Caribbean National Weekly

PBS releases mini-doc on Jamaican American DJ, producer Walshy Fire

By Nicanor Gordon··2 min read
PBS releases mini-doc on Jamaican American DJ, producer Walshy Fire
Key Points(5)
  • <span style="font-weight: 400;">This month PBS launched a 10-minute episode of American Masters: In the Making, a digital docu-series featuring Jamaican American Walshy Fire.
  • The episode is aptly titled, “Walshy Fire: Pull Up.” </span> <span style="font-weight: 400;">Walshy Fire, who grew up in Miami and whose real name is Leighton Paul Walsh, is a Grammy-winning DJ, MC, record producer, and one-third of the global hit-making music group, Major Lazer.
  • He explains how he was surrounded by what he dubs “the golden era of dancehall.” Shabba Ranks, Papa San, Beenie Man, Bounty Killer, and Super Cat were running the charts at the time, he recalls.
  • </span> <span style="font-weight: 400;">“All these clubs and venues within Half Way Tree just shook where I lived,” he explained.
  • It shook him, Walshy Fire the boy, as well.

This month PBS launched a 10-minute episode of American Masters: In the Making, a digital docu-series featuring Jamaican American Walshy Fire. The episode is aptly titled, “Walshy Fire: Pull Up.”

Walshy Fire, who grew up in Miami and whose real name is Leighton Paul Walsh, is a Grammy-winning DJ, MC, record producer, and one-third of the global hit-making music group, Major Lazer. In the documentary, acclaimed Caribbean American director and filmmaker, Alicia Edwards, gives a glimpse into the talented artist’s life through a combination of interviews with cultural experts and the people who know him best, as well as concert footage, in-studio videos, and found footage, all tied together through narration from the man himself.

Starting in Jamaica

The documentary starts with Walshy’s beginnings in Kingston, Jamaica. He explains how he was surrounded by what he dubs “the golden era of dancehall.” Shabba Ranks, Papa San, Beenie Man, Bounty Killer, and Super Cat were running the charts at the time, he recalls.

“All these clubs and venues within Half Way Tree just shook where I lived,” he explained. It shook him, Walshy Fire the boy, as well. There, Director Edwards weaves in footage of a teenage Walshy entertaining a crowd of his peers with impromptu bars.

Miami Upbringing 

Jamaica was just one part of his musical education, the documentary reveals. The rest came from Miami.

In Miami, many cultures mix and combine through close proximity, which creates a landscape that is uniquely Miami. It’s the food, music, and the people. It’s what makes Walshy Fire able to represent his native Jamaica 100% and his adopted Miami 100% with zero contradiction.

It's in Miami where 21-year-old Walshy joined the Black Chiney sound system. The group, consisting of four Chinese-Jamaicans, toured the world combining reggae, dancehall, house, and much more. “Putting it together was natural for us. We weren’t trying to do it,” explained Warren “Willy Chin” Hoo, another member of the group.

Promoting Happiness 

Today, Walshy is the only Jamaican member of the supergroup Major Lazer where he entertains at shows across the globe, packed to the brim with hundreds of thousands of patrons, alongside group members Ape Drums and Diplo.

In the documentary, Keith “Papa Keith” Walcott, a premier DJ and radio personality, labels Walshy as “talent in its true form.” For Walshy it comes naturally. “I’ve been doing this for 28 years,” he explained. “I’m happy; it’s hard for me to not put out happiness. I reap happiness because of that.”

The Walshy Fire episode can be found on the PBS website and Youtube channel.

 

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