Baby Cham's 'GHETTO STORY'
Canadian Tour... more>>>
Jamaica has ever seen; in other words - "Wow
Wow!!"
Born Dameon Dean Beckett in Kingston, Jamaica on
February 24th, 1977 at just age seven years old he
bagn watching established deejays of the day honing
their skill on the mic while sharpening his own deejaying
abilities at school. "I was a good student, I
wasn't focused on deejaying just yet", Cham recalls.
"But you just develop the idea of being a deejay,
holding the mic and rocking the crowd." One of
nine children whose father died in 1991, Dameon put
aside his childhood aspirations of becoming polite
because it would have been a financial burden for
his mother, "so I found another way out,"
he says.
While attending high school Dameon and friends would
lyrically freestyle, receiving enthusiastic responses
from their fellow students. Dameon was asked to perform
at a talent show in Kingston, (Where he first adopted
the moniker Baby Cham) for which he wrote several
original songs, surprising many in the community with
his skills. With his friends encouragement he began
visiting Kingston's recording studios where young
hopefuls and already established artists spends hours
each day waiting for an opportunity to "voice",
that is, record their vocals over a producer's pre-exisiting
rhythm ("riddim") track. "Nothing started
to happen for me until about age 15, that's when I
voiced my first song," Cham recalls. "A
year later, I voiced a song that got a little recognition
in Jamaica, "One Bag of Hotness". Then sound
systems started looking for me in the community to
do dub plate specials (custom made acetate recordings
lauding a specific sound system)" In 1995 Baby
Cham met popular deejay Spragga Benz who took him
to Donovan Germain's Penthouse studios. Spragga and
Cham recorded "No Coco Mania" which rocketed
to number one throughout the Caribbean, earning Baby
Cham an opportunity to perform in Barbados, his first
trip outside of Jamaica.
As a result of his numerous visits to Penthouse, Baby
Cham formed an alliance with Dave Kelly who was at
the time the studio resident task master (engineer,
producer, etc). When Kelly opened THE BOXX studio
facility, Cham continued to call on him seeking an
opportunity to record. "I always liked how Dave
did his work," Cham remarks, "how his product
sounded: him nah rush it, just one or two rhythms
a year and they always last." Kelly, however,
insisted the promising young artist finish school
before he would record him. Since Baby Cham completed
high school, his dynamic deejay style in combination
with Kelly's impeccable sense of rhythms has forged
an indomitable Dancehall combination.
Kelly's JOYRIDE rhythm released in late 1996 dominated
the Dancehalls and radio airwaves for most of 1997,
yielding two hits for Baby Cham: "Funny Man"
with singer Mr. Easy and "Joyride" with
singer Wayne Wonder. As the rhythm's popularity traveled
outside of Jamaica, Baby Cham hit the road on a four
week Joyride Tour of the US along with Frisco Kid,
Alley Cat, Wayne Wonder and Mr. Easy. Under the guidance
of the tour more established artists, Cham gained
confidence and developed the powerful delivery which
now trademarks his live performances.
In 1998, the Dancehall celebrity spotlight shone
even brighter on Baby Cham when he recorded "Que
Sera (Bumper Cart)" over Kelly's RAE RAE rhythm.
The song's popularity earned Cham his first advertised
appearance on Jamaica's Reggae Sumfest - The island's
most important Reggae Festival. The RAE RAE rumblings
escalated to seismic proportion when Kelly released
the SHOWTIME rhythm featuring one of Cham's best selling
single "Gallong Yah Gal". Cham returned
to Sumfest 1999, his dazzling performance rated among
the finest of the festival.
In July 1999, Kelly's much anticipated BUG rhythm
began it's Dancehall infestation and with it arrived
Cham's anthem "Ghetto Pledge". As the year
ended the BUG refused to be exterminated spawning,
instead Kelly's CLONE rhythm and another Cham's chart
topper "Another Level" featuring Bounty
Killer.
Baby Cham's music indeed raises Dancehall to another
level - after listening to "Wow
. The Story",
it's certain longtime fans and recent Dancehall converts
will have a unanimous response: Wow Wow!!!!.