Career
He is a Chinese Jamaican. In 1969 Lloyd A. Chinese-Loy opened Aquarius Record Store in Half Way Tree, Kingston, Jamaica. In the early 1970s Chinese-Loy contracted Mr.
Rosser, a notable studio engineer from Wales, to build an innovative, state of the art 24-track recording studio - the first of its kind in Jamaica and probably the entire Caribbean region.
And so was born Aquarius Recording Studio in the heart of Half-Way-Tree. Lloyd Chinese-Loy subsequently brought on board his half-brother Herman Chinese-Loy, who ran the retail end of the business.
Herman dabbled in producing. His earliest productions were quirky, innovative instrumentals, using musicians such as Lloyd Charmers and The Hippy Boys on tracks such as "African Zulu", "Shang I", "Reggae In The Fields", "Invasion", and "Inner Space".
He was the first producer to use the Now Generation band and the first to record Horace Swaby, whose recordings, like those of other keyboard players who recorded for Chinese Loy, were released under the name "Augustus Pablo", the success of Swaby"s releases causing the name to stick.
In the early 1970s, Herman Chinese Loy also produced Dennis Brown, Alton Ellis, and Bruce Ruffin, whose "Rain" reached number 19 in the United Kingdom singles chart. Herman Chinese-Loy was responsible for one of the first dub albums, Aquarius Dub, released in 1973, and mixed at Dynamic studio by Chinese Loy himself. A follow-up, Aquarius Dub part 2, was released the next year.
Herman Chinese-Loy returned to reggae productions in 1979, after a brief hiatus, scoring several hits in the early dancehall style with artists such as Little Roy and Ernest Wilson.