Marcia Llyneth Griffiths was born on November 23,
1949 to Joseph and Beatrice Griffiths. The family hailed
from a poor section of West Kingston, but as bad as
things were, Marcia considered those days glorious,
because there was always one thing in abundance - one
thing that made them the wealthiest family in the world
- one thing that no one could take from them... Love.
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Peaceful
Woman: From her teen years Marcia depicts
calm and charm |
Marcia as a teenager attended Kingston Senior School,
and was a zealous member of her church choir. In fact,
she was always taking part in some school concert or
play. She loved to hang out and sing with friends, often
times sneaking out of the house after her parents had
gone to bed. It was during one such nightly excursion,
that the slim fifteen year old beauty managed to get
herself discovered.
Philip “Boasie” James lead singer of the
Blues Busters vocal duo was visiting his girlfriend,
who lived next door to Marcia, and heard this lovely
voice floating through the air. He could not believe
his ears, and subsequently took Marcia straight away
to Byron Lee and insisted that this song-bird be included
on the upcoming talent show to be held at the Carib
Theater in Kingston. Marcia remembers that Byron was
upset with “Boasie” for coming to interrupt
his well planned program schedule and insisting that
this "nobody" go on his show.
Marcia remembers she performed a Carla Thomas original,“No
Time To Lose” to phenomenal response from the
audience. They demanded an encore, but to no avail,
as she had only rehearsed one song with the band. As
much as she wanted to, she could not do any more performances
that day.
The attention Marcia received after this auspicious
debut was overwhelming. Everyone wanted to manage her,
including Byron Lee’s manager Ronnie Nasralla.
That same night he took her to the studios of JBC where
Marcia made her first television debut. All in one day
were the ingredients of an overnight success story which
no one realized was about to happen. The rest is history,
for the girl who became first the queen, the matriarch
of Reggae Music. Marcia L. Griffiths OD., a great contributor
to Reggae Music, is most fitting for the royal, prestigious,
and respectful title of Reggae Empress.
>>> Bio continued - Pages 1,
2, 3,
4, 5,
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