My NTS
Live now
1
London
18:00 - 20:00

Old friends and hapless mavericks Ivan Smagghe and Nathan Gregory Wilkins present a fortnightly window into their ramshackle musical world. A show with absolutely no rules (as they'd only break them). We love the unmixable, old & new. We are oddballs and we love you.

2
Berlin
19:00 - 20:00

Champeta on Cassette is a selection of rare, unreleased, and instrumental tracks that are essential to Cartagena’s champetúa culture. Producers like Raúl "Romy" Molina handed their music directly to picó owners, allowing fans to feel and learn the tracks before their official release. Cassettes were the pulse of Bazurto’s market and the underground bootlegging scene. This mix revives that raw, magnetic energy.

Glen Adams

Glen Adams

Glen Adams has been played on NTS over 20 times, featured on 26 episodes and was first played on 7 February 2015.

Glen Adams (b. Glenroy Phillip Adams, 1950) is a Jamaican musician, composer, arranger, engineer, producer, based since the mid-1970s in Brooklyn, New York.

Adams' first break in the music business came as a teenager when he appeared as a singer on Radio Jamaica's Opportunity Knocks show hosted by Vere Johns, and he began performing in Kingston and St. Andrews at weekends. He made his first record, "Wonderthirst", in 1960 for Coxsone Dodd at Federal Recording Studio, the title of the song becoming his nickname. He then moved on to work with Duke Reid's Treasure Isle set-up, and co-founded The Heptones before moving on to The Pioneers.

Adams then moved on again to work with Bunny Lee as a solo singer and also A&R man. He began filling in on keyboards when other musicians failed to turn up for recording sessions, with sufficient success that he became known as a session player. Along with other musicians such as the Barrett brothers (Aston and Carlton), he performed in sessions for a range of producers under a variety of group names notably The Hippy Boys for Bunny Lee, where Adams did some of his most memorable work accompanying Slim Smith, The Reggae Boys, and The Upsetters for Lee "Scratch" Perry. Adams also worked for Herman Chin Loy, where he was one of a number of keyboard players to record under the name Augustus Pablo, before Horace Swaby adopted that identity.

Perry took The Upsetters to tour the United Kingdom in the wake of his hit "Return Of Django" (and the less successful follow-up, "Live Injectiion"), returning to Jamaica in 1970. As part of The Upsetters, Adams backed The Wailers during their spell with Perry, and Adams did much of the arranging and composed the song "Mr. Brown". When The Wailers parted company with Perry in 1971, taking The Upsetter's rhythm section with them, Adams remained with Perry, but began to split his time between Jamaica and the United States, where he set up his own Capo record label, and put together a new band, the Blue Grass Experience. He eventually moved to Brooklyn permanently in 1975, where he became more involved in producing, and also worked for Brad Osbourne's Clocktower and Lloyd Barnes' Bullwackie labels, and played with The Realistics band.

In the late 1970s, Adams expanded into R&B and Rap production.

After many years in the studio, Adams has recently returned to live performance, touring the USA and Europe with The Slackers, and also playing occasional NYC shows with the Jammyland All-Stars.

Adams now owns his own recording studio and has recently produced for artists such as Susan Cadogan and Keith Rowe, half of the vocal duo Keith & Tex from Jamaica.

read more

Glen Adams

Glen Adams has been played on NTS over 20 times, featured on 26 episodes and was first played on 7 February 2015.

Glen Adams (b. Glenroy Phillip Adams, 1950) is a Jamaican musician, composer, arranger, engineer, producer, based since the mid-1970s in Brooklyn, New York.

Adams' first break in the music business came as a teenager when he appeared as a singer on Radio Jamaica's Opportunity Knocks show hosted by Vere Johns, and he began performing in Kingston and St. Andrews at weekends. He made his first record, "Wonderthirst", in 1960 for Coxsone Dodd at Federal Recording Studio, the title of the song becoming his nickname. He then moved on to work with Duke Reid's Treasure Isle set-up, and co-founded The Heptones before moving on to The Pioneers.

Adams then moved on again to work with Bunny Lee as a solo singer and also A&R man. He began filling in on keyboards when other musicians failed to turn up for recording sessions, with sufficient success that he became known as a session player. Along with other musicians such as the Barrett brothers (Aston and Carlton), he performed in sessions for a range of producers under a variety of group names notably The Hippy Boys for Bunny Lee, where Adams did some of his most memorable work accompanying Slim Smith, The Reggae Boys, and The Upsetters for Lee "Scratch" Perry. Adams also worked for Herman Chin Loy, where he was one of a number of keyboard players to record under the name Augustus Pablo, before Horace Swaby adopted that identity.

Perry took The Upsetters to tour the United Kingdom in the wake of his hit "Return Of Django" (and the less successful follow-up, "Live Injectiion"), returning to Jamaica in 1970. As part of The Upsetters, Adams backed The Wailers during their spell with Perry, and Adams did much of the arranging and composed the song "Mr. Brown". When The Wailers parted company with Perry in 1971, taking The Upsetter's rhythm section with them, Adams remained with Perry, but began to split his time between Jamaica and the United States, where he set up his own Capo record label, and put together a new band, the Blue Grass Experience. He eventually moved to Brooklyn permanently in 1975, where he became more involved in producing, and also worked for Brad Osbourne's Clocktower and Lloyd Barnes' Bullwackie labels, and played with The Realistics band.

In the late 1970s, Adams expanded into R&B and Rap production.

After many years in the studio, Adams has recently returned to live performance, touring the USA and Europe with The Slackers, and also playing occasional NYC shows with the Jammyland All-Stars.

Adams now owns his own recording studio and has recently produced for artists such as Susan Cadogan and Keith Rowe, half of the vocal duo Keith & Tex from Jamaica.

Original source Last.fm

Tracks featured on

Most played tracks

A Beat For You
Glen Adams
Top Secret Records1982
Mad Blank
Glen Adams
Tuff Gong0
I Want To Hold Your Hand
Glen Adams
Landmark Corner0
A Beat For You
Glen Adams
Emotional Rescue, Jamwax2017
Stay Dread
Glen Adams, The Outerlimits
Capo Records1975
Can't Hide Your Love
Glen Adams
Capo Records0
Run Come Dance
Glen Adams
Landmark Corner0
She's So Fine
Glen Adams
Pressure Sounds, Lee's2009
Cool, Cool Rock Steady
Glen Addams, Collins Band
Collins Down Beat1968