Winston Sparkes (17 September 1940 – 31 January 2012), better known as King Stitt, was a Jamaican pioneer DJ.
He earned the nickname as a boy because of his stuttering and decided to use it as his stage name. Stitt began deejaying on Clement Dodd's Sir Coxsone's Downbeat Sound System in 1956.
Count Machuki, the original Jamaican deejay, noticed him for his dancing and offered him to try his hand on the mic. Stitt soon built his own deejay set, occasionally replacing him and eventually becoming one of the most popular deejays on the island's dances. He became King Stitt when he was crowned "king of the deejays" in 1963, in the heyday of ska.
Following the folding of Sir Coxsone's Downbeat's sound system around 1968 (as Coxsone preferred to concentrate on recordings), Stitt found himself working as a mason in Ocho Rios. He had been deejaying at the mic for over ten years when he was first recorded over brand new reggae rhythms in 1969, creating some of the first deejay records ever.
Right Time is the 1976 studio album debut of influential reggae band the Mighty Diamonds. The album, released by Virgin Records after they signed the Mighty Diamonds following a search for talent in Jamaica, is critically regarded as a reggae classic, a landmark in the roots reggae subgenre. Several of the album's socially conscious songs were hits in the band's native Jamaica, with a few becoming successful in the UK underground. Influential and sometimes unconventional, the album helped secure the success of recording studio Channel One Studios, and rhythm team Sly Dunbar and Robbie Shakespeare.
The Mighty Diamonds were among the first artists signed to the Virgin record label after it entered the reggae music market. The Mighty Diamonds had been discovered by Jamaica's Channel One Studios, and when Virgin followed Island Records into the Jamaican marketplace, they, too, discovered The Mighty Diamonds. Virgin's representatives set up a table at a Sheraton Hotel with $100,000 and, after police intervention calmed the resultant excitement, left with such artists as the Mighty Diamonds, Prince Far I, Johnny Clarke and Big Youth on their roster. The album, the Mighty Diamonds' record debut, was recorded at Channel One Studios in Kingston, Jamaica, with production by Chinese Jamaican Joseph Hoo Kim, whose family owned the studio. 2006's Caribbean Popular Music notes that "[w]ith the release of ...Right Time in 1976, the studio came into its own."
The Right Time may refer to:
"The Right Time" is a song by Celtic folk rock band The Corrs, the third single from their debut album Forgiven, Not Forgotten. It was released in 1996 and the track was remixed for airplay. The remix replaced a light and breezy rhythm with a hard-pounding beat coupled with reggae-style bass. The remix was produced by Per Adebratt, Tommy Ekman, and Douglas Carr, who had previously worked with Ace of Base. The song was featured in their live set for several years.
"The Right Time" was targeted at pop radio by Atlantic US, hence the video theme of 1960s pop tinged with psychedelic, and the band's new haircuts and publicity photos. The new style lasted around a week before the Corrs' classic look returned. The video for the track was originally filmed and released with the "Radio Edit – Dance Mix" version; promotion was done with this version too. The album edit video can be found on the Best of The Corrs DVD.
Warner's International territories released "Forgiven, Not Forgotten" as the second single from the album of the same name, while Atlantic US went straight to "The Right Time".
The right time
Is the night time
Oh the right time,
The right time
Is the night time
Oh the right time,
The right time
Is the night time
Oh the right time,
The right time
Is the night time
Oh the right time,
But its me that I cant remember
Its me that I can not
Its me thats smokin reefer
Its me thats smokin pot
But its me that I cant remember
Its me that I can not
But its me thats smokin reefer
Its me thats smokin pot
But its me that I cant remember
Its me that I can not
But its me thats smokin reefer
Its me thats smokin
But its me that I cant remember
Its me that I can not
But its me thats smokin reefer
Its me
Ya know it makes me feel so good inside
Whoooa yeah
So come on and and join me
On the irie side
Oh oh ya know it makes me feel so good inside
Ohhh yeah
So come on and join us
On the irie side
The right time
Is the night time
Oh the right time,
The right time
Is the night time
Oh the right time,
The right time
Is the night time
Oh the right time,
The right time
Is the night time
Oh the right time,
But its me that I cant remember
Its me that I can not
Its me thats smokin reefer
Its me thats smokin pot
But its me that I cant remember
Its me that I can not
But its me thats smokin reefer
Its me thats smokin pot
But its me that I cant remember
Its me that I can not
But its me thats smokin reefer
Its me thats smokin
But its me that I cant remember
Its me that I can not
But its me thats smokin reefer
Its me
Ya know it makes me feel so good inside
Whoooa yeah
So come on and and join us
On the irie side
Oh oh ya know it makes me feel so good inside
Ohhh yeah
So come on and join us