SUPER CAT THE “DON
DADA”
A major figure in the positive-consciousness
dancehall movement, Jamaican DJ/toaster Super Cat was born William Maragh in a
ghetto section of Kingston known as Cockburn Pen or Seivright Gardens (the same
area that produced DJ stars like U-Roy and Prince Jazzbo).
Interested in music from a very young age,
Maragh was touring Jamaica with various sound system organizations by the time
he was a teenager.
His first DJ name, Cat-a-Rock, was eventually
switched to Super Cat due to the former's resemblance to the word
"cataract"; he also earned a secondary nickname, the Wild Apache.
Super Cat made his recording debut in 1981 with the single "Mr.
Walker," recorded for the Techniques label and produced by Winston Riley.
A succession of singles for various labels followed, as did his debut album Si
Boops Deh, which appeared on Techniques in 1985.
Settling for a short time on the Skengdon
label, Super Cat recorded another album, Boops, but soon grew dissatisfied
enough with the business aspect of recording to start his own label, Wild
Apache Productions. The self-produced album Sweets for My Sweet followed in
1988, as did a number of singles produced for other artists on the Wild Apache
imprint; Super Cat also teamed up with Nicodemus and Junior Demus for the first
triple-team DJ album in dancehall history, Cabin Stabbin'
Emboldened by success, Super Cat decided to
move to New York City and attempt to crack the American market. He secured a
major-label deal with Columbia and landed the track "Nuff Man a Dead"
on their compilation Dancehall Reggaespanol; in 1992, he issued one of the
first major-label dancehall albums, the acclaimed Don Dada. Several
high-profile TV and concert festival appearances followed, and Source magazine
named Super Cat their Dancehall Artist of the Year for 1993. The following
year, he reunited with Nicodemus and Junior Demus, adding Junior Cat to make
the resulting album The Good, the Bad, the Ugly, and the Crazy a four-way
collaboration. Super Cat's own fusion of dancehall, roots reggae, hip-hop, and
R&B was next showcased on the proper follow-up to Don Dada, 1995's The
Struggle Continues. While the album was another success, Super Cat really
raised his profile in the pop mainstream with his guest shot on Sugar Ray's
1997 smash "Fly," which prominently featured his toasting skills.
Columbia capitalized on the resulting exposure in 1998 with the singles
compilation The Good, the Better, the Best of Super Cat. ~ Steve Huey