Around 1966, Hinds made the transformation to rocksteady, and the hits kept coming. Over the next several years, he released smash after smash, including The Higher the Monkey Climbs, No Good Rudy, On a Saturday Night, Here I Stand, and Save a Bread. He and Reid parted company in 1972, with the latter dying three years later; Hinds then began working with producer Jack Ruby, a collaboration which resulted in the 1976 LP Jezebel. Two years later, he also teamed with producer Sonia Pottinger for a series of singles including Rig-Ma-Roe Game and Wipe Your Weeping Eyes. After 1984's Travel with Love, however, the reclusive Hinds essentially went into retirement, leaving Jamaica only rarely. He did return to recording, albeit sporadically, with a final studio effort in 1992, Know Jah Better, and then a decade later with a live album Let's Rock Live. Another concert album, 2003's Live at the Grassroots, featured Hinds backed by roots revivalists John Brown's Body. Justin Hinds succumbed to cancer two years later, passing away quietly at his Jamaican home on March 16, 2005. Labels continued to release additional material after his death, however, such as the 2009 compilation Sinners. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi