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Eek a Mouse : ウィキペディア英語版
Eek-A-Mouse

Eek-A-Mouse (born Ripton Joseph Hylton, 19 November 1957, Kingston, Jamaica) is a Jamaican reggae musician. He is one of the early artists to be described as a "singjay".〔Barrow, Steve & Dalton, Peter (2004) "The Rough Guide To Reggae, 3rd edn.", Rough Guides, ISBN 1-84353-329-4〕
==Biography==
Eek-A-Mouse began his music career when he was in college, releasing two roots reggae singles under his own name, which were produced by his mathematics tutor, Mr. Dehaney. These early works were influenced by the music of Pablo Moses.〔〔Thompson, Dave (2002) ''Reggae & Caribbean Music'', Backbeat Books, ISBN 0-87930-655-6〕 He then went on to work for various sound systems over the next few years and also released a few more singles. He adopted the stage name "Eek-A-Mouse" in 1979, taking the name of a racehorse he always bet on; it was a nickname his friends had used for some time.〔〔Larkin, Colin (1998) "The Virgin Encyclopedia of Reggae", Virgin Books, ISBN 0-7535-0242-9〕〔Greene, Jo-Ann "(Eek-A-Mouse Biography )", allmusic, Macrovision Corporation〕 He began recording for Joe Gibbs in 1979, having a hit straight away with "Once a Virgin", now showing the influence of Ranking Joe,〔 and this was soon followed with "Wa-Do-Dem" (produced by Douglas Boothe), and "Modelling Queen", which began an association with Linval Thompson, who produced his debut ''Bubble Up Yu Hip'' album.〔
By the end of 1980, he had linked up with producer Henry "Junjo" Lawes, with whom he had big hits in 1981 with the likes of "Virgin Girl" and a recut "Wa-Do-Dem".〔 In 1981, he was the star of the Reggae Sunsplash Festival, cheering audiences still mourning over the death of reggae icon Bob Marley.〔 His association with Lawes led to a string of successful singles and albums, and in 1982 his hits included "Wild Like a Tiger", "For Hire and Removal", "Do You Remember", and "Ganja Smuggling". The same year he released his second album, ''Wa Do Dem''.〔 The "Operation Eradication" single showed Hylton's serious side, the song inspired by the vigilante killing of close friend and fellow DJ Errol Shorter.〔〔〔Lesser, Beth (2008) ''Dancehall: The Rise of Jamaican Dancehall Culture'', Soul Jazz, ISBN 978-0-9554817-1-0, p.37〕 ''Skidip'' was released before the year was out.
Further albums followed with 1983's ''Mouse and the Man'', produced by Linval Thompson, and 1984's ''Mouseketeer'', again produced by Lawes. He also featured on several of the live dancehall albums from the era, including the ''Aces International'' and ''Live at Skateland'' collections.〔 In the second half of the decade his popularity began to wane slightly, and he targeted the United States with the ''Assassinator'' album in 1985 (his first US release), produced by Anthony and Ronald Welch.〔〔 He also travelled to the United Kingdom to record ''The King and I'' the same year, the album targeted at the rock crossover audience to which he had begun to appeal.〔
His 1988 album ''Eek-A-Nomics'' saw him begin to establish himself with an international audience, spawning a club hit with "The Freak", and he was signed by Island Records in 1989.〔 He returned to prominence with 1991's ''U-Neek'' album, which continued the rock-oriented style, including a cover version of Led Zeppelin's "D'yer Mak'er", and from which the hit single "You're The One I Need" was taken.〔〔 He went through a period of relative quietness before returning in 1996 with the ''Black Cowboy'' album.〔
He also has a performance in the 1991 gangster movie ''New Jack City'' playing a drug-dealing Rastafarian named Fat Smitty.〔
Eek-A-Mouse is a regular at Sunsplash and often teams up with reggae duo Michigan & Smiley. An album was issued of his performance in 1983. He was also featured on nu metal group P.O.D.'s album ''Satellite'', lending his vocals to the rock-reggae track "Ridiculous." He can also be heard on OPM's album, ''ForThemAsses'', on the track "Perfect Day." Eek-A-Mouse recorded a song with hip-hop recording artist Ditch, called "Smoke it up" (2007, released in 2009), which is featured on Ditch's CD ''Public Intoxication''. The song by Ditch and Eek-a-Mouse is featured on the Jack Herer documentary as well. Has as well teamed up with Bounty Killer and Damian Marley in "Khaki Suit".
On 16 August 2008 Hylton was arrested on charges of rape and narcotic possession. He fled the United States and an arrest warrant with a million dollar bond was issued.〔http://www.kdhnc.com/documents/12/CrimeBlotter_201211301439057852.pdf〕 These charges were filed in Dare County North Carolina after a performance at the Port O' Call restaurant. He failed to appear at the first hearing and was given a failure to appear charge and his bond was set at $1,375,000.
On 21 November 2012, Eek-a-Mouse was found in Paraguay without a proper visa and deported.〔 He was transferred to Kill Devil Hills in Dare County, NC shortly after his deportation from Paraguay to await his trial which was then scheduled for the Summer of 2013. Hylton has an immigration hold on him which would prevent him from bonding out prior to the trial due to immigration reasons.
He was charged with felony rape, felony kidnapping, felony cocaine charges and misdemeanour relating to possession of marijuana.〔"(Eek-A-Mouse is a free man )", ''Jamaica Observer'', 30 August 2013. Retrieved 31 August 2013〕 In July 2013 he was released after a plea agreement, having pleaded "no contest" to misdemeanour charges for assault on a female and attempted crime against nature, with his time already spent in prison covering his sentence.〔
He performed in Jamaica for the first time in eight years in August 2015 at the Marcus Garvey Festival in Ocho Rios.〔Campbell, Howard (2015) "(Eek-A-Mouse in make-over mode )", ''Jamaica Observer'', 22 November 2015. Retrieved 22 November 2015〕

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