Douglas, Jay (Clive Pinnock) - You Are My Lady

Format: CD
Label: Mega City Music 461001
Year: 1997
Origin: Jamaica → Toronto, Ontario, 🇨🇦
Genre: funk, soul, rhythm & blues
Keyword: 
Value of Original Title: 
Inquiries Email: ryder@robertwilliston.com
Release Type: Albums
Buy directly from Artist:  N/A
Playlist: Ontario, The Ultimate Jamaica to Ontario Collection, Beautiful Black Canadians, Canadian as Funk, 1990's

Tracks

Track Name
Are You Lonely for Me Baby
Let's Stay Together
You Are My Lady
Please Stay
Consider Me
Soul Trek
I Wanna Take You Home
Please Stay
Every Time You Go Away
Soul Trek

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You Are My Lady

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Information/Write-up

Jay Douglas’s story begins in the hills of rural Jamaica, where church music, American R&B radio and the early sparks of ska shaped his first ideas about what a singer could be. When he moved to Toronto as a teenager in the early 1960s, he arrived in a city still waking up to Caribbean culture. He carried with him a ready-made musical vocabulary — blues, gospel, Sam Cooke, soul, the rhythmic shift of ska into rocksteady — and an unmistakably warm, conversational voice that would soon become a signature sound in his new home.

Toronto’s West Indian community was still small when Douglas began singing at school dances and downtown clubs, but the demand for a charismatic frontman grew quickly. By the late 1960s he was leading The Cougars, a high-energy outfit that became one of the anchor bands of the Jamaican-Canadian circuit. The group worked Toronto, Montreal and the Ontario–Quebec nightclub and college scene relentlessly, backing visiting Jamaican stars and mixing soul, funk, rhythm and blues, ska and the newly arriving reggae. Their recordings — including “Soul Bird,” “Wishbone,” “Gold Dust,” and a revered cover of “I Wish It Would Rain” — later resurfaced on Jamaica to Toronto: Soul Funk & Reggae 1967–1974, the compilation that reintroduced early Jamaican-Canadian music to the world and cemented The Cougars' legacy.

Douglas transitioned seamlessly into the 1970s and ’80s as a solo act, working both in Toronto clubs and internationally. His deep knowledge of soul and reggae made him a natural collaborator, and over the years he performed or recorded with some of the most important artists to emerge from Jamaica and the diaspora — Beres Hammond, Freddie McGregor, Marcia Griffiths, Luciano, Ken Boothe, Leroy Sibbles, Fab 5, General Trees, Jesse “Dubmatix” King, Ziggy Marley, Lyn Taitt and Ernest Ranglin among them. Producers often noted that Douglas brought the polish of classic R&B and the ease of a jazz singer to Jamaican rhythm tracks, creating a hybrid that was distinctly his own.

In Toronto he became a standard-bearer of the city’s evolving Caribbean sound. Long-running residencies, theatre engagements, festival stages and cruise-ship tours kept him busy through years when live R&B musicians fought for space in a changing industry. Through it all he held onto a tone that critics compared to Lou Rawls — elegant, unhurried, effortlessly expressive — and a stage presence shaped by decades of watching dancefloors light up.

The 2000s brought broader recognition. A new generation discovered Douglas through reissues of the early Toronto reggae scene, while his own recordings — infused with jump blues, vintage soul, jazz phrasing and classic rocksteady — found their way to major venues including Massey Hall, Roy Thomson Hall, the Toronto Jazz Festival, Rastafest, and international stages like the Four Seasons Reggae Cruise in Atlanta. His later singles and albums led to three Juno Award nominations, affirming his place as one of Canada’s defining voices in reggae and soul.

Douglas’s importance to Toronto goes beyond music. He played a central role in the creation of Reggae Lane — the laneway named to honour Little Jamaica’s cultural history — working with Councillor Josh Colle to ensure the neighbourhood’s musical legacy was formally recognized. Adrian Hayles’ massive mural on the lane features Douglas himself, a visual reminder of how deeply he is woven into the city’s cultural fabric.

Today Jay Douglas leads the Jay Douglas All-Star Band, a group built around musicians fluent in the entire Caribbean–North American continuum: ska and rocksteady, lovers rock, deep soul, New Orleans shuffle, jazz, funk and gospel-rooted R&B. He remains a magnetic live performer — warm, gracious, and rooted in a lifetime of listening — carrying the tradition forward while always keeping the room smiling.

As a solo artist he has performed around the world, bringing the sound of Toronto’s Caribbean soul to audiences from the Caribbean to Europe to the United States, and everywhere the music still needs to move a crowd.
-Robert Williston

Musicians
Jay Douglas: lead vocals
Eddie Bullen: drum programming, piano, synthesizers, bass on all tracks except 4, 8, 9; arranger and producer of all tracks except 8, 9
Bernie Pitters: arranger and producer on tracks 4, 8; drum programming, piano, synthesizer bass
Pete Martin: producer on track 9; lead guitar, rhythm guitar
Len Feldman: piano, organ
Anton Evans: bass guitar
Clarke Williams: drums
Demo Cates: alto, soprano, tenor saxophones on tracks 3, 5, 7
Alex Walker: alto, tenor saxophones on tracks 4, 8, 10
Dalton Browne: guitar on tracks 4, 8
Simone Denny: guest vocals on track 2
Liberty Silver: backing vocals on tracks 1, 3, 5, 7
Poetic Soul: backing vocals on tracks 4, 8, 9
Devon: backing vocals on tracks 6, 10
Major San: backing vocals on tracks 6, 10

Production
Recorded at Thunder Dome Sound Studio
Recorded at Wellesley Sound Studio
Recorded at Platinum Groove Studio

Recording engineers:
Jeff McCullough
Dan Williams (Wellesley Sound Studio)
Tony Green (Music Works)
Eric Abrahams (Room With a View)
Django Tmoshenko (North 49th St. Sound)

Mastered by Michael Jack at Pizzaudio Studio
Art direction by John Possian

Artwork
Design: International Marketing Services
Photography: Jim Dowson

Special thanks:
Bernie Pitters, Diane Brooks, Otis Gayle, Tando Hyman, Jackie Richardson, George St. Kitts, Cynthia Webber, Marcel Zaga, Rap Artist Major San & Devon, Jackie James, George Banton, R. Zee Jackson, Leroy Brown, Jimmy Reid, Winston Studmi, Rupie & Lee Marshal For their spiritual & musical contribution to Soul Trek
Special thanks to my family and all my supporting friends

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