Reggae Goes Missing From
The Dancehall
Jamaica is internationally
recognised as the birthplace of reggae and dancehall
music, the latter delivering the more flashy uptempo sound,
while the former targets the spiritual and Afrocentric followers with
slower, sometimes sultry beats.
However, with the
competitive nature of Jamaica's music industry, the two genres seem to
be fighting for existence in the dancehall. Reggae
is losing.
The Sunday
Gleaner spoke with reggae
artiste Warrior King, and according to the Virtuous Woman
singer,
local disc jockeys are killing reggae
music.
"Dem selector yah a kill the
music where it come from. Reggae music is the foundation and it should
be included in the juggling like any other genre. A lot of foreigners
have been asking me 'why when they come to Jamaica they don't hear
reggae music?' When I am abroad it is different because it is played in
the dancehall in Trinidad, California and Europe," Warrior King said.
According to the artiste,
Jamaicans do not appreciate reggae, and may only realise the effect of
their disregard when reggae has left our shores.
"Dem seh 'di cow nuh know
the use a him tale til it gone.' Dats why the youth a get suh crazy
because dem naah get nuh roots. Reggae music keep people calm. Look how
Bob Marley, Culture and Dennis Brown work hard to keep reggae alive ...
all we need to do is spread the music across the board, 15 minutes of
dancehall,15 minutes of reggae and 15 minutes of hip hop. Reggae is not
dead because you have established people like Akon doing a reggae
album," he said.
Veteran reggae producer
Bobby Digital believes disc jockeys in the dancehall are busy trying to
please themselves instead of helping to develop the music industry.
"I don't think reggae is
getting a fair chance to prove itself in the dancehall. These guys
playing the music are just trying to please themselves to get a
forward; it's only for their own gain. How are we going to expose new
talent if we don't hear the artiste?" Digital asked.
According to the producer, who has done work for artistes of massive
stature - Sizzla Kalonji, Shabba Ranks, Morgan Heritage, Anthony B,
Cocoa Tea, Super Cat and Garnett Silk, making up some of that number -
reggae music production has not decreased. However, the songs are not
getting a chance to develop locally.
"For the past six to seven years, I have been making music but they
don't get much attention here because they are not willing to let
something new through the gate, and if you don't listen to music, you
cannot know what it is," he continued.
"We need to recognise what we have and learn to nurture it. Until we do
that, then dog nyam wi supper. Teach the youth dem music from school so
they can have an early exposure, because I have seen reggae artistes
from overseas who are even better than some out here," he said.
Dancehall disc jockey and producer Supa Hype also conceded that the
dancehall needed to place more emphasis on reggae.
According to him, upcoming DJs lack mature experience.
"We need more reggae. We need to put more into reggae. Recently, people
like Christopher Martin and Busy Signal put out reggae albums - even Mr
Vegas; we need more of that," he continued.
"Some DJs just wake up and seh dem a selector, dem nuh really have no
experience. I am coming from vinyl days so I know real music. That is
why I always play reggae songs from people like Sizzla in my juggling,"
Supa Hype said.
Supa Hype also said taking on the profession of music was like going to
school.
"DJs, do your homework. Try different genres for different segments.
You can't just do the same thing every week," he said.
The selector went on to say he would be releasing an exclusive reggae
project - featuring Gyptian, Lutan Fyah, among others - as evidence
that he was willing to lead the change.
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A New Day - Songs heralding
JA’s Independence

THE creativity of Jamaican
singers and songwriters stood out in 1962 when the country gained
Independence from Britain. A plethora of patriotic songs marked the
nation’s birth. However, the most popular were Independent Jamaica by
Lord Creator, Rise Jamaica (Independence Time is Here) by Al T Joe and
Derrick Morgan’s Forward March.
David Brown, senior research
fellow at the African Caribbean Institute/Jamaica Memory Bank, at a
forum earlier this year, said: “We owe a great depth of gratitude to
all musicians. And by all, I mean collective; those from the Eastern
Caribbean, and also our indigenous musicians who provide for us in a
very creative and unique form of documentation of our history.”
Lord Creator, born Kentrick
Patrick, in the San Fernando Valley of Trinidad and Tobago, started as
a calypso singer before coming to Jamaica in the early 1960s.
He recorded his first hit song,
Evening News, in 1959. Independent Jamaica, done three years later for
producer Vincent ‘Randy’ Chin, was written at Chin’s east Kingston home.
In a 2003 interview with the
Jamaica Observer, Lord Creator said a well-known sports reporter helped
him draft the song.
“I knew Jamaica was getting
independence but I didn’t know the details, so Raymond Sharpe brought
me copies of The Gleaner, we went up to Randy’s house in Deanery Road
and I made the song from the information in half-hour,” Creator
recalled.
Sometimes called ‘Jamaica
Fats’, Al T Joe’s vocals mirrored New Orleans Rhythm and Blues singer
Fats Domino. In the late 1950s, New Orleans R&B was a big
influence on Jamaican music.
When Jamaicans got a taste of
ska music on the verge of their Independence, his Rise Jamaica
(Independence Time Is Here), was no exception.
Morgan’s Forward March was one
of the biggest Independence anthems. Born March 27, 1940, in Mocho,
Clarendon, the singer/songwriter enjoyed great popularity in the early
1960s with producer Leslie Kong.
Reflecting on Forward March,
Morgan said it highlighted the buoyant mood in the country leading up
to Independence.
“We were very happy even though
many people did not know what Independence meant. The song came to me
as a way to tell everyone to move forward,” he told the Observer.
“When I heard Jamaica was
getting Independence, I decided to write this song. I sit down and
write the song with Leslie Kong who gave me the idea for the intro to
Forward March.”
Morgan said he performed
Forward March for the first time on August 5 on the eve of Independence
at a civic ceremony in downtown Kingston.
Since the start of the Festival
Song Contest 46 years ago, Derrick Morgan has written a number of
winning songs for fellow artistes.
The first was Jamaica Whoa in
1998 by Neville Martin. Then in 2000 with Fi Wi Island A Boom by
Stanley Beckford, followed two years later by Progress from Devon Black
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