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Bertram McLean

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Also known as
  
Ranchie

Role
  
Musician

Origin
  
Jamaica

Died
  
November 14, 2012

Years active
  
Early 1970s – 1998

Genres
  
Reggae

Name
  
Bertram McLean


Instruments
  
Guitar, bass guitar, keyboards

Associated acts
  
RHT Invincibles, The Impact All Stars, The Revolutionaries, Skin, Flesh and Bones, Jimmy Cliff

Similar People
  
Ansell Collins, Uziah Thompson, Joseph Hoo Kim, Bobby Ellis, Lloyd Parks

Bertram McLean (c.1948 – 14 November 2012), also known by his nickname "Ranchie", was a Jamaican musician active between the 1970s and the 1990s, who recorded with many of Jamaica's biggest stars.

Biography

McLean began working as a session musician in the 1970s, as guitarist in the groups the RHT Invincibles (along with Ansell Collins, Lloyd Parks, and Sly Dunbar), The Randy's house band The Impact All Stars, The Revolutionaries, and Skin, Flesh & Bones, and playing on albums by artists including Earth & Stone, Culture, and Jimmy Cliff. He also released solo material including the "Toy" single. Primarily a guitarist and bass guitarist, he also plays keyboards. Throughout the 1980s he was in demand as a studio musician, joining Cliff's backing band Oneness and writing songs for Cliff such as "Rub-A-Dub Partner" and "Roots Woman", recording with The Clarendonians and Sadao Watanabe, and playing on the soundtrack to the film Club Paradise, in which he also had a small role. In the 1990s his output increased, working with Burning Spear, I-Roy, The Meditations, and Sly & Robbie.

McLean's career as a musician came to an end after he suffered a stroke in 1998. In 2010 he underwent surgery after being diagnosed with prostate cancer. He died on 14 November 2012 at the University Hospital of the West Indies after a long illness.

References

Bertram McLean Wikipedia