Barbara Jones | |
---|---|
Birth name | Barbara Nation |
Born |
c. 1952 Kingston, Jamaica |
Died | 19 December 2014 (aged 62) Kingston, Jamaica |
Genres | Reggae, gospel |
Years active | 1971–2014 |
Labels | Trojan, GG's, Dynamic, VP |
Barbara Nation ( c. 1952 – 19 December 2014), better known as Barbara Jones, was a Jamaican singer who had a UK hit single in 1981 with " Just When I Needed You Most".
Born in Kingston and raised in Manchester, Jamaica, she began her career in 1971 with the single "Sad Movies". [1] She had her greatest success in January 1981 with "Just When I Needed You Most", which reached number 31 on the UK Singles Chart. [2]
She toured as backing singer with Jimmy Cliff in the late 1970s and early 1980s; [1] In 1991, she became a devout Christian and gave up secular music to concentrate on gospel music. [1] [3]
After becoming ill in London, she was diagnosed with leukaemia in February 2014. [1] She returned to reggae with performances in Brazil with Lloyd Parks. [4] Her health deteriorated and she died in Kingston's University Hospital of the West Indies on 19 December 2014, from pneumonia contracted during chemotherapy treatments. She was 62 years old. [1] [5]
Jones was once described as "the Billie Holliday of reggae music". [6]
Barbara Jones | |
---|---|
Birth name | Barbara Nation |
Born |
c. 1952 Kingston, Jamaica |
Died | 19 December 2014 (aged 62) Kingston, Jamaica |
Genres | Reggae, gospel |
Years active | 1971–2014 |
Labels | Trojan, GG's, Dynamic, VP |
Barbara Nation ( c. 1952 – 19 December 2014), better known as Barbara Jones, was a Jamaican singer who had a UK hit single in 1981 with " Just When I Needed You Most".
Born in Kingston and raised in Manchester, Jamaica, she began her career in 1971 with the single "Sad Movies". [1] She had her greatest success in January 1981 with "Just When I Needed You Most", which reached number 31 on the UK Singles Chart. [2]
She toured as backing singer with Jimmy Cliff in the late 1970s and early 1980s; [1] In 1991, she became a devout Christian and gave up secular music to concentrate on gospel music. [1] [3]
After becoming ill in London, she was diagnosed with leukaemia in February 2014. [1] She returned to reggae with performances in Brazil with Lloyd Parks. [4] Her health deteriorated and she died in Kingston's University Hospital of the West Indies on 19 December 2014, from pneumonia contracted during chemotherapy treatments. She was 62 years old. [1] [5]
Jones was once described as "the Billie Holliday of reggae music". [6]