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My Runnings
Sunday, 25 July 2004
Tony Gits As Jolly Roger Scene2

Posted by tn3/tonygits at 5:57 PM EDT
Updated: Sunday, 25 July 2004 8:20 PM EDT
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Tony Gits As Jolly Roger Scene1

Posted by tn3/tonygits at 5:55 PM EDT
Updated: Sunday, 25 July 2004 8:21 PM EDT
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Saturday, 24 July 2004
My struggle with Rasta and Reggae
My struggle with Rasta and Reggae music have been tightly interwoven through the fabric of my life. As a young man, entering adulthood, there was strong opposition to me taking up the Rasta Faith. My family tried to get me to cut my hair and go to Catholic Mass! They also tried to get me to forget music and concentrate on a nine-to-five job. As far as I was concerned they might as well ask me to walk on hot coals! No way was I about to give up my Faith or my love of music. There was not other alternative, I had to leave and be myself. I fled the family ties and migrated to Canada, where I was free to outwardly manifest my belief. It was there, far away from home that I put on my Dreadlocks and persued music full time. I had countless dreams of being a musician and that has been all I have ever wanted to do as far back as I can remember. Anyone who made the decision to follow Rastafari in those days exposed themselves to descrimination and redicule. Many were disowned by their parents and family.

JAH has been my strength and comfort. I am determined and will never give up any one of my true loves, neither Rastafari nor Music!..............One Love.

Posted by tn3/tonygits at 5:15 PM EDT
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West Indies Music Makes West End Magic
There's a joke about Jamaica: There are only two speeds threre...slow and dead stop." Tony Nicholson smiles when he describes his native island. He says he returns there on occasion becaus the island makes him "feel rejuvenated." The reggae musician plays six nights a weeek at Daiquiri's in the West End. It's no wonder the guitarist/vocalist feels the need for Caribbean calm. Nicholson came to Dallas 1ast summer. He began hawking his album on West End corner,eventually selling 2000 records. When Daiquiri's opened last fall, Nicholson convinced the owner that reggae music was perfect for the club. Nicholson banded together with bass player Austin Mathews of Saint Kitts and Ian Ellis a rhythm guitarist from Jamaica. In the intervening months Nicholson and company have developed a steady following. The group play's a mixture of original and welI-known reggae songs such as "I Shot the Sheriff' with an emphasis on the original. Nicholson has even written a song called 'West End Magic.' which blends social commentary with a refrain about friends rocking in the West End. Ironically, it took a trip outside his Native Jamaica , the birthplace of Reggae, for Nicholson to start performing the music. "I visited Toronto and heard people playing music they were calling Reggae, but it didnt sound like any Reggae I had ever heard. I thought that the music needed to be played by people who knew, loved and respected Reggae music. I knew that I had to do it" He went back home for a brief visit, but returned to Canada a few months later. When he returned, Nicholson joined a group that became "Bloodfire." During his five-year stay in the north, Nicholson and 'Bloodfire' opened concerts for the biggest names in reggae, Bloodfire played venues with Steel Pulse, Third World, Peter Tosh and Jimmy Cliff, he even opened for the Police, But Nicholson is quick to add, "It was before they were really big," Nicholson came to Dallas for two main reasons. His primary reason was to join his family. His father was transferred here five years ago. The elder Nicholson is an engineer at a Plano based computer company. Nicholson's other reason is a long-term goal: "To establish the music here." He explains his waist Iength dreadlocks are associated with his faith. There are strict rules governing diet as well as the law against cutting the hair. The rules of Rastafari also give guidance regarding how to live everyday, and how to interact with others. For Tony the Music is all that matters.................

Posted by tn3/tonygits at 4:47 PM EDT
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