…I REALISED I HAD SOMETHING CALLED “A VOICE” from around the age of three or four, and my mum always encouraged me to sing. She was a domestic and would sometimes bring homework, like ironing, and when she was doing it she’d ask me to sing to her to keep her company. I remember many a Saturday night when that happened. Dad was a musician, which also inspired me as a youngster. He’d compose calypsos on his guitar and he was like the village entertainer.
…MY FATHER DID ALL SORTS OF JOBS. I grew up in Trinidad and Tobago in the Caribbean, until we moved to England when I was ten, and there wasn’t an organised system of work. You either worked in the oil field, which was the most responsible job there was, or you did whatever you could to feed your family. Back then people were dab hands at everything—such as gardening, fishing, making utensils out of discarded tins—and my father was one of them. That’s really the main reason he emigrated to England as part of the Windrush movement, eventually bringing us over with him in 1960.
…ARRIVING IN ALDGATE EAST WAS A TOTAL CULTURE SHOCK. I’d come from living on the border of a cocoa and coffee plantation, then suddenly there were all these buildings and streets and cars. It was all very strange to me but as a child, you adapt very quickly, whereas if I’d been a grown-up I’d probably have fled back to the Caribbean!
Billy Ocean as a young man
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