R.I.P Robert "Bobby Digital" Dixon - Iconic Jamaican Reggae Producer - Dead At 59....

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Robert "Bobby Digital" Dixon, one of dancehall/reggae's most successful music producers, died on Thursday at age 59. He reportedly succumbed to a kidney-related illness after he had gone to do his weekly dialysis treatment at the hospital.

Reports are that Dixon began to feel ill and was eventually admitted and later died.

Reggae music has been plunged into mourning at the untimely passing of a man, widely regarded as a titan whose distinctive style defined the computerized era of dancehall like no other. Dixon owned the Digital B label which produced seminal dancehall greats like Shabba Ranks and Sizzla.

"He was one of the greatest producers ever in dancehall and reggae music. He was a great colleague, and a great friend, and one of the most brilliant minds in reggae music. He was the one who brought Shabba Ranks to the world, and he started off Garnet Silk too. Bobby just had a distinctive feel for the music, a brilliant mind, and he was truly one of reggae's greats. He will be missed," Bunny Lee, head of Trojan Records, told Loop News.

Dixon was given his nickname "Bobby Digital" by friend and colleague Bunny Lee in the early 1980s.

"He was always in good spirits. I remember he used to cut dubs at Jammys, and I asked him to engineer a Pat Kelly album and he used the digital ting and did a great job, and mi start call him Bobby Digital," he said.

Originally from Olympic Gardens in Kingston, Dixon was a protege of engineer/producer Lloyd "King Jammy" James with whom he started his career as an audio engineer.

In the 1980s, Dixon helped stylize the computerized phase of Jamaican music, as an accomplished digital engineer.

Dixon established himself as a top flight producer with a raft of hit songs by Shabba Ranks starting in the late 1980s with 'Peenie Peenie', and followed up that with a veritable tsunami of dancehall anthems such as 'Just Reality', 'Live Blanket' and 'Wicked In A Bed'.

Other hit songs produced by Dixon were 'Till I'm Laid to Rest' by Buju Banton, Cocoa Tea and Admiral Tibet's 'Serious Times', Garnet Silk's 'It's Growing' and Sizzla's 'Black Woman and Child'.

In the late 1990s he began to work with a raft of Rastafarian reggae artistes such as Morgan Heritage, Sizzla, Anthony B and Richie Spice. He was the producer of Sizzla's critically acclaimed 'Black Woman and Child' album of the late 1990s, and Morgan Heritage's breakthrough album, 'Protect Us Jah'.

Dixon has produced more recent albums for Richie Spice, Anthony B, Morgan Heritage, Chezidek, Ras Shiloh, Louie Culture, LMS, Mikey Spice, and Norris Man.

He also produced 'Don't Haffi Dread', the breakthrough song and album by Morgan Heritage.

Robert "Bobby Digital" Dixon is survived by his wife Merva, three children, two grandchildren, a sister and two brothers.
 
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Bobby Digital, ‘Dem Bow’ Reggae Producer, Dead at 59
By Justin Curto
Photo: Reggae Love/YouTube
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Bobby Digital, the reggae producer who helped create the ubiquitous Shabba Ranks hit “Dem Bow,” died May 21, the New York Times reports. He was 59 years old and died due to kidney disease, his son said. Born Robert Dixon in Kingston, Jamaica, he was present as dancehall music went electronic in the mid-1980s. Digital learned from digital dancehall innovator King Jammy and eventually started his own label and studio, both called Digital B. He began working with Shabba Ranks in the late ’80s, soon after creating the hit “Dem Bow,” now a prominent sample in pop music worldwide through its creation of the dembow riddim. His early ’90s work with Shabba Ranks led the group to two Grammy Awards for their albums As Raw As Ever and X-Tra Naked. Digital later worked with musicians including Sanchez, Garnett Silk, Morgan Heritage, and Sizzla, while his music has been sampled by musicians as prominent as Jay-Z and 50 Cent. Recently, VP Records issued a two-volume collection of Digital’s music, X-Tra Wicked and Serious Times.
 
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