#kingston

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Faerie Queen on Flickr.Photographer/Stylist- Christa J Newman Location- South Shore MA Mask provided

Faerie Queen on Flickr.

Photographer/Stylist- Christa J Newman
Location- South Shore MA
Mask provided by- Legendary Leathercrafts


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 Marley and his band rehearse for the historic Dream Concert, which was held at the National Stadium

Marley and his band rehearse for the historic Dream Concert, which was held at the National Stadium in Kingston, Jamaica in October 1975. The event was a benefit concert for the Jamaican Institute for the Blind.

Photographer:Kim Gottlieb-Walker
Location Of Photograph: National Stadium, Kingston, Jamaica. 10/04/75


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Soundcheck at the One Love Peace Concert, 1978. Photographer: Peter SimonLocation Of Photograph: Nat

Soundcheck at the One Love Peace Concert, 1978.

Photographer:Peter Simon
Location Of Photograph: National Arena, Kingston, Jamaica. 04/22/78


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“Reggae music is a ghetto musicand a ghetto music is a rebel music…”

“Reggae music is a ghetto music
and a ghetto music is a rebel music…”


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Roland Alphonso

Roland Alphonso


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Don Drummond

Don Drummond


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DENNIS BROWN BACKAYARD KINGSTON

DENNIS BROWN BACKAYARD KINGSTON


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Kingston 1962 - Hortense Ellis, Derrick Morgan, Prince Buster, Alton Ellis, Lloyd Charmers, Jimmy Cl

Kingston 1962 - Hortense Ellis, Derrick Morgan, Prince Buster, Alton Ellis, Lloyd Charmers, Jimmy Cliff… no mesmo show já é bom né ?? imagina abrindo para o RAY CHARLES….


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Oraine Christie was born in a very small, populated area in Kingston, Jamaica.“Kingston, Jamaica i

Oraine Christie was born in a very small, populated area in Kingston, Jamaica.

Kingston, Jamaica is a very small area but it’s very populated and in that population everyone wants to achieve their goal and come out with something.”

Growing up in Jamaica he held various jobs which included working for an insurance company as well as networking for various companies such as a mobile company out of England. In Jamaica, the process is rather different in order to go to college.

In Jamaica you have to pass certain amount of exams in order to go to college and so forth. I went to one of the elite high schools in Jamaica.”

About two years ago, Oraine was able to come to the United States on a work permit for a company that he had a connection with through work. “I first came here because my cousin in Jamaica he has a girlfriend that worked up here and the company normally takes people from my country to come up here and work for usually certain amount of seasons so on and so forth.” Coming to the United States would allow him to generate a higher income than he would in Jamaica. “I am actually going after what I want to do, so that’s a big difference in my life.”

Upon arriving to the United States, Oraine started off in the Dorchester area of Massachusetts where he had some family members. However, his main motivation was to receive his General Educational Development (GED) in order for colleges and universities in America to recognize his diploma so he enrolled in a GED class at Dorcas International Institute of Rhode Island.

After graduating with his GED from Dorcas International Institute, Oraine begin his journey to Harvard. He is currently attending Harvard Extension and will soon transfer to Harvard University, his “first and only choice”. “[Harvard] is where I wanted to go.” At this point in his life, Oraine considers attending Harvard his greatest accomplishment. However, Oraine has his sights set on the future and strives to attend Oxford University for his Master’s in Business Administration (MBA). He also plans to go to law school.

“I want everyone to be like ‘Oh he has an MBA from here and another one from here and then Esquire at the end of his name’….I’ve wanted to be a lawyer since I was young…I want to be able to be someone in life and I don’t want no one to be able to walk all over me. In Jamaica I would have given an arm and a leg to become a lawyer.

The constant movement between work, school, and socializing serves as a strong hold against sleep for typical Jamaican lifestyle, and Oraine had to adjust when he first arrived.

It is slow. Because I’m always up and about, as soon as it hits 6am I am up, that is just my natural clock. So when I’m up I try and make myself as busy as possible during the day because if I don’t I will not sleep at night.”Not used to all the down time here in America, Oraine tries very hard to be busy during the day, that way he will be able to sleep at night.

Oraine has one complaint about the weather here in New England and that is that it changes too often; “Today will be good and then tomorrow it rains, then the next day is good and then rain! The fluctuation kills me!”

Since his arrival, Oraine has not lost touch with his close friends and relatives. “We are in constant communication.” He hopes to soon visit friends who are now living in Canada and England. Oraine is also headed back to Jamaica come summertime to visit friends and family and celebrate his upcoming birthday.

Oraine does not plan to slow his pace any time soon, in fact he is just beginning. As a loving father of a five-year-old son, Oraine works to give his child the opportunity to achieve his wildest dreams.

“The other day he told me he wanted to be an artist, so I told him ‘draw’. It is America! He is the only thing that will keep him from accomplishing his dreams.”

Oraine describes a certain drive embedded in his mind upon coming to America, “…everybody only got one life to live and you can’t let someone go and take that from you”.

 

Written and compiled by Emily Matthews and Phil Lynch


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blackafricanandbeautiful: President Barack Obama made an unannounced stop at the Bob Marley Museum iblackafricanandbeautiful: President Barack Obama made an unannounced stop at the Bob Marley Museum i

blackafricanandbeautiful:

President Barack Obama made an unannounced stop at the Bob Marley Museum in Kingston, Jamaica, taking a brief tour of the museum late Wednesday evening.

“I still have all the albums,” Obama said while looking at a wall of framed records, according to a White House pool report.

Black is Beautiful!|Twitter|Instagram|Facebook


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woolie bullies (our sheep herd!) - kingston, WA (mar. 1997)

woolie bullies (our sheep herd!) - kingston, WA (mar. 1997)


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Happy Birthday to Jamaican Olympic Sprinter Usain “Lightning” Bolt…. eight-time W

Happy Birthday to Jamaican Olympic Sprinter Usain “Lightning” Bolt…. eight-time World champion & winner of 6 gold medals, arguably the fastest man in the world.
Usain Bolt’s average ground speed equates to 37.58 km/h (23.35 mph)


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peacedrums: The Front Bottoms at The Cricketers, Kingston, 18/09/12 Joyce Manor at The Fighting Cockpeacedrums: The Front Bottoms at The Cricketers, Kingston, 18/09/12 Joyce Manor at The Fighting Cock

peacedrums:

The Front Bottoms at The Cricketers, Kingston, 18/09/12

Joyce Manor at The Fighting Cocks, Kingston, 22/09/12


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On The Buses (And Trains)

On The Buses (And Trains)

I don’t travel as much as I used to on buses and trains, especially night buses. I used to work on them a lot travelling back from visits to London but I rarely go into town anymore. I can draw on a bus and adjust my strokes to the movements. A childhood of writing and doodling on moving boats, I guess? The lifting of restrictions meant I started travelling on them again, and a few times on night…


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Tales From The Riverbank 2 - Two Ways of Seeing a River

Tales From The Riverbank 2 – Two Ways of Seeing a River

Seascapes haven’t been the only marine subject this summer – as I said in the first of the riverbank posts, I have gone back to drawing the River Thames more since the Big Burn Out after Lockdown 1 where it was the only nearest subject I had, and it became stifling as much as I tried to vary it. Boats have been a frequent subject in my work included messing around with boats and Kingston Regatta,…


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