A self confessed 'Beatle' baby born in Notting
Hill, London of West Indian parents, the young
Jay had unwittingly nurtured latent DJing ambitions
even from the tender age of eight. By then, encouraged
by a very musical oriented family he had bought
his first record and played at his first gig,
a 10th birthday party for one his cousins, displaying
a talent that was to become the stuff of DJing
legend.
As young as he was, the music scene, especially
the powerful and exciting R&B coming out
of late 60's black America from the likes of
Sly Stone, Aretha Franklin and James Brown was
to have a profound effect on the young Jay and
would cement his love of all kinds of black music
forever.
By the late 70's, he had become an avid collector
of American black music enthusiastically collecting
labels like Motown, Atlantic, Stax, Prelude,
West End and Salsoul disco including his passion
'The Sound of Philadelphia'. He was fortunate
enough to experience the rise of disco first
time around and was also present at the birth
of hip hop culture in the wake of disco's untimely
demise at the turn of the eighties.
Whilst visiting the New York side of his family
in Brooklyn for the first time, he was amazed
to discover that one of his uncles was also
an accomplished DJ and sound system operator
himself. Jay stayed for several months frequenting
all the clubs that mattered including the legendary
Paradise Garage, forging lasting friendships
with the likes of DJ icons Larry Levan, Frankie
Knuckles and latterly David Morales, Tony Humphries
and Louis Vega years before most of them were
ever heard of or known in the UK.
Inspired by what he'd discovered and experienced
during that inaugural Big Apple trip, Jay decided
to take his DJing more seriously. He then teamed
up with his brother Joey and built the now
famous Good Times Sound System playing out
at the Notting Hill Carnival to critical acclaim.
By now his reputation as an underground DJ
of some repute was beginning to grow, often
attracting crowds of up to a couple of thousand
people whenever he played out at one of his
itinerant warehouse parties. This led to an
invitation from old pal DJ Gordon Mac to start
up their own pirate radio station, which they
called Kiss FM after it's New York namesake.
Completely untrained in any aspects of broadcasting,
he presented his first live show the day after
they debuted on air back in October 1985. The
rest, as they say, is radio history.
Because of his influence on the various London
club scenes and the respect he was afforded
by fellow DJ's alike, he became the catalyst
for attracting the likes of Coldcut's Jonathon
More and Matt Black, Soul II Soul's Jazzie
B, Dr. Bob Jones, Radio One's Danny Rampling,
Talkin Loud's Gilles Peterson and MTV's Trevor
'The Lick' Nelson and many more to join the
fledgling pirate station. Few had previous
radio experience before being recruited by
Jay and now all have gone on to become household
names in popular dance culture including his
original partner and protégé,
the ubiquitous 'Judge' Jules who's nickname
Jay is also credited with coining.
It was this initial DJ partnership in 1986,
which led directly to the emergence of the
then cult 'rare groove' scene. A term coined
by Jay after his now legendary weekend show
called 'The Original Rare Groove Show' on Kiss
FM. Affectionately known as the 'Godfather',
his much loved Shake 'n' Fingerpop party crew
along with Judge Jules' Family Funktion collective
were the leading purveyors of this funky underground
dance scene playing mainly black music from
the 70's and 80’s mixing it up with the
best of what was then a new sound coming out
of Chicago and New York, namely the first house
records. Together they were responsible for
the very first (illegal) warehouse parties
ever staged in London - preceding the acid
house explosion by some three years, creating
a huge impression on and inspiring many of
today's leading UK DJ's and club promoters.
The Nineties dawned and it was time for Jay
to seek new challenges. On September 1st, 1990,
he hosted the very first legal broadcast for
Kiss 100 after they won their licence. He was
also responsible for establishing the very
first 'Paradise Garage' style club in the UK
called High On Hope, with ex partner Patrick
Lilley playing deep US house mixed with original
disco classics, bringing over the likes of
DJ's Tony Humphries, Marshall Jefferson, Blaze,
Ten City and Adeva for the first time ever
to the UK. He again was responsible for reviving
interest in former dance divas such as Jocelyn
Brown, Chaka Khan, Sharon Redd, Loleatta Holloway,
Kim Myzelle, En Vogue and the late Gwen Guthrie,
all of whom appeared regularly at his ground
breaking club to rapturous acclaim.
By now Jay had become a much-respected household
name on the UK dance scene. He was headhunted
by Polygram to launch a new label with close
friend and DJ Gilles Peterson called Talkin
Loud signing amongst others the likes of singer/songwriters
Omar, Bryan Powell, Young Disciples, Galliano
and Incognito. After three successful years
there and many more happy years at Kiss, he
quit both to pursue his first love - DJing.
With increasing DJing commitments around the
world including regular tours to countries
such as Australia, USA, Canada, Japan, Southern
Africa and the Middle/Far East playing an eclectic
mix of black and dance music, Norman has precious
little time to do much else. He has played
in just about every major city in Europe being
one of the first ever UK DJ's to do so.
He is also the doyen of the 'stars'. The DJ
choice of the rich and famous. He is without
doubt their favourite 'celebrity' DJ, playing
for the likes of Mick Jagger at his 5Oth birthday
party, Robert Di Nero, Michael Caine, George
Michael, Will Smith, Prince, Bruce Springsteen,
Jamiroquai who affectionately calls him the
'Godfather'), Paul Weller (who has been quoted
as saying that Jay is his favourite DJ), actor
Lenny Henry (who reputedly modelled his pirate
radio DJ TV character on Jay), Viviene Westwood,
Gaultier, Tommy Hilfiger and more recently
for MTV (at Pierre Cardin's magnificent space
age villa overlooking the Mediterranean up
in the hills outside Cannes) all of whom have
danced their asses off to a Norman Jay set.
He is also often booked to play at big film
premiers including 101 Dalmations, Judge Dred,
Enemy Of The State, East Is East and the multi
million pound launch of Sky TV's new digital
cable channel at Battersea Power Station.
He was the first ever UK DJ to be invited
to play at the celebrated Cannes Film Festival
and in recognition of his lifelong DJ achievements
and involvement in club culture, Jay himself
is the subject of a full length film. 'Good
Times' is a semi autobiographical account of
the man, directed by London based independent
filmmaker Terry Walshe (using some rare archive
footage from Good Times) documenting Jay's
early struggles to follow his musical passion
and achieve his dream. It highlights his influence
on, and his importance to, the modern dance
scene as it stands today since he embarked
on his illustrious DJ career back in the early
eighties. Following the DJ icon from Africa
to America, from The Big Chill to Notting Hill,
the film finishes with fantastic footage of
Carnival 2000.
Norman produced the soundtrack for the full
length Good Times film 'Good Times- A Notting
Hill Story' which premiered in 2001 in central
London on the big screen with runs at local
cinemas throughout the UK in 2001/2002. After
a successful run in independent cinemas, Channel
4 eventually picked up on the film which it
later broadcast nationally in December 2002.
With the global rise of UK DJ and dance culture,
Jay has once again found his niche being
extremely popular with a new generation of
dance fans worldwide as well as playing at
clubs and festivals nationwide. Whether it's
playing upfront disco fuelled funky house
in the nations main rooms or old skool funk,
jazzy hip hop or chilled out beats in the
back, he still manages to maintain his rich
musical heritage and quality in every set
he plays. Whilst being amongst one of the
most popular and credible contemporary DJ's
in the country, he is often cited as a major
influence by a host of today's leading DJ's
who often refer to him quite simply as 'The
DJ's DJ'.
Recognition and Awards past and Present
Continually featured in DJ’s top 150
DJs in the world and one of the Face magazine's
most influential club culture figures of the
decade amongst numerous other accolades attributed
to him, Jay's contribution to UK music scene
is second to none. Featuring regularly on various
television, radio and magazine programmes about
black music or dance culture, Norman Jay, a
recognised authority on both is considered
by many to be 'The Peoples DJ' because of the
width and breadth of his DJ style. A 'Clubland
institution' the Face once called him.
Apart from a punishing DJ schedule over the
year, playing funky house and various other
styles at gigs worldwide, he was voted club
DJ of the year 96/97 by Blues & Soul magazine
and is the only DJ featured in the Face magazine's
book of club culture extracts from 1980-1997
called "Nightfever".In 1998 Norman
was a nominee for the Best Radio Personality
category in GQ magazine's annual Men Of The
Year Awards.
THE QUEEN HONOURS NORMAN JAY IN 2002
Norman has been rewarded for his achievements
and dedication to his passion of Music, he
was named in the Queens birthday honours list
with an MBE for “services to dj’ing
and music”. Norman now sits with only
a select few djs who have been given an award
of this magnitude and is the first to be given
an MBE for “services to music and dj’ing”.
CD RELEASES
As an in demand compiler he has released a
number of superbly crafted compilation CD's.
The latest of which is a fantastic double CD
called Good Times 3, to be released in the
UK only at the Ausust 2003, again compiled
with his brother Joey Jay on React Records.
This is the follow up release in the massively
popular series 'Joey and Norman Jay Presents...Good
Times' and showcases more eclectic Carnival
favourites old and new from the 'Bud' brothers,
also currently available from all good record
stores. Since Nuphonic’s demise, who
originally released Good Times 1 and 2 ( which
had been deleted), React records realised the
need to re-release 2 such important compilations
in the series. The whole series is now out
in the shops (Good Times 1 and 2 from October).
His next project “Giant 45” will
come out in February 2004 featuring the differing
music styles from Norman’s hugely successful
weekly radio show on BBC London 94.9 FM called “Giant
45”. Look out for “Good Times 4” next
summer 2004.
Also available is the double CD released by
that most glamorous of UK glamorous niteries
Miss Moneypenny's. CD 1 contains 13 of the
most soulful garage tracks from 1998/99 deftly
mixed by our man Jay while CD 2 contains eleven
of the funkiest 'Good Grooves' ever! 'Miss
Moneypenny's Presents...Norman Jay' is still
available through K-Tel, Tower Records, Virgin,
HMV or Amazon.com on CD format only. Other
recommended releases include Norman Jay Presents
Philadelphia 1973 -1981 - The Underground Anthems.
Norman Jay and Gilles Peterson's classic Journey
By DJS 'Desert Island Discs' has been re-released
due to popular demand after the original release
reached cult status worldwide out on Journey
by Dj US.
He is also working through one of his busiest
DJ schedules to date taking him to new parties,
clubs and festivals the world over whilst continuing
to host his massively popular 'Giant 45' radio
show, a weekly black music based programme
broadcast every Sunday night on BBC London
on 94.9 FM between 7:00pm - 10:00pm. You can
listen live online or on demand from www.bbc.co.uk/london
or there is a link from Norman Jay’s
own website www.normanjay.com