.a. the Wild Apache, came roaring out of Jamaica in the 1980s, blazing a new trail through the dancehall reggae scene with hits like "Ghetto Red Hot," "Nuff Man A Dead," "Boops," and "Dolly My Baby." One of the first Jamaican deejays to break through the U.S. market, Maragh helped pioneer the fusion of dancehall with Hip Hop and R&B, now known as reggae fusion, collaborating with then-rising stars like Puff Daddy, Notorious BIG Heavy D, Mary J. Blige, Wu-Tang Clan’s Method Man, Kris Kross and DJ Muggs from Cypress Hill. Outspoken in his attitude on politics, sex, drugs, and violence, Cat’s talk is tough, his message is conscious and positive, a cry for justice that rings from the ghettos of Kingston, Jamaica, Georgetown, Guyana, Port of Spain, Trinidad, New York City, South Central Los Angeles, inner city Toronto and around the world.

Discography 

 

1985: Si Boops Deh (Techniques)
1986: Boops! (Skengdon)
1988: Sweets for My Sweet (Wild Apache)
1991: Cabin Stabbin (with Nicodemus & Junior Demus)(Wild Apache)
1992: Don Dada (Columbia)
1994: Good, the Bad, the Ugly & the Crazy (with Nicodemus, Junior Demus and Junior Cat) (Columbia)
1995: The Struggle Continues (Columbia)
2004: Reggaematic Diamond All-Stars (Wild Apache)