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Rennie Cogle Zircon Radio

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Download Rennie Cogle Zircon Radio APK latest version Free for Android

Version 1.0
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Size 7.24 MB (7,586,567 bytes)
Developer B and O Technologies.com
Category Apps, Music & Audio
Package Name com.renniecogle.radio
OS 4.1 and up

Rennie Cogle Zircon Radio APPLICATION description

Renford “Rennie” Cogle is a singer and songwriter.
Renford “Rennie” Cogle (born 20 June 1948), is a singer and songwriter whose career spans more than three decades and about as many continents. His musical career started in 1972 when his friend, the late Delroy “Smooth Operator” Wilson, listened to his music and recorded “You Keep On Running”. This was to be the first of many number one hits written by Cogle. Subsequent songs such as “Sweet Rose”; “Ring of Gold”; “Rock It To Me”; “Babylon Policy” and “Passion of Love” became international hit singles and were performed by Tony Brevett and The Melodians.

“Everybody Balling”; “Heart Breaking Love”; “Build Me Up”; “By the Rivers of Babylon”; “It’s My Delight” and “Sweet Sensation”, performed by Brent Dowe, are among the other hit songs he has written. “Sweet Sensation” was a worldwide success for British group UB40. It’s been featured in the movie soundtrack Harder They Come and EastEnders, a popular British television soap opera. “Sweet Sensation” has been recently re-recorded by the Detroit Cobras. Cogle has also written Sharon Blacks “Struggling”, Marcia Griffiths “Survival” and Joe Coleman’s “The Way I Feel For You”.

In 1982 Cogle contacted Polygram Records which is now Universal Music Publishers and signed a contract with them for thirty-nine of his songs. In 1987 the contract with Universal Music Publishers was re-written to include additional songs he had written; by 1997 this contract was finalized.
Early life
Cogle was born in the Denham Town area of Kingston, Jamaica, W.I. on 20 June 1948 to Roberto Cogle and Doris Brown. He first attended Tweedside Primary School in Clarendon, Jamaica where his grandmother resided. His father, Roberto Cogle was a descendant of Irish immigrants. At the age of 12 he was taken back to Kingston by his mother and father. As a child, Cogle attained his early schooling at the Ebenezer Primary School located at Spanish Town Road and Darling Street. Ebenezer Primary School was later to become Operation Friendship. The students were then transferred to Denham Town Primary School where he found a passion in writing poetry. He later put melody to the words, and performed the songs during weekly music concerts.

The concerts were a significant part of the early development for music appreciation at the primary level. He says, “Every Friday, school concerts were held and students were encouraged to perform using their special talents. I used to sing the songs I wrote and they were always well received.”

Cogle was an exceptional student and while at Denham Town Primary School, he took the Common Entrance Examination and received a government scholarship to attend Knockalva Agricultural Training School (KATC) in Montpelier, Hanover. He graduated after three years and received another government scholarship to attend the Jamaica School of Agriculture in Twickenham Park in St. Catherine, Jamaica. He received yet a third scholarship to attend U.W.I. St. Augustine in Trinidad but due to the passing of his mother at the time he turned it down. The passing of his mother he says was, “devastating to me.”

Rennie at Dunn’s River Falls, Jamaica, WI
He went on to work for the now defunct Jamaica Railway Corporation (JRC) at its head office where he stayed for seven years. He has three brothers and one surviving sister of two. His father is also deceased.

Adult life
In 1976 Cogle immigrated to New York and in 1979 he joined the United States Army. He was sent to South Carolina for basic training and then to Fort Lee in New Jersey to do an eight-month course in clerical and book-keeping studies. On finishing the eight-month course, Cogle was deployed to Wiesbaden in Germany where he continued to write songs, recording them to tape cassettes; he also searched for his records for as he says, “I did not know where else other than Jamaica my records were.”
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