Jon Baker (born 1960) is a music industry executive. He has worked as a fashion designer, promoter, and is currently co-owner of Geejam, a luxury resort and recording studio located in San San, near Port Antonio, Jamaica.
After leaving school in 1977,[5][6] Baker opened a punk T-shirt store called Blooze in Kensington Market in 1978.[7] In 1979, operations grew and Blooze was relocated to the Great Gear Market, Kings Road, London and renamed Axiom.[7][8] In 1980 Baker moved to New York[5][9] and in 1981 staged a combined Axiom fashion show and concert in support of Spandau Ballet’s performance at The Underground, Broadway’s disco club.[2][10][8]
In 1982, Baker launched UK fashion label Demob in New York.[11] Baker then based himself in New York where he met club promoter and manager Ruza Blue who introduced him to the hip-hop scene in the Bronx.[2] Baker then began working at The Roxy club.[12][13]
Baker produced fashion shows for various designers and events in New York, such as the Danceteria and the Peppermint Lounge.[2] In 1983, Baker designed and promoted a club on Union Square called Fresh 14, before it closed after a short while[4][14] and in 1984 Baker returned to the UK.[5]
Gee Street Records
In 1985, having returned to the UK, Baker organized Doug E. Fresh and Slick Rick's first UK tour.[15] That year, he met Rob Birch and Nick Hallam of the Stereo MCs and together they began to produce and distribute white label records to London dance shops. He also met his future wife Ziggi Golding, an agent who ran the progressive "Z" modeling agency.[16][17][18] Baker alongside Britain’s pirate radio Kiss FM hip-hop jock DJ Richie Rich in 1986[4][14] and the Stereo MCs , opened a recording studio called Gee Street Records.[5] Among the artists Gee Street signed and/or promoted were Jon King/King Butcher, Funtopia, Gail Ann Dorsey, Queen Latifah, Jungle Brothers, the Stereo MCs, and P.M. Dawn. Gee Street's first significant success was the release of Straight out the Jungle by Jungle Brothers; their single "I'll House You" reached the top 5 in the UK national charts.[19] Then, in 1988, he signed the Stereo MCs to a licensing deal with Island Records.
Polygram / Island Records
In 1990, Polygram Records’ Chris Blackwell signed P.M. Dawn, and proposed a joint venture with Island/PolyGram that secured Gee Street's roster for Island.[20] Baker agreed on a worldwide joint venture with the focus on North American markets in 1991.[4][6] Baker was appointed President of Island Jamaica for North America (the Jamaican music division of Island Records). The first release under the joint venture, PM Dawn’s “Set Adrift on Memory Bliss” released in 1991, providing the funding for Bakers investments in Jamaica and with this he brought property in San San, Port Antonio.[1][21]
The joint venture agreement between Island Polygram Records and Baker faltered and came to an end in 1996.[22]
In 2002, he moved to Jamaica, became a Jamaican citizen. That year, he also produced the album Adelante, featuring Ky-Mani Marley and Alberto D'Ascola (aka Alborosie)[25]
In 2004, Baker produced Two Culture Clash in collaboration with producer Mark Jones in the UK.[26] In 2004 and again in 2005, he became a consultant for New Reality TV's Digicel Rising Stars talent competition on Jamaica's TVJ television station in 2004.[27][28]
In 2006, Baker worked with Steve Beaver of the Hong Kong-based Beaver Music on the Singerz Collection album series through Universal Music Japan; it featured contemporary songs interpreted in a reggae style. Later that year, however, Baker and Beaver went into a more formal partnership and agreed to develop Geejam into a luxury private hotel.[29] To this point, Baker had devoted a great deal of his energy to make Geejam an exclusive residential recording studio. The studio's resources had earned a strong reputation among industry insiders and attracted several top artists including Gorillaz, No Doubt, India Arie, Dru Hill, Gondwana, Les Nubians, Wyclef Jean, and Björk.[30][31]
^ abcClunis, Andrew (December 22, 2000). "Gee Jam Puts Down Roots in Portland". The Gleaner. p. 50.
^ abSmith, Graham; Sullivan, Chris (2011). "Jon Bakers Axiom' P". We Can Be Heroes.
^ ab"The Blitz goes a bomb in New York". Evening Standard.
^Seymour, Corey (November 1, 2011). "Jamaican Punch". W Magazine: Women's Fashion & Celebrity News. Retrieved November 2, 2020.
^Johnson, David (July 1, 1981). "1981, First Blitz invasion of the US". New Sounds New Styles, republished at Shapersofthe80s.com). Retrieved April 23, 2023.