Sunday, 14 May 2006

Bob Marley, The Peacemaker

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Charles E Campbell
Sunday, May 14, 2006

This week, I want to take the time out to honour the memory of Bob Marley noting the day he departed from this world 25 years ago. It would be remiss of me not to also honour my father, Alfred Campbell - an Anglican priest who also coincidentally died on May 11th, a year ago today.

Both these men were missionaries in their own right; products of two consecutive generations deeply influenced by Jamaican cultural impulses.

Bob did his first recording, the admonitory Judge Not, in 1959. Despite this early attempt, he failed to connect with that critical mass until the period of 1964-1966, when The Wailers became sound system kings. In Jamaica, they recorded over 100 tracks for Coxsone Dodd's Studio One music outfit, including covers of the Beatles, Bob Dylan and Tom Jones. During one week in particular, they had five of the top 10 songs on the local hit parade.

Between 1968 and 1972, while signed to the American duo of Johnny Nash and Danny Simms, Bob Marley and The Wailers covered hits by American artistes like The Archies, The Box Tops and James Brown. In Jamaica, 1968 was a watershed year. When the Rastafarian and the American-borne Black Power movements converged and erupted in the Rodney Riots, the main lyrical content of our music was forever changed.

Bob, Bunny and Peter were also going through their own private transformation; from accepting the tenets of Rastafari to changing producers and working with Lee 'Scratch' Perry and his Upsetters band, who produced the albums, Soul Rebel, African Herbsman and Rasta Revolution.

In 1972, now signed to Chris Blackwell's Island Records, the Wailers released the classic Catch A Fire album, and quickly followed it up with Burnin'. Unfortunately, this also precipitated the split-up of the band.
Aston 'Family Man' Barrett and Tyrone Downie were now the main musicians responsible for the arrangements of the Wailers Band.

When compared with Bob's earlier works, it is not hard to detect changes in the music's structure; Downie introduced synthesisers, strings and extra guitar parts. Back at home, our complaints were that the music was being watered down. On the international circuit, however, to quote Roger Steffens, "The two Island LPs had garnered ecstatic press, particularly in Britain. The British tours and TV dates showed a receptive and excitable audience, hungry for the Wailers' new brand of 'international style' Reggae."

[Bob Marley, Spirit Dancer - Bruce W Talamon, 1994]
Today, we hear a reprise of that parochial tendency in relation to Sean Paul and the new genre called Reggaeton or Spanish Reggae.
In 1974, the I-Threes joined Bob Marley and the Wailers on what is still considered his most riveting and revolutionary work, Natty Dread.

Bob had begun maturing in his newly adopted religion and now saw the world through the eyes of his Rastafari philosophy. The album comprised chilling, tauntingly angry lyrics on tracks like, Dem Belly Full (But We Hungry), Rebel Music, Talking Blues, Revolution and No Woman No Cry.

In 1975, Eric Clapton's cover of I Shot The Sheriff rocketed to the number one position on the American charts and Bob's concert tours of Europe and the US were now filling large venues and concert halls. Bob's stage demeanour was no longer playful and flirtatious - he had become a shaman.

Rastaman Vibration, released in 1976, became Bob's only top-10 hit in America. I pause at this point of the chronology to remind us of the still visible scars of political tribalism which plagues Jamaica to this day.

At this time, Bob - under 'nuff' pressure from associates like myself - conceded to doing the Smile Jamaica concert, as a consequence of which Bob, his wife Rita and manager Don Taylor were shot by 'unknown assailants'. The world has it that these perpetrators went unpunished, but Jamaican folklore tells a different tale, including a death, execution-style, sometime later in McGregor Gully, East Kingston.

In 1988, post-Peter Tosh's death, I was in Cameroon organising our first West African Reggae Sunsplash tour and boasting of the great Black heroes of the West who advocated for the liberation and development of the African continent. An African stopped me dead in my tracks with the comment, "But in Africa, we do not shoot our heroes".

That night in 1976, at Heroes Park, Bob's lyrics, One good thing about music/when it hits you feel no pain had new meaning. He went even further, Puss and dog, dem get together/why can't we love one another.

Flash forward to January 10, 1978, five days after the Green Bay Massacre - a pair of enemy gun men, Claudie Massop (JLP) and Aston Thompson, aka Bucky Marshall (PNP), negotiated a 'spontaneous' truce as a response to the clear signal sent by the State security forces. They planned a concert to celebrate the peace treaty and convinced Manley and Seaga to appear, but they needed someone above the political fray to symbolise the armistice. They flew to London and met with Bob, who again answered his people's call.

Bob took the stage shortly after midnight. That night is one from which many stories and myths have been spun. One report says that at 12:09 am, two 20-second earthquakes occurred. What is sure is that in the audience at the National Stadium were people who had not shared the same the same breathing space for over four years. It was the 12th anniversary of Haile Selassie I's visit to Jamaica.

As he ended his set with Jammin', Bob called for "the two leading people of this land to come up here and shake hands, show the people that you are gonna unite, show the people that you love 'em right". The significant gesture of Seaga and Manley together with their hands clasped over Bob's head is indelibly inked in our memory and our history.

That's the stuff of which heroes are made. In the right place, at the right time and for ever more through this single act - more than any other - Bob Marley became Jamaica's national hero, a symbol of peace and 'One Love'. He united the nation through music. In June 1979, two years before his untimely death, Bob was awarded a United Nations medal for peace.

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Sunday, 2 April 2006

The Coronation of Mama P

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Charles H E Campbell
Sunday, April 02, 2006

.And the masses took over King's House, adding levity, colour, fun, humour and carefree dancing. Jamaicans crowned our first queen mama, the Most Honorable [Reverend] Portia Lucretia 'Mama P' Simpson-Miller, officially in our own indigenous manner on Thursday, March 30.

If you attended Thursday's swearing-in ceremony and public reception - in keeping with the season upon us - you may well have thought, "hey, is this a carnival event or what?"

When we arrived with our presumed very special 'red strip' invitations, looking first for a uniformed usher, then for seats in the demarcated, supposedly dignified and exalted section, neither was available. It was clear that the public euphoria following Portia's election has produced an unprecedented outpouring of Jamaicans from all walks of life, overwhelming the organisers, facilities and staff.

Initially I felt embarrassed, disappointed, let down. We found our associates, borrowed chairs from another section and joined them. Spontaneity and ingenuity were the order of the day- it was either 'join them or leave them', the latter which Bruce eventually did. Pity he has not yet learnt how to flex.
To miss was to 'dis'. can't stop the progress. Isn't it beginning to seem like Bruce is always leaving somewhere (or something)? There are always two sides to every coin. Yes, the organisers and protocol officers failed.

However, the result was a less frigid, less neo-colonial (is neo-liberalism being challenged here?), uniquely Jamaican atmosphere, filled with warmth, fun and good humour-like the hilarious uproar, momentarily distracting everyone, when KD Knight's image appeared on the screen provided for attendees at the back. Bwoy, if I were KD Knight, I would take a long hike somewhere in foreign.

At all times, however, you could feel the pride of the people, basking in this historical moment, when one of their own has finally broken the glass ceiling. For one afternoon, all the social barriers bruk down - to paraphrase Michigan & Smiley - at King's House. Even Ralph Gonsalves had to stand in the cheese and cracker line like everyone else, and in the process be 'ram jostled'.

Having placed her on the pinnacle of political power, the masses were not going to accept any back seats or relegation of their status to observe her formal installation. We enjoyed the poignant, relaxed atmosphere so much that by the end of the ceremony, rather than stay at the formal reception, we chose to join the sea of humanity in the public reception where we danced to some good classic Reggae music performed by the Bare Essentials until 10 pm. They were great, and along with Lloyd Lovindeer, captured the mood perfectly.

Hon. Aloun Assamba is our new Minister of Culture and she deserves congratulations and a warm welcome to the portfolio. She, however, does not need any introductions, having recently served as chairman of the JCDC. Even after her entry into the political arena, she faithfully continued to attend their events and functions.

What is even more important though is the formal link with tourism, recognising maybe that our culture is in essence what makes our tourism destination and product so uniquely attractive to visitors worldwide. A fuller integration of the two, therefore, can only serve to enhance our ability for growth in these two critical sectors of the economy.

Of course in my view, this development could become merely cosmetic change, unless related subject areas, departments, agencies and statutory bodies currently splintered and dispersed across various ministries, are consolidated and rationalized into one complete Ministry of Culture, under a central administrative structure, rather than the prevailing waste of financial and human resources due to multiple and duplicate administrative bodies. I wrote on this issue one year ago, in the Sunday Observer, March 20, 2005 and I now wish to quote liberally from what I said then.

In the present scenario, "the Ministry of Education, Youth and Culture has overall responsibility for Government's cultural policies through its culture division. However, the Jamaica Promotions Corporation (JAMPRO), which falls under the Ministry of Commerce, Science and Technology, has a film and an entertainment unit, the Ministry of Industry and Tourism has an entertainment division and the agency in charge of intellectual property also falls under the Ministry of Commerce, Science and Technology.

The Office of the Prime Minister still retains a cultural unit that produces special events along with its main responsibility for state ceremonies and the Ministry of Local Government is allotted funds for cultural-related activities under the Social Development Commission (SDC) and the division of Sport. Yet, the effect of all this is that the state has retreated from active influence and participation in the cultural lives of our communities.

What the sector needs and the state of the country demands is a consolidation of government funds into the Division of Culture. This will facilitate a sustained and extensive community programme all across the country promoting heritage, culture, community animation along with the visual and performing arts to foster an ethos of collaboration, fellowship and harmony among people from all walks of life in the processes of cultural assimilation and development.

National cultural activity should be a culmination and showcase of ongoing, sustained community activity, so that it is self-perpetuating. It should not replace it, as is now the case. So much of the budget that we should be spending in the development of creative talent in the communities is being spent on a plethora of "national" and quasi-state events which have mushroomed over recent years, attended by a rotation of about fifteen hundred people, most of whom can afford to pay for their own entertainment and do not need the sponsorship of the state and otherwise have little interest in popular culture.

If there is an amalgamation and streamlining of these administrations and monies allotted to all ministries and agencies aforementioned, a higher proportion could be spent directly on more useful and socially viable cultural programmes and initiatives, channeling the creative energies of our youth, even profitable careers for some, away from the guns and other anti-social behaviour."

In Queen Mama's maiden speech on Thursday, she placed much emphasis on the symbol of hope expressed in her election, but to quote from Brian Meeks, "nothing has changed in Jamaica. There are powerful expectations of her and there will be intense frustration if Mama.doesn't deliver". (Los Angeles Times, March 20, 2006)

I detected a strong reliance on religion as a source of inspiration in the new PM's speech. She should be careful however, that this does not go overboard to the point of lulling the people like opium into apolitical activity or complacency.

Even though all our elections since 1980 have been peaceful affairs and our change of Governments since have been relatively smooth transitions, the same LA Times article amply exposes the daily diet of negative images that some North American press conjures up for their citizens about Jamaica. It said, "Politics has often been blood sport in Jamaica, where hundreds die in politically-driven gang clashes before each election."

Oft times perception is stronger and persists longer than fact. Please bear this in mind when determining the date to fly the gate.
Most Hon PJ Patterson, I hope you find some peace in your retirement. All told, it was a good, long innings. Walk good. One love.

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Album Review: Comin' In Tough by Freddie McGregor

For the last several weeks, I have had a constant 'companion' which I have selfishly kept to myself. This 'companion' has been so incredibly melodious and uplifting, that I now feel it is full time I share this treasure with other connoisseurs of good music. My reference is to Freddie McGregor's latest album, Comin' In Tough.

Be not intimidated or deterred by the album's title - instead prepare for some really easy listening that will possibly put you in cruise control mode. As Freddie McGregor, OD says in the liner notes, "October of 2004 was definitely the right time, the music is moving back to where it once was and the combination of Digital band and Big Ship crew proved well."

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There are some clarion call hymns for patriots, rallying for public morality and decency - Set The Programme, the recently radio friendly Bangarang and Lock It Down - two of the more lyrical originals and my personal favourites on this album:
Right ya now we come fi shut dem down, shut up the slackness and the madness,

All those crazy talk dem a carry roun' town,
Right ya now we come fi lock dat down, yeah,
Clean up your lyrics and spread love around,
Lock It Down - Track #1)

I can remember those days, yes, your vibes were nice, yeah,
Contrary to what some folks may say, Jamaica has gone a long way,
Now looking back from where we were, today is a much brighter day,
So fi free up di land mek di farmer dem go plant,
Production we need everyday now afu yam and yellow yam and what a bam bam, Jamaica yes we are strong,

Sing it now, Jamaica no waan no bangarang,
We no want it, we no need it yeah,
(Bangarang - Track #2)

As is customary with any complete Freddie McGregor recording, there are several lovers rock tracks on this album, including four excellent interpretations - The Gaylads' Red Rose, Brotherhood of Man's United We Stand which features Marcia Griffiths, The Wailers' Love and Affection and Ooh Child made popular by Nina Simone in the early 1970's. Track 16, the tune In Your Dreams, is a very infectious updated version of our traditional Mento song, Evening Time.

A third major theme explored on Comin' In Tough album comes from some conscious Rastaman redemptive songs calling for change to the harsh reality of existence for the underprivileged amongst us - Comin' In Tough, Choices, and Better Way.
Pick Yourself Up, done in conjunction with Morgan Heritage is a great motivational piece in what has now become a classic tradition of this contemporary group.

Can You Feel It has such a catchy vibe instilled by Anthony B's innovative rapping, that its likely by the end of the song you will be tapping your feet, clapping your hands and singing the chorus, "people raving, dancehall grooving, people carrying on from dusk til' dawn."

Sister Marcia Griffiths, OD lends grace and relevance to this album in their duet United We Stand, a popular 1970's song poignant with symbolism of world peace, cultural diversity and harmony.

All told this album represents the best of the foundation and current trends in Reggae music. This is the type of album which music educators, politicians and human resources managers should be listening to and promoting within their various spheres of influence.

Freddie has not shortchanged thoroughness or quality in an attempt to achieve success. The results must be very satisfactory to him and his associates at VP Records. Freddie too must be very proud of his teenaged sons Daniel and Stephen, who produced four of the seventeen tracks included on the album - Choices, You Don't Know, Little Girl and Love On Our Side.

Consummate professional that he has become, he is well known for exhaustive liner notes. It includes some very expressive pictures of Freddie - very characteristic of his upbeat, pleasant personality.

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Sunday, 5 March 2006

West Indian Tribalism Post-CSM

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Charles H E Campbell
Sunday, March 05, 2006

While my bosses Rodney, Vinay and Wayne had me busting my butt over the last two weekends, friends of mine - some of Jamaica's better promoters and producers - were over in Trinidad having a whale of a time at the first Trinidad Carnival since the formalisation of the Caribbean Single Market.

They have since come home, chock full of stories, and some hilarious ones to boot. One story goes as follows: There they were, jumping in the streets, near the Port Of Spain Police Fraud Squad Station, at the Carnival Parade alongside Tribe, a Carnival Mas band which is very popular with Jamaicans, being reputed to have included some 183 J'can jammers this year.

A Trinidadian female reveller draws their attention to Tribe's security detail, who were in the process of mobbing and beating a helpless male photographer. This rescues the photographer as the Tribe security detail is compelled to quickly disperse.

In an act of obvious reprisal to this, the young lady referred to above, our Good Samaritan, is later the subject of harassment, including lewd remarks and is manhandled by members of Tribe's security detail, one of whom turns out to be a plainclothes (undercover) cop, when he is wearing his regular costume.

So, chivalrous gentleman that my friend Darren is, he comes to the young lady's rescue and proceeds to lead her away, when without further ado, they are viciously attacked and severely beaten by members of Tribe's security detail. Luckily, like valiant knights in shining costumed armour, with clenched fist employed as their source of honour, Darren's friends intervene, demolishing, yea, almost vanquishing the barbarians- sorry, I mean the infidels.

But plebs that they are, the Trini posse responds with primitive ice picks, Darren is stabbed right above his right ear and on his cheek bone.

Along with two others, he ends up at the hospital, nursing his wounds where the nurse attending to him curtly informs him that "we don't need you Jamaicans here". Poor Darren by this is devastated; meanwhile a fight breaks out elsewhere in the hospital, between two Trinidadian natives.

Rick and Claude, who are downstairs, waiting on the injured members of their party to be treated, rush upstairs to see if it is a continuation of the earlier incident involving their other friends. Happily it is not, but the police are called in to quell the pandemonium, and of course they come in guns a-blazing.

Rick and Claude are by now at the top of the stairs, staring into guns seemingly pointed at them, in the hands of uniformed police officers. In light of their earlier experiences with the Trini police, this scene ends with their hands in the air as the curtain comes down on another Trini carnival.

Meanwhile, back at home, I attended the Passa Passa play held just down the road from where I currently reside at the Jus Cheers Entertainment spot on the edge of St Ann's Bay on Wednesday night. I arrived just in time to witness real live passa passa myself. It seems the Passa Passa production team was draping the chain link fence that separated the premises from a block factory next door to 'block' their neighbours' ability to freely view the play.

This prompted their neighbours in the factory yard to begin to throw bottles over the fence into an area where paid patrons were already seated, necessitating a swift exodus of that area, but not before the bottles were duly returned in a volley. Luckily, the local police were brought in quickly and their mere presence dissipated the fracas.

It was instructive to see the large attendance for this play. There were, to my estimate, about 400 patrons. Then there was this awesome rapport which the actors/actresses had with their audience throughout the play. To me this was folk theatre at its best. Just Cheers is fast becoming the place to be for entertainment packages in St. Ann's Bay.

By the time you have read this, they will have staged Memories By The Score with Marcia Griffiths, Ken Boothe, John Holt, Derrick Morgan, George Nooks, Beenie Man and presented by Lloyd Parkes in association with People's Choice Promotions.

Ocho Rios has a relatively new sports bar called Ocean Eleven- it too has become a significant addition to the entertainment scene down here, because of its wide catalogue of musical genres played and at a moderate volume, actually allowing conversation. Ocean Eleven has an incredibly beautiful ambience with rustic but tasteful furniture, spaciously laid out. They provide an excellent assortment of drinks and a good entertainment program. I have observed a very good mix of locals and tourists in house easily fraternising.

And then I was at Courts St. Ann's Bay in the cashier's line on Wednesday. A buxom woman broke the line in front of another man, lightly stating "ladies before gentlemen", to which his retort was "not any more, a unno rule now, that why no woman nah rule my house. Gi unno an inch, unno want a mile fi tek liberty wid man".

Congrats Mrs Portia Simpson-Miller. Your win is indicative of a broader movement heralding a new social order and a break down of many prejudices still residing just below the surface of our Jamaican psyche.

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Sunday, 19 February 2006

Unwanted Marriages

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Charles Campbell
Sunday, February 19, 2006

Recently, I encountered a practice amongst artistes' managers that I find offensive. Reggae artistes should question if this practice of their managers marrying lesser lights - artistes with less talent, experience and exposure - to their own burgeoning careers, accrue to their benefit, or if in fact it injures their potential for increased performance bookings.

For argument's sake, let's say I'm an event producer and I have conceptualised an event programme and line-up in keeping with my objectives. I am interested in booking Fantan Mojah, but when his booking agent is contacted by my staff, they are informed that if we want Fantan, a Reggae/Dancehall artiste with a formidable track record and at least four solid hits to his credit, we will also have to book his stablemate, Nanko, who can only be classified as a one-hit wonder.

Technically, this is a form of extortion; that is forcing me to pay for goods or services that I do not want because you have the power or monopoly over other goods or services that I do want. Furthermore, Jamaican law explicitly forbids cartelisation.
We declined the suggestion, and so the manager increases Fantan's fee by $200,000.

This could imply one of two things - either that the agent was originally under-pricing Fantan Mojah in order to obtain bookings for Nanko, or we were expected to capitulate and hire both acts, thereby subverting our principles and hurting our programme. If we do not cave in, the result is that Fantan Mojah is no longer on the line-up of an event that could theoretically be the pivot his career needs to catapult him to international stardom.

What amazes me, however, is how widespread this practice has become in Jamaica in a short span. Yet no one seems prepared to come forward and speak out against this abhorrent business practice, for fear that their future productions will be boycotted by other agents and managers. "The [player] who plays by the rules is the one who gets shafted."

Instead, stage show audiences are often subjected to, and have to suffer through a slew of "yute a try a ting", while waiting for the headliners to take the stage.

These occurrences provoke comment on another practice, essentially borrowed from the Dancehall and out of its appropriate cultural space, that has become a feature of many stage shows - artistes bringing on numerous unscheduled acts (almost infinitum) during their stint on stage, many times to the utter boredom of most members of the audience.

All the same, I must admit that every now and again, during these charades, I have witnessed artistes bring on a stage guest during their performances, only to be upstaged and outclassed by that unknown act. In these circumstances, it becomes quite hilarious to watch the scheduled act try to recover the microphone, composure and audience attention.

These are some issues, urgent of debate within the music fraternity, since we are at variance from the international norms on these matters and it does irk international promoters and audiences and veer them away from booking our acts. In these cases, Reggae acts from other islands and countries are given preference where our talent and authenticity should naturally give us the edge.

The Jamaican people who pay to attend these shows must begin to let their voices be heard on these matters, while demanding that promoters use more objective criteria in developing their line-up and running order. For far too long, we have allowed our standards to be subverted and whittled away because we are unprepared to "get up, stand up for our rights", as Reggae icon Peter Tosh consistently encouraged us to do. No struggle is painless and victory comes at a price.

Over the last few days, I discussed this issue with a number of music industry personages. I was consistently cautioned, even by close associates, not to introduce the subject publicly, because I might prejudice my own short-term self-interest. If however, we want to improve the planning and organisation of live shows in this country on the eve of a renaissance, we must again go back to respecting some basic principles and ethics.

This, to a great extent, is what is holding back the potential of Reggae/Dancehall music and its practitioners. It is not that we do not have the talent in abundance, creativity or determination to succeed, instead we are hampered by poor business standards and strategies, as well as disregard for morality, ethics and codes of conduct.

I make no claim to be any paragon of virtue, but I do believe that it is incumbent on all of us to seek to protect the integrity of the Reggae music industry. In this regard, its main players and supporters have a special responsibility to take the lead in rebalancing and restructuring the scheme of things, including how we conduct our business affairs.

On a much more pleasant issue, I boldly predicted that Damian 'Junior Gong' Marley would win the Reggae Grammy for the album Welcome To Jamrock. In fact, he bettered this by also winning the Grammy for Best Alternative/Urban Performance.

I wish to wholeheartedly congratulate Damian on these accomplishments. While all the other nominees were also deserving of their nominations, it was always obvious that Welcome To Jamrock was way out front in terms of worldwide appeal and impact.

This time, locally, there has been no controversy about the selected winner, or the anticipated cynicism implying that his Marley genealogy added weight to his chances. The title song is a song of its time.

Big Up Junior! If I might give you some advice, too often our acts win one award and suddenly take off into the stratosphere, do silly things, change their address, their lifestyle, their producers, their managers, their friends- remember, "the higher monkey climb, the more him expose". Stay grounded; remember where you are coming from and what brought you here.

Please see this as a milestone on your career path and use it as a stepping stone to further successes. One Love, Uncle Charles.

PS Welcome back, Tim and Zola. Joining the team gets us to comfort zone and completes the karmic circle.

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Sunday, 5 February 2006

Wannabes

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Charles H.E. Campbell
Sunday, February 05, 2006

Do you know what I love about Jamaicans? They refuse to be left behind in any way, shape or form. On Thursday, January 26, opening night of the Air Jamaica Jazz and Blues Festival, a lady sitting to my left commented, "Look at all these 'wannabes', dem not the usual jazz and blues crowd at all. This whole affair has been spoilt!" I estimate that this was the largest opening night to date for the nine-year-old festival.

There were lots of first-time black, working class patrons mingling freely with the aristocrats, captains of industry, senior politicians and sundry others. By the way, the commentator above was also black, but she was being squired by a red skin, 'soft haired' (Lebanese-type) Jamaican Don Quixote. Her girlfriend, who sported braided natural hair, did not speak one single sentence of proper English, but.

The point is, the flood gates opened on that Thursday night for Air Jamaica Jazz and Blues Fest and I bet the organisers ain't feelin' no pain. The winning formula that began two years ago with country music star Kenny Rogers and Alicia Keys and continued last year with Dionne Warwick, Roberta Flack, Norah Jones and Toots and the Maytals, has this year paid off handsomely for Walter Elmore and his team.

Even while provoking the ire of jazz purists, without the infusion of the pop genre, this festival would not today be the tremendous success that it has become since Walter took control of the project. This is a commercial reality that the minority in the audience who do not welcome the broader class mix and the participation of these and others like Bounty Killer's cameo, will simply have to live with.

For instance, on Thursday night, with about 7,000 patrons present, Morgan Heritage proved their 'meckle' that they are right up there in terms of showmanship, stage craft and musical genius with people like Puerto Rican jazz flautist, Nestor Torres and R&B sensation John Legend. These three shared the limelight on this the opening night of the three day long festival, and the audience showed equal appreciation. Another great performance, Morgan Heritage! Your act gets better every time.

Many Montegonians who had stayed away in previous years were out in their numbers, lapping up the sophisticated atmosphere which before had only attracted an almost 'purely' exclusive middle-class audience. In my estimation, that is one thing about good music and a good blend of all classes, united in love and appreciation of excellent performances, spanning multiple genres, the vibe was exhilarating and left us all on a high.

As my classmate and lifelong friend C P Henriques commented, "When Marguerittaville close down, den yuh know su'mn a draw de crowd." The organisers deserve high praise for delivering a first class international production.

On Friday night, R&B crooner turned reverend, Al Green who closed the evening's offerings, was great, but maybe should have performed before Air Supply. An artiste of his experience should not have started his set with two largely unknown songs.

Air Supply, however, did not waste time in rocking the estimated 12,000 persons present. From their first song, they served up hit after hit non-stop. The ladies were rushing to the front of the stage, some in joyous tears - when lead singer Graham Russell came into the audience, the place literally erupted.

Bo Diddley was very much in the vein of Monty Alexander and taught the youth present the history of world music. Did you know that this is what inspired Elvis Presley's Rock and Roll phenomenon? However, at the time, only White artistes could sell its records so Elvis' success also spelt the eventual success of people like Bo Diddley.

UB40 has done a very similar thing for Reggae music, using their international visibility and success to gain a wider audience for Reggae with their hit covers of Jamaican classics like Wear You To The Ball, Many Rivers To Cross and Eric Donaldson's Cherry Oh Baby. Lord Creator, who penned and was the original performer of Kingston Town, possibly UB40's most popular cover to date, has always maintained that he has been living from the royalties that UB40 has generated. All the same, it's now safe to say that we have come along a far way in terms of racial acceptance and tolerance.

Saturday, which featured a mass audience of approximately 15,000 people and the closing night of the festival, belonged to Patti LaBelle. Her precursors Maxi Priest and James Ingram did themselves well, but the obvious taker was Ms LaBelle whose commanding stage presence, rich sonorous voice, drama and string of hits had every member of the audience standing and singing along. It was a tremendous feeling to be in the audience sharing that sea of human emotions and harmony. kinda like Reggae Sunsplash, huh?

By far, the most interesting feature of the festival this year was the impressive stage, with new intelligent lights and state-of-the art Meyer front-of-house system. The personnel enhanced this with their relatively speedy set changes.

I was particularly impressed with the electronic backdrop which continually projected images of the performances as well as still images such as Al Green's infamous shirtless album cover for his Greatest Hits Volume One. This has certainly lifted the level of technical production locally.

With the recent mass introduction of personal folding chairs, promoters will have to find a solution to maintaining pathways for crowd flow. The tussle to move around at the festival was unbearable.

In fact, during their performance on Friday night it was obvious that Russell of Air Supply, feeding off the audience wanted to penetrate deeper, however, because there was no unimpeded pathway, he did not come.

Thank God we did not have a medical emergency or an occurrence like last year when the public address stack began to come down. This could have created a serious crisis. The narrow pathway leading from the gate to the amphitheatre was a bottleneck of bodies and proved a recurring nightmare throughout the event.

One of the spin-offs of being a public figure is that you suddenly get voluntary spokespersons telling people your views of them, or on issues discussed privately. They of course, are free to quote you completely out of context. On the upside, it certainly gets the word out of FOC and sometimes saves a lot of unproductive time.

They say that in show business "any publicity is good publicity". For those people who really want to know my views about the social responsibility of the artiste fraternity, please read my published articles, Self-Regulate or Perish (The Sunday Observer, June 12, 2005) and TOK TKO'd (The Sunday Observer, January 8, 2006). The owners of the past plantation system continue to delude themselves and have not yet realised that the 'animals' have taken over.

Ronnie. I shall always respect and honour your contribution. Furthermore, you remain my older brother and mentor and deserve the highest praise and an appropriate tribute, never mind your reticence.

Wayne Murray, owner/operator of True Tone, tells me that nothing was wrong with the public address system at Third World's 'Committed', held at King's House on December 27 and Smirnoff Experience, headlined by Sean Paul, held on December 23 - it was the engineers provided by the artistes to mix the house system that produced the poor sound. John gives me the same reason for the sound at Air Jamaica Jazz and Blues on Friday night.

Meanwhile, the personnel responsible for refuelling the generator at Rebel Salute fell asleep during Burning Spear's performance, causing the stage lights to go out on him before he finished his set.

Aaah. the vagaries of this business. Come on guys, sound engineers employed to international artistes must keep up with the new technical advances in public address systems, especially the features of mixing boards which you may be required to use at first class events.

While you may know the various songs and intonations of them and therefore hold exclusive authority when your artiste is on stage, you have to polish up your act and not make your audiences continue to suffer. As is now the case and in most instances, the providers of the systems take the flak for your inefficiencies,

In my view, there has to be a re-balancing of the ownership of this area of production on these large events. The promoter's/supplier's engineers must have at least equal authority in such a scenario because ultimately, they are responsible for all aspects of the production. In the end, it is really all about what you hear.

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Sunday, 22 January 2006

Good Omens

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Charles Campbell
Sunday, January 22, 2006

Currently, there is speculative interest being generated in regards to a debate as to whether the market can viably sustain three large summer festivals. Meanwhile, Barbados has multiple festivals annually and I have even seen plans by St Lucia - a smaller island with a much smaller population - to commence promoting large festival-type events monthly.

The interests concerned have already received UNESCO endorsements and substantial capital support from international, public and private sponsors.

A good guide to determining the depth of the live event market is to assess the gate returns from events held within the four-week period of December 15, 2005 to January 15, 2006. During this period, as usual, there was a plethora of public parties and smaller stage shows, as well as Sting (Dec 26), East Fest (December 30) and Rebel Salute (January 14).

This must be the first year in many aeons that I have not heard any promoter complaining about having lost monies invested in any one of the events.

Better still is the feedback from patrons about these live shows, that by comparison this year, they experienced a higher level of organisation, including shorter band changes and expedient crowd and traffic control than they have become accustomed to in previous years. This is indeed good news, and augurs well for future growth of these events.

While it is the time to say that attendance numbers at Rebel Salute were less than last year, for two reasons, I was not surprised. Firstly, Jimmy Cliff's career was already on a resurgence on the local scene when he was announced as the headliner and therefore became a fillip to ambivalent or wavering patrons.

Last year too, however, with preparations to expand access roads and parking facilities commencing too late, compounded by rainfall and too few traffic cops - especially senior officers - and security personnel assigned to this task, access and egress for the average patron was a nightmare.

Due to previous promises that were unfulfilled, there was some amount of cynicism when it was announced this year that there would be increased car park capacity and that high command would oversee the traffic arrangements and I know of more than a few people who stayed away primarily for this reason.

Happily, they were proven wrong and the traffic flow before and after went relatively smoothly. Congratulations are in order to both the police traffic department and Flames Productions. The production staff are also due commendations on the set changes at Rebel Salute. They were tight and efficient.

I must single out Noddy Virtue for special mention for his commanding stage presence and use of stagecraft. Most of the other younger artistes on the show performed mostly in a crouching stance, giving the audience a sideways view of them rather than full frontal view. Noddy's entrance was full of drama, then he gave us full, upright stance before doing his little skank from time to time.

Don't get me wrong, I like an active performer who makes full use of his stage and on that show, Bunny Rugs and Luciano surely displayed how to do it. and yes, Rodney, your namesake certainly squandered a lot of his mystique on that night.

It is an incumbent on artistes' managers to impart the importance and techniques of stage craft to their protégés at an early phase of their career if they are aiming for lasting international impact as performers. Take Ninjaman for example, he has perfected this art and in doing so has sustained a long career even when he does not have current songs on the hit parade.

Year after year at Reggae Sunsplash and Sting, he delivers thrilling performances that overshadow other contenders in his genre. What I am happy to see though, is more of our artistes 'dressing the part', so to speak. The industry went through a low point when acts were coming on stage 'in any ol' clothes'- thank God that this now seems to be totally relegated to the past.

Brazilian Reggae band, Lions of Israel did themselves and Reggae proud at Rebel Salute that night. I certainly hope that Jamaicans and Latin Americans, who did not get the opportunity to see their performance, will again get the chance to see them in June at the Caribbean and Latin American cultural festival now being planned. It is encouraging to see how enthusiastic the Spanish, Peruvian, Cuban, Colombian and Mexican embassies have been toward this project.
This brings me back to my pet subject of 'Brand Jamaica'.

We met with the Colombian ambassador this week and in looking at him and hearing him speak, one began to wonder whether he was originally from St Elizabeth or Westmoreland. Of course, as it turns out, his ancestors - like that of many Colombians - are Jamaicans and they revere this historical link while retaining many traditional cultural norms and forms like mento music which has in turn influenced newer forms of music in Colombia and other Hispanic countries in the region.

Mento is so ingrained in our subconscious that you can hear distinct strains of it whenever there is an election campaign on. It is no different this time around. Have you heard Portia Simpson's campaign songs, for instance?

While I believe it is partly because of alienation to popular music and culture, I also believe that the genre harkens back or portends to a gentler Jamaica.

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Sunday, 8 January 2006

TOK TKO'd

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C H Campbell
Sunday, January 08, 2006

Well. what else could one say? TOK shot themselves in the foot twice on two consecutive days over the recent holiday season. Their behaviour at Smirnoff Experience, headlined by burgeoning sensation Sean Paul, and the Renaissance Christmas Eve Party, held on December 23 and 24 respectively, was obtuse to say the least.

I am not convinced it is uncontrolled homophobia which made them draw for their now-stale Chi-Chi Man charade; in my view it was a vain attempt to revive their listless career. Unfortunately, they seem determined to (drag) down the entire reggae fraternity with them - mired in their own special 'product of the cesspool'.

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Do we allow TOK to throw principle through the window in defence of their so-called morals?

Hear dem nuh - "Don't ever make your morals be compromised by cowardice" (Sunday Observer, December 25, 2005); such high-sounding principles used to rationalise their own pending obsolescence. So do we allow them to throw principle through the window in defence of their so-called morals? President of Red Stripe, Mark McKenzie's response is, "I am neither for censorship nor discrimination, but I am for honouring contracts and agreements."

There are two critical factors necessary for the continued success of the Jamaican reggae music industry. Firstly, there is a need for significant corporate sponsorship and secondly, the necessity to market our products and artists in the international arena.

Let us grasp that reality. The Jamaican marketplace is too small for any one artiste to absolutely pin his or her career on. We must therefore respect the laws and cultural nuances of other countries and peoples who love and revere our music and our artistes. The last thing we need right now is another round of boycotts of Jamaican artistes touring or their records/CDs abroad.

Let me be very clear on my position - I am a resolute promoter of free speech and expression. I will defend anyone's right to oppose a lifestyle which is objectionable to his creed or religion.

While I perfectly understand the ingrained influence of the Old Testament/Fundamentalist beliefs which underpin our culture - taught for decades by mostly American-style evangelicals and churches which dot our Jamaican terrain, I also stand for cultural and religious tolerance. In this context, I know that many times the lyrics by our reggae/dancehall artistes are metaphorical; however these are sometimes misunderstood, interpreted literally by the international marketplace and even locals who live outside of the mass social sphere.

Now, the onus is on the artistes to be more creative in expressing their sentiments, so as not to seem discriminatory or offensive, even if it is unintentional. Leachim Semaj offers, rather than 'Fire bun' we could express the same sentiments without agitating peoples sensibilities by singing 'Gi mi water mek wi bless dem'.

The primary principle involved in this issue, however, is that a contract is a voluntary agreement between parties on the assumption that all parties are honourable. Said another way, if you are of the view that you cannot abide by any of its clauses, then you should honourably refrain from entering into the contract. It was most dishonourable therefore, to have indicated acceptance of the terms and conditions of the contract to perform and then proceed to disregard them in practice.

On another matter, it was reported to me that the sound at both Smirnoff Experience and the Third World show (held on December 27) was distorted, yet the system used was supposedly the best system in the country in terms of size and quality equipment. I am very interested in knowing what went wrong on both occasions.

In 2004, Third World's Committed had some no-shows and this was again the case in 2005 with Luciano, Freddie McGregor, Half Pint and Beres Hammond advertised, but not performing. This is not good enough. I hope their averages improves this year.

From all reports, Sting scored a success in attendance and performances this year. Congratulations are certainly in order to the promoters for sticking to a line-up heavily leaning towards conscious reggae/dancehall and it is sure proof that this resurgence has now taken a firm hold of our Jamaican audiences.

.Until East Fest came to its unfortunate end, reports consistently maintained that this year was much better organised and there were some exceptional performances by Elephant Man, Pinchers, Gregory Isaacs, Marcia Griffiths, Baby Cham, John Holt, Freddie McGregor and Natural Black, whose segment really stood out with hits flowing one after another.

I am sure we are all now looking forward to Rebel Salute on January 14, the first big Reggae event of the year, which will be headlined by, Third World, Inner Circle, The Congos and of course still reigning Reggae warrior, Burning Spear.

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