By Charles H. E. Campbell
Over the recent holiday season, Sizzla re-emerged as the
most popular, in-form and hard-working headline act on the live circuit, at
this time in Jamaica. A casual glance of the flyers and advertisements, as well
as the show reviews, reveal that he not only performed at a majority of the
large annual stage shows and ‘name-brand’ events such as Sting and Superjam, but
skilfully moderated his repertoire and approach for smaller, more intimate gigs
like Resistance – a live tribute to Producer Fattis Burrell, staged by his son
Kareem. This is a subtle but critical aspect of performance careers, too often
missing from our younger artistes. From all the reports, Sizzla displayed
throughout, that he has reached a new plateau in mastery of his singing,
audience rapport and stagecraft. In so doing, he’s set the template and raised
the standard bar for local performances going forward.
On two of the shows, Sizzla was ushered off the stage by
police officers after the prescribed 2am deadline for live events, in accordance
with the Noise Abatement Act. Once again, this brings centre- stage focus by
the Entertainment Sector on the urgent need for its reform. It also drives home the dire consequences for
the sector if the Government doesn’t establish Entertainment Zones across
Jamaica, as one of the new measures being explored to allow live music to
thrive, especially during the peaks of our annual cultural calendar.
In the meantime however, promoters will have to be more
cognisant of the restrictions and time constraints imposed by this Act. They
will have to better plan their event schedules, especially the running order of
live performances, so that headline acts are given the maximum time they
deserve to delve into their repertoire for the pleasure of the patrons.
This triumphant re-emergence of Sizzla is in-keeping with a
positive trend in our music that has been taking root over the last five years.
Conscious and Roots style Reggae are once again coming into their own amongst
local artistes and music fans alike; gaining prominence on the live circuit, if
not on local radio airplay. This movement has, in large part, been led by artistes
such as, Protoje, Kabaka Pyramid, Chronixx, Jah 9, Iba Mahr, Jesse Royal, Ikaya
and Bands like, Raging Fyah, C-Sharp and Uprising Roots.
Billy Wilmot and his
family should be given a lot of credit for the monthly Jamesia series, through
which most of these acts continuously honed their craft, while getting
tremendous exposure.
Recently Mr. Vegas
and Busy Signal, two of Dancehalls dominant stars, grabbed
news headlines when they both released Reggae albums, enhancing their personal
profile and catalogue, while bringing even more international attention to the
genre.
Most of these artistes will be appearing on Rebel Salute,
which is being staged on January 18 & 19, at a new home this year, Richmond
Estate in Priory St Ann. The change of location to the North Coast and new
format are bold moves by Tony Rebel and his family, so I wish them blessings
and the best of luck.
Email:che.campbell@gmail.com
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/entertainment/The-re-emergence-of-Sizzla_13363529





1 comment:
Nice article. Bless up Kalonji--- ALLL TRU WORDS..
RASTAFARI TAKEOVA!!!!! 7777777
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