MC Kinky
MC Kinky | |
---|---|
Birth name | Caron Liza Geary |
Also known as | Feral,[1] Feral is Kinky,[1] Feral aka MC Kinky,[2] Cantankerous,[1] The Infidel[1] |
Born | Paddington, London, England | 15 October 1963
Origin | Kilburn, North West London, England[3][4] |
Genres | Ragga |
Years active | 1989 | –present
Labels | More Protein |
Caron Liza Geary (born 15 October 1963 in Paddington, London),[1] known by various stage names, is an English female raggamuffin toaster. She was the first white female reggae/dancehall MC.[1][5]
According to Geary, her first recorded appearance was on a cover of Kid Ralph, a dancehall track by Little Twitch.[6][7][8] The song talks about a "legendary" homosexual figure in Jamaica's prison system.[9] She has subsequently worked as a solo artist and with other musicians, including Erasure and Boy George, who described her music as "the dirtiest 'slackest' reggae I'd heard since the seventies".[10]
Background
Growing up in Marylebone,[11] Geary lived adjacent to an after-hours party which blasted out reggae music;[11] as a result, Geary was exposed to reggae from a very young age. It is these experiences which inspired her to write the controversial song Everything Starts With An 'E' as part of E-Zee Possee, which was banned by the BBC because of its lyrics[12] and made #69 in the UK Singles Chart in 1989, leaving the chart after only one week;[13] however it was re-released less than a year later in March 1990 and climbed to #15 on the UK chart,[13] spending eight weeks in the chart.[13]
Kinky's first solo single, the Apollo 440 produced "Get Over It",[14] reached #95 on the UK Singles Chart.[15] Her only solo top 75 hit, coming five years later, was Everybody, released under the name "Kinky", which charted at #71 on that chart.[16]
Kinky has been touring underground, occasionally providing vocals for other artists. In 1997, she took a residency in Ibiza as "the Infidel",[11] operating under the name for a week[17] before writing an album called Cantankerous and taking up the name for herself.[11] When a member of staff at Club Motherfucker described her sound as "feral pop",[6] she became "Feral" and finally ended up with "Feral aka MC Kinky"[2] and "FERALisKINKY"[18]
Artistry
Descriptions of Geary's sound have varied from a "bass driven, vitriolic sonic hybrid of grimy electronic ragga, manic house and punk rock"[5] to a "white female raggamuffin toaster".[19] Kinky has denounced these descriptions, saying "I can't be bothered with people who spend large amounts of time trying to place people and music into small and narrow categories. I do what comes naturally to me, and it usually has a combination of influences."[19]
Discography
Singles
Solo singles
Year | Single | UK chart position |
---|---|---|
1991 | "Get Over It"[15] | 95 |
1991 | "Inna We Kingdom"[20] | — |
1992 | "Won Love"[20] | — |
1992 | "Twisting The Mind"[20] | — |
1996 (as "Kinky") | "Everybody"[16] | 71 |
As featured artist
Year | Single | UK chart position |
---|---|---|
1989 | "Everything Starts With An 'E'" (E-Zee Possee ft. MC Kinky)[21] | 69 |
1990 | "Everything Starts With An 'E'" (re-entry) (E-Zee Possee ft. MC Kinky)[21] | 15 |
1990 | "Generations of Love" (Jesus Loves You ft. MC Kinky)[22] | 80 |
1991 | "Generations of Love" (re-entry) (Jesus Loves You ft. MC Kinky)[22] | 35 |
1992 | "Take a Chance on Me" (Erasure ft. MC Kinky)[23] | 1 |
1992 | "Flight" (Flight ft. MC Kinky)[24] | — |
1995 | "Yalla Chant" (She A Baad Gal Edit; Natacha Atlas ft. MC Kinky)[25] | — |
2000 | "The Chase" (Giorgio Moroder vs. Jam & Spoon ft. MC Kinky)[26] | — |
2001 | "We Love" (Storm ft. MC Kinky)[27] | — |
2006 | "Wind It Up" (Abashment Electro House Mix; Gwen Stefani ft. MC Kinky)[26] | — |
2013 | "Raging in the Dancehall" (Endymion & The Viper ft. FERAL is KINKY) | — |
2013 | "Bring Dat" (Daishi Dance ft. FERAL is KINKY) | — |
Other songs
Year | Song |
---|---|
1989 | "Kipsy" (Boy George ft. MC Kinky)[28] |
1995 | "Son of Bambi (Walk Tuff)" (Towa Tei ft. MC Kinky)[29] |
References
- ^ a b c d e f "Screenshot from official website, shows newspaper clipping dated 24th December 2012". Official website.
- ^ a b "Hear that voice: Glass meets Feral aka MC Kinky". The Glass Magazine.
- ^ "Official MySpace page for Cantankerous". Cantankerous.
- ^ "Official Facebook page". Facebook.
- ^ a b "Gig Guide - Week Starting Thursday the 14th of February, 2013". Leng Pleng, the premier gig guide for live music and DJ gigs in Cambodia.
- ^ a b "FERAL i$ KINKY". DJmag.com. Retrieved 14 May 2013.
- ^ "Feral Is Kinky Interview". guestlist.net.
- ^ "Distinctive and Dangerous: We Meet FERAL is KINKY". The DJ List.
- ^ "Top 10 Songs That Buju Banton Can Listen To As He Awaits His Freedom". Top10Jamaica.com. Retrieved 14 May 2013.
- ^ Boy George (1995). Take It Like A Man. The Autobiography of Boy George. Sidgwick & Jackson. p. 533. ISBN 0 330 32362 8.
- ^ a b c d "Feral sound, kinky style". The Phnom Penh Post.
- ^ "Pump Up The Volume". YouTube.
- ^ a b c Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 175. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.
- ^ "List of songs Apollo 440 have produced a remix for". Soundslogic.com.
- ^ a b "The Official Charts Company - MC Kinky". The Official Charts Company. 6 May 2013.
- ^ a b "The Official Charts Company - MC Kinky". The Official Charts Company. 5 May 2013.
- ^ "Feral aka MC Kinky". Stewartwho.com. Retrieved 19 July 2013.
- ^ "Official website".
- ^ a b "Caron Geary aka MC Kinky". reocities.com. Retrieved 14 May 2013.
- ^ a b c "MC Kinky". Discogs.
- ^ a b "The Official Charts Company - MC Kinky". The Official Charts Company. 5 May 2013.
- ^ a b "The Official Charts Company - MC Kinky". The Official Charts Company. 5 May 2013.
- ^ "Abba-Esque". Allmusic.com.
- ^ "Flight". Discogs.
- ^ "Yalla Chant". Discogs.
- ^ a b "Past releases from 2005-2007". Boy George fansite.
- ^ "Jam & Spoon's official website, click "The Music" to access".
- ^ "Tense Nervous Headache". Discogs.
- ^ Son of Bambi (Walk Tuff) at MusicBrainz (list of releases)