Daftar Isi
Kong's Death Aftermath
Contractual Ambiguity
Kong's sudden passing left legal vacuum.1 His empire lacked formal succession planning. 1960s Kingston contracts were verbal. Handshakes, not lawyers.2
The masters existed physically. Legal ownership? Contested. Kong's estate claimed rights. Artists' families disagreed.3
Dekker's success complicated matters. "Israelites" topped UK charts 1969.1 Money flowed. Without documentation, distributors didn't pay.
Pre-Berne Convention Vacuum
Jamaica hadn't ratified Berne Convention.4 International protections didn't apply. British bootleggers faced no consequences.2
Jamaican music conquered the world. But creators couldn't control it. Covers proliferated.4 Artists saw pennies.
Jamaica prioritized cultural export over IP.3 This benefited spread but devastated artists financially.
Bootleg Economy
Unauthorized Distribution
"The licensing of Leslie Kong product became so murky after his death that most of his early productions were widely & openly bootlegged."5 London vendors sold unauthorized compilations.6
Dekker appeared on dozens he never authorized. Quality varied. Some used third-generation copies.5
A bootlegger could press 5,000 copies and vanish. Legal action cost more than recovery.6
Revenue Deprivation
Dekker toured constantly across England, Europe.7 Live performance became primary income. Recorded music generated almost nothing.
"Israelites" remained radio staple. People bought records. Yet money disappeared.6
He'd brought reggae worldwide. The world hadn't compensated him.7 Kong's death triggered this.
Daftar Pustaka
- "Desmond Dekker Dies Of Heart Attack." Billboard, 25 May 2006.
- "Reggae legend Desmond Dekker dies." ABC News Australia, 26 May 2006.
- "Desmond Dekker." Herald Scotland, 26 May 2006.
- Foster, Chuck. Roots Rock Reggae. 1999, pp. 18-20.
- Ska Music History documentation, n.d.
- "Jamaican ska great Desmond Dekker dead at 64." Mail & Guardian, 29 May 2006.
- "Desmond Dekker." The Stage, 25 June 2006.