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‘Legendary’ voice silenced as lead singer of Jamaican reggae group Mighty Diamonds is murdered

'When it was time for him to sing, he was like a bird from heaven'

A small portrait of Emma Lewis


Written by

Emma Lewis


On March 29, at about 9:45 p.m. local time on a humid night in Kingston, Jamaica, the lead singer of the reggae music trio Mighty Diamonds, Donald “Tabby Diamond” Shaw, 67, was shot dead near his home on McKinsey Crescent, Olympic Gardens. Also shot dead was another man, Owen Beckford, and three others were shot and injured in the attack, which took place at a popular community social spot.


From the crime scene, The Jamaica Gleaner tweeted:


BREAKING: Reggae musician 'Tabby Diamond' of the legendary trio Mighty Diamonds is among two people shot dead in a drive-by attack on McKinley Crescent in the St Andrew South Police Division. Three other people injured.


While police are still investigating the murders, there is speculation that they may be linked to a long-running gang dispute. Shaw's son is currently in custody on a murder charge, and Shaw may have been deliberately targeted, the police surmise.


Culture and Entertainment Minister Olivia “Babsy” Grange shared her condolences, observing:


Tabby’s killing is as senseless as it is tragic and leaves an awful void in the Jamaican music landscape.


Shaw's soulful tenor voice was instantly recognisable, backed up by smooth harmonies from his former school friends Lloyd “Judge” Ferguson and Fitzroy “Bunny” Simpson. Formed in Trench Town in 1969 (and initially called Limelight), Mighty Diamonds became famous for their “conscious” music infused with Rastafari beliefs, which often focused on social issues of the time.


The trio reportedly held the record for the longest surviving reggae group, still touring both overseas and at home up until last year. They recorded over 40 albums together. Although Tabby Diamond rarely made music without his other two band members, in 2020 he released a single entitled “This World (Is Going Up in Flames).” The video, recorded in his neighbourhood, featured young children playing and was reflective of Tabby's gentle and loving nature.




Mighty Diamonds got their major break in 1975, when they began to record with Joseph “Jo Jo” Hoo Kim‘s Channel One Studio. Their debut album “Right Time,” released by Virgin Records in 1976, became a reggae classic, filled with melodies and thoughtful lyrics. They reaped — and maintained — considerable international success, producing an album called “Deeper Roots” in 1979 and the Gussie Clarke-produced “Changes,” which included the extremely popular song “Pass the Kutchie”. There were many subsequent versions of this song, including British-Jamaican reggae band Musical Youth's “Pass the Dutchie”, which altered the original lyrics to remove mention of the ganja pipe, and became a huge hit in the United Kingdom.


In a newspaper interview, Shaw's former producer reflected:


Tabby's sound and persona and his voice were all basically compatible. He was smooth, cool, not a problematic person, pleasing, touching to the soul. He took everything in stride, he was one of the humblest persons I knew, nothing was a problem to him, he didn't talk much. He would smoke weed and when it was time for him to sing, he was like a bird from heaven.


Members of the local music fraternity expressed shock at his death, with popular dancehall deejay Beenie Man tweeting:



Reggae singer Nadine Sutherland paid tribute:

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