Eddy Grant (born Edmond Montague Grant on 5 March 1948), is a Plaisance, Guyana born musician. When he was still a young boy, his parents emigrated to the UK, where he settled. He had his first Number One hit in 1968, when he was the lead guitarist and main songwriter of the multiracial group, The Equals. It was his self-penned song, "Baby Come Back" that flew to the chart summit. The tune also later topped the UK singles chart again when covered by Pato Banton.
Musical Achievements
- In 1982, his solo recording of "I Don't Wanna Dance" spent three weeks at Number One in the UK singles chart. He scored a Top Ten album in the same year, with Killer On The Rampage.
- "Electric Avenue" was both a UK and U.S. number 2 in 1983, selling over a million copies. Plus, a later remix of the song was a UK Top Ten hit again in 2001.
- His later single, "Gimme Hope Jo'anna", during the apartheid regime ("Joanna" stands for Johannesburg, South Africa) was a song about apartheid in that country, and was subsequently banned by it. Lyrics include:
- "Well Joanna she runs a country, she runs in Durban and the Transvaal.
- She makes a few of her people happy, she don't care about the rest at all.
- She got a system they call apartheid, it keeps a brother in subjection.
- But maybe pressure will make Joanna see, how everybody can live as one."
- In 2001, Eddy Grant, The Greatest Hits was released.
Eddy Grant as the Boss
Eddy set up his own recording company, Ice Records, but more recently has returned to the West Indies from London, choosing Barbados as a more realistic venue for a recording company, rather than his country of origin. He has also produced the likes of Sting, Mick Jagger and Elvis Costello.
UK chart single discography
- "Living On The Front Line" - 1979 - #11
- "Do You Feel My Love" - 1980 - #8
- "Can't Get Enough Of You" - 1981 - #13
- "I Love You, Yes I Love You" - 1981 - #37
- "I Don't Wanna Dance" - 1982 - #1
- "Electric Avenue" - 1983 - #2
- "Living On The Front Line / Do You Feel My Love" - re-issue - 1983 - #47
- "War Party" - 1983 - #42
- "Till I Can't Take Love No More" - 1983 - #42
- "Romancing The Stone" - 1984 - #52
- "Gimme Hope Jo'anna" - 1988 - #7
- "Walking On Sunshine" - 1989 - #63
- "Electric Avenue" - re-mix - 2001 - #5
- "Walking On Sunshine" - re-mix - 2001 - #57
External links
1948 births | Reggae musicians | Living people | Guyanese people | Singers | Guitarists | Songwriters
Eddy Grant | Eddy Grant | Eddy Grant