Wayne Jarrett seems to have drifted in and out of the
reggae spotlight like a late-night ghost, tracking the timeless
"Satta Dread" with
Bunny Lee in 1976, then vanishing until he turned up to record the album
Chip In with producer
Henry "Junjo" Lawes in Kingston in 1982; later in the year he showed up in New York to put down six classic sides for
Lloyd "Bullwackie" Barnes'
Wackies label which, along with the dubs, made up the
Showcase, Vol. 1 LP. Then
Jarrett, like a wisp of ganja smoke, was gone again, and rumors persist that he is now living in Connecticut, in New York, in Miami, or perhaps he's back in Kingston. Mysterious as these comings and goings are,
Jarrett has managed to produce two marvelous
roots albums, both of which feature his disarming,
Horace Andy-like tenor vocals. His quavering delivery, which first appears to be a stylistic affectation, quickly becomes endearing, and on this set, a reissue of the original
Chip In LP with both sides of the two 12"
disco mixes that
Greensleeves released to support the album back in 1982 added as bonus tracks, listeners have what has to be called a lost
reggae classic. Recorded at
Channel One over some gorgeous
Roots Radics rhythms and mixed by
Scientist at
King Tubby's in Kingston,
Chip In was cut just as the
roots influence of the 1970s was waning and the onset of
dancehall was beginning to engulf Jamaica, and it is the perfect transitional set because of it, full of a dreamy, druggy flow, but still somehow fresh and sparse and perfectly nuanced and balanced as
Jarrett's intimate phrasing floats in and out of the mix. It isn't a flashy album, and it isn't insistent or strident, but has all the feel of an unforced conversation with a close friend, unwinding with the sharp yet gauzy clarity of a perfectly recalled memory. ~ Steve Leggett