Talk:Alton Ellis

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The third paragraph: His first hit was "Dance Crasher", a plea for peace, and followed it up with "Get Ready - Rock Steady", perhaps the first rocksteady recording. The song was recording with keyboardist Jackie Mittoo playing the bass guitar part because the bassist did not show up; Mittoo could not keep up with the ska beat, and the tempo was slowed down to accommodate him. This allowed for a choppier rhythm that led Ellis to expand his vocal range.

was pretty much stolen from All Music Guide's Biography for Ellis at

http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:oe861vkjzzba~T10

Ellis quickly scored a major hit with the antiviolence plea "Dance Crasher," and the following year, he released what was arguably the first rocksteady single, "Get Ready - Rock Steady." Its innovative beat grew out of a session where the scheduled bassist didn't show up, forcing keyboardist Jackie Mittoo to play the bass part himself; Mittoo's left hand couldn't keep up with the frantic ska beat, so he elected to slow down the tempo. The result was a choppier rhythm that wound up allowing the vocalist to stretch out more, and soon the rocksteady sound had taken over Jamaican music, with Ellis leading the charge.

Is paraphrasing other's original work how Wikipedia operates?

I just noticed this by chance looking up info about Alton Ellis.

(above comment by User:74.99.214.118 March 18, 2007) - seems to have been fixed. Wwwhatsup (talk) 05:13, 1 February 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Songs

Surely "I'm Just A Guy" and "Breaking Up Is Hard To Do" merit a mention. Wwwhatsup (talk) 05:10, 1 February 2008 (UTC)