Background
Trevor Taylor was born in 1958 in Montego Bay, Jamaica.
Trevor Taylor was born in 1958 in Montego Bay, Jamaica.
His stage name was Supa T. He is best known as the first leading vocalist of the German band
At the age of 14, Taylor visited England for the first time. Besides music, young Trevor was interested in cooking, power lifting, and football. Trevor was a true rastaman, and his idol was Bob Marley.
At the beginning of his career, Trevor played bass guitar in the British reggae band UB40 and also was a singer in little-known groups in Seychelles.
In 1978, Trevor worked as a chef in a restaurant "Holiday Inn" in Birmingham, and then in Cologne restaurant "Stummel". In 1984, Trevor Taylor joined the new group He sang lead vocals on the hit song "You"re A Woman".
lieutenant appeared to be a real success for the band and instantly reached Top 10 in many European music charts. In Germany, the single peaked at Number.
8 and did not leave the German Top 20 for four months.
The same year, released their first studio album, Hot Girls, Bad Boys. Trevor Taylor was a leading vocalist on most songs (except "LOVE In My Carolina"). He later performed all the compositions for the band"s second album, Heartbeat.
In 1987, while recording the single "Come Back And Stay", producers Tony Hendrik and Karin van Haaren decided to change the lead singer, and John McInerney became the permanent front person.
These changes led to tensions within the group, so Taylor gradually phased out his presence and in 1989 left the team for good to pursue a solo career. After leaving the group, Trevor tried to act in films and participated in various musical projects, from trance to reggae.
In 1990, the reggae project Street Noise released the single "Our Problem", where Trevor Taylor was the leading vocalist. Foreign several years Trevor was a producer and vocalist in the German reggae band Umoya, which released three albums and six singles.
Since 1995, under the pseudonym Supa T, Taylor began recording with the band The Party Animals, releasing singles "My Dog", "Gotta Jump", "Be True", and "Love and Respect".
The latter was the hit of the year in Spain and held top positions in the Spanish charts for a long time. All these compositions subsequently were featured in his first solo album, Reggae in the People’s House & Soul, released in 1998 by Vale Music. That same year, Trevor participated in the recording of the single "Harddrummer" by Chocolate Milk.
He later recorded singles for Mondo Club: a cover version of "Don"t Worry, Be Happy", and "Sex Up My Life", which became the soundtrack for the television series "Heiße Tage – Wilde Nächte".
In his later years, Trevor performed a lot with reggae groups Umoya and The Reggae Cracks. He also planned to release his second solo album, Second Life.
Trevor Taylor, aged 50, died of a heart attack at a hospital in Cologne. His second solo album is still officially unreleased.
In 1991, Trevor was a member of the band Temper Temper as a guitarist.