Nasio Fontaine, also known simply as Nasio, is a reggae artist from the Commonwealth of Dominica.
Biography
editNasio is the youngest of seven children born to a Kalinago mother and father of African descent, in the village of Carte-Bois.[1][2] When he was eight years old, Nasio began singing in the Bagatelle school and the village Catholic church choirs.[3] Nasio had a habit of making instruments out of everything he could find. His father, Atto, made his very first instrument, a piece of board with fishing lines for strings.[4] He was inspired at an early age by calypso artists and soul musicians such as Curtis Mayfield, Sam Cooke, and Marvin Gaye.[1]
In 1981, he moved from Dominica to the island of St. Maarten where he became influenced by Rastafari and reggae artists such as Joseph Hill, Burning Spear, Jacob Miller, and Bob Marley, to whom he is often compared.[1] He recorded his first 12-inch single "Born to Be Free" in 1986, which sold over 5,000 copies in St. Maarten (the island's biggest ever selling single), and followed it with the EP Babylon is Falling in 1990.[1] His first full-length CD Reggae Power (1994) was followed by Wolf Catcher (1997) and Revolution (1999). Living in the Positive was released by Ras Records in 2004. In 2005 Nasio recorded the album Universal Cry at Long View in Massachusetts and Peter Gabriel's Real World Studios in the UK; collaborating with producer Richard Evans. Universal Cry was released on the Greensleeves record label in the summer of 2006 to critical acclaim. Fontaine's popularity has spread to Africa, where he performed in 2006. He also performed at the Glastonbury Festival in the UK in 2007.[5]
A compilation of material from his earlier albums, Rise Up, was released in 2007.[6]
Discography
edit- Reggae Power (1994), Reggae Power
- Wolf Catcher (1997)
- Revolution (1999), Import
- Living in the Positive (2003), Higher Love/RAS
- Universal Cry (2006), Greensleeves
- Compilations
- Rise Up (2007)
References
edit- ^ a b c d Hamilton, Andrew "Nasio Biography", Allmusic, retrieved 2011-02-27
- ^ Katz, David (1 September 2006). "Nasio Fontaine: hear his cry". Caribbean Beat Magazine. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
- ^ "Nasio Fontaine joins Rebel Salute line-up", Jamaica Gleaner, 16 January 2004, retrieved 2011-02-27
- ^ Jebbinson, André (2007) "Caribbean Flavour Series - Fontaine's natural rhythm unbeatable", Jamaica Gleaner, 4 February 2007, retrieved 2011-02-27
- ^ "Glastonbury announces full line-up", Exclaim!, 4 June 2007, retrieved 2011-02-27
- ^ Cooke, Mel (2007) "Easy rebellion from Nasio Fontaine", Jamaica Gleaner, 11 July 2007, retrieved 2011-02-27