[1] Over the next couple of years, he released singles including "King Samuel", "Jump Out of the Frying Pan", "The Ark" and "Rub Up Push Up".
[1] He had several more hits in Jamaica including "The Higher the Monkey Climbs", "No Good Rudie", "On a Saturday Night", "Here I Stand" and "Save a Bread".
[1] His final studio album Know Jah Better was released in 1992, but he worked on Wingless Angels with other Jamaican musicians, which was produced by Keith Richards in the early 1990s.
In 1997, he toured the US for the first time and he released a couple of live albums in the early 2000s, including one recorded at the Finger Lakes GrassRoots Festival of Music and Dance in Trumansburg, New York backed by John Brown's Body.
On 23 September 2010, a new posthumous album, Wingless Angels II, was released with "Oh What a Joy, What a Comfort", featuring guitar work by Keith Richards plus the Jamaican Nyabinghi rhythm Drummers.