George Phang

From outside Jamaica, producer George Phang seemed to hurtle like a comet across the mid-'80s. He was first sighted in 1982, and burned brightly, then faded away as the decade progressed. The truth, of course, was a little different. Phang hailed from a family long prominent in the Jones Town section of Kingston, and in his teens became involved in the local community. With the election of the PNP in 1972, the district's MP, Anthony Spaulding, became Housing Minister, and Phang was hired to help transform a local stockyard into public housing. The PNP were swept from power in 1980, but that seems to have had little effect on the fortunes of the Phangs. It did, however, provide the impetus for George to shift his attention toward the music business. Michael Palmer was one of the first to benefit, with his Phang-produced 1982 album Lick Shot, the first of three full-lengths he cut for the producer. That set heralded Phang's arrival, and Little John gave him his first hits, when both "True Confessions" and "Roots Girl" stormed the chart. A pair of popular albums followed in 1984 and 1985.