Neha Patil (Editor)

The Tennors

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Origin
  
Kingston, Jamaica

Labels
  
Studio One

Genre
  
Reggae

Genres
  
Reggae

Active from
  
1967

Record label
  
Studio One


Past members
  
Ronnie Davis, Nehemiah Davis, George Dekker, Howard Spencer, and Hilton Wilson

Albums
  
Rock Steady Classics, Sings Hits From Studio One, Lead With Your Heart, Moods

Members
  
Ronnie Davis, George "Clive" Murphy, Maurice Johnson

Similar
  
The Kingstonians, Duke Reid, The Ethiopians, Derrick Morgan, The Clarendonians

The tennors pressure slide 1967


The Tennors were a Jamaican rocksteady and reggae vocal group in the 1960s and '70s. Among the band's hits was "Ride Yu Donkey" in 1968. The song was featured on the soundtrack to the 2005 film Broken Flowers.

Contents

The Tennors wwwlawlessstreetcomwpcontentuploads201203

The tennors jamaica 50 celebrating jamaica s 50th year of independence


History

The group was formed in Kingston in the mid-1960s by singer George "Clive" Murphy who formed a duo with Maurice "Professor" Johnson. They called themselves the Tennor Twins. They auditioned a song called "Pressure and Slide" in 1967 while sitting in the back of a taxicab for arranger Jackie Mittoo of Studio One. Murphy and Johnson were then joined by Norman Davis, and the trio recorded the song backed by Mittoo. This, their first single, was one of the major Jamaican hits for the year 1967,.

The Tennors The Tennors I39ve Got To Get You Off My Mind YouTube

The Tennors then went on to form their own label that grew its own stable of artists. The accidental death of Johnson reduced the trio back to a duo, and Murphy and Davis continued as songwriters. They offered their song, "Ride Yu Donkey", to many artists, but ended up recording it themselves after it was turned down. The song was released in 1968 and was a huge hit.

The Tennors The Tennors Weather Report YouTube

Other songs by the Tennors included "Cleopatra (I've Got to Get You Off My Mind)", "Grandpa", "Massi Massa", "Girl You Hold Me" and "Rub Me Khaki", "Sufferer", "Sign of the Times", "Biff Baff" (aka "Traitor"), "Bow Legged Girl", "Little Things", "Cherry" and "Oh My Baby".

The Tennors RIP Ronnie Davis THE TENNORS amp FRIENDS Another Scorcher 180g LP

The group became a trio again with the addition of Ronnie Davis in 1968. Other singers who were in the Tennors included Nehemiah Davis, George Dekker, Howard Spencer, and Hilton Wilson. The trio backed singer Jackie Bernard on "Another Scorcher", and moved towards reggae with the song "Reggae Girl".

Under Sonia Pottinger, they recorded "Gee Whiz" and "Give Me Bread". In 1970, The Tennors worked with Treasure Isle producer Duke Reid on the song "Hopeful Village". It was a hit and won the group the Best Performer title at that year's Jamaican Independence Song Festival. The band worked again with Reid in 1973 on "Weather Report", adapted from "The Only Living Boy In New York" by Simon and Garfunkel.

After that, the group folded. Murphy emigrated to the United States and started a solo career under the name Clive Tennors. He released a solo album, Ride Yu Donkey, in 1991.

In March 2012, after a near 35 year hiatus, The Tennors reunited with George Murphy aka "Clive Tennors", Ronnie Davis and a new member Henry Buckley, Jr. Sadiki.. Currently Ronnie Davis works with The Tennors only when officially contracted and Sadiki left the group in 2012.

Songs

Reggae Girl1993
Another ScorcherMoods · 2011
Pressure & SlideMoods · 2011

References

The Tennors Wikipedia