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About his
new solo career he conceded:
‘Going solo
was like starting again. With Cross Section a vast amount of energy was
generated and we did some good gigs but my head wasn’t very well together then
− you have to know, not guess where you are going. I need to be able to work be
myself before I can work with other people, and even then, I can’t see myself
being part of a band again. My music isn’t as complex as it used to b: I like
to exploit the chemical suitability of a basic rhythm, catchy melody and simple
verse and refrain. Reggae is essentially a folk medium and I want to put some
of my environment into it.’ (Next 14 Mag. May 1985).
After a
single released in late 1983 (Reasons to Live b/w Oh No Oppressor), Mr. Amir
licensed his first long player in mid-1984, playing all the instruments
himself:
Dawning
(1984)
- Deep
Inside
- Deep in
Music
- Will We
Ever Know
- Love with
Music
- Mystery
Overture
- Mystery
of Mine
- Reasons
to Live
- Dawning
- Running
out of Time
About the
album Next 14 Magazine wrote:
‘If this
had come out of Jamaica, everyone from Sting to Keith Richards would be
clamouring to play on his next album, Eric Clapton would record Love with Ease
and have a number one hit with ti in America and the Melody Maker would put him
on the front cover and call him the new Bob Marley.’
In 1985 Mr.
Amir released a mini-LP (No Place to Go) and in 1987, as Amir the single Lines
of Love (with Lee Marles on guitars and Steve Brown on drums).