Last week one of Reggae luminaries struck his final note making it a sad day for his many fans all over the world.
Joe Gibbs died of heart attack at University Hospital of the West Indies from a heart attack at age 65.
He leaves behind a rich legacy that not only impacted Jamaica, but indeed the whole world.
Born in Montego Bay in 1943, Gibbs left Jamaica to train as an engineer in the US. After some time spent in the United States as an electronic engineer, Gibbs went back to Kingston, and opened a repair TV shop at 32 Beeston Street where he soon started to sell records. The fast growth of the local music scene encouraged him to be more involved in the business, and in 1967 he started to record some artists in the back of his shop with a two-track tape machine and the already established Lee Perry who had just ended his association with Clement "Coxsone" Dodd. In 1968, with the help of Bunny Lee, he launched his Amalgamated label, and had his first success with one of the earliest rock steady tunes, Roy Shirley's "Hold Them".