JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Sunday, March 9, 2025

Leg­endary mu­sic pro­duc­ers slam T&T mu­sic...

'We need a new direction'

by

20100102

On the ground lev­el of�the fa­mous Char­lie's Records on Ful­ton Street in Brook­lyn, Rawl­ston Charles stands in front of just two of the many gold records he has churned out over the years. He is tall, sar­to­r­i­al and as debonair as ever. He con­cedes that the mu­sic in­dus­try has changed course, dra­mat­i­cal­ly. But he is al­so trou­bled�by the to­day's mu­sic–T&T mu­sic, that is. And for one wide­ly con­sid­ered a leg­endary fig­ure in ca­lyp­so and so­ca mu­sic, what he had to say should be lis­tened to... at­ten­tive­ly. His tone is mel­low but his words are provoca­tive, in­ci­sive. "Our mu­sic�tells us what is hap­pen­ing in our so­ci­ety. There is a beat, but re­al­ly no melody. Melodies live on...beats change from day to day," he says. And for one who has pro­duced the likes of Swal­low, Shad­ow, Scrunter, Blue Boy, Ex­plain­er, and the list goes on and on, such words are in­deed weighty.

He is fa­ther­ly, invit­ing to­day's youth to lis­ten to the mae­stros of the past and learn. "The youth should not get an­gry with what I am say­ing. I un­der­stand that they are still try­ing to find them­selves." "Our mu­sic has to of­fer more. It must have greater ap­peal." And in a state­ment that may stir some re­flec­tion, if not con­tro­ver­sy, he adds, "Reg­gae mu­sic of­fers every­thing. You can re­lax, make love with it, and dance to it. But with our mu­sic, it's all about hands in the air, wav­ing and jump­ing. This is fast food mu­sic; there is no iden­ti­ty." Char­lie, as he is af­fec­tion­ate­ly called, ac­knowl­edges the dif­fi­cul­ty in re-es­tab­lish­ing�the melody and cross over ap­peal of the 80s and ear­ly 90s. "The young peo­ple just don't see us. We are here and they are over there."

Up­stairs at the stu­dio, su­per en­gi­neer and pro­duc­er Franklyn Grant is be­hind the con­trols. He is busy�mix­ing some new tracks. It's a state of the art fa­cil­i­ty that had been the adopt­ed home of Cur­tis Blow and Heavy D–and of course count­less ca­lyp­so and so­ca artistes. Franklyn has worked with the very best. And that in­cludes Jen­nifer Lopez and Ted­dy Ri­ley. He is al­so cred­it­ed with one of so­ca's biggest hits, Workie Workie, by Burn­ing Flames. Singer Ty­ro Matthews of Moru­ga, is al­so in the stu­dio. Franklyn and Rawl­ston go way back. Franklyn, who�grew up in Tacarigua,�must rein­vent the wheel, so to speak. He did it be­fore; why not again? He shares many of Rawl­ston's sen­ti­ments. "We must take so­ca to an­oth­er lev­el," he says. He cites UB40, a British band that shot to fame with the help of reg­gae mu­sic, dom­i­nat­ing the Eu­ro­pean charts in the 80s. "Look, our mu­sic must be big­ger than Car­ni­val. Don't get fooled. When for­eign­ers go to Car­ni­val and jump to so­ca they are en­joy­ing every­thing about the ex­pe­ri­ence. It does not mean that they will be tak­ing that mu­sic home with them."

He�con­tin­ues, "How can the mu­sic en­joy in­ter­na­tion­al ac­claim if there is no air­play here in the States...if no one is buy­ing?" Franklyn iden­ti­fies ma­jor prob­lems fac­ing so­ca mu­sic, one of which is boot­leg­ging. An­oth­er is the preva­lence of un­der­ground Caribbean ra­dio sta­tions that can be closed at any time by the au­thor­i­ties. "Our mu­sic just doesn't have the av­enues for ex­po­sure," he says. "Why don't the gov­ern­ments buy some sta­tions here and pro­mote our stuff prop­er­ly?" he asks. Franklyn is all about mu­sic. He has stud­ied the art well and be­lieves that so­ca must take on main­stream sta­tus to sur­vive. He ad­mires Kevin Lit­tle's mu­sic and Machel Mon­tano's work on One More Wine. "Now that is mu­sic that takes a lit­tle from all gen­res," he says with some an­i­ma­tion. Char­lie's Records' new "chair­man", Ku­ti Grant, joins the dis­cus­sion. He is Rawl­ston's son. He must chart a new course and car­ry the mu­si­cal ba­ton hand­ed to him by his fa­ther.

Pen­ny Bernard joins the group. A sen­sa­tion­al vo­cal­ist, she is al­so a for­mer Miss T&T USA. Franklyn and Ku­ti are bank­ing that Ty­ro and Pen­ny will be the next big acts at Char­lie's. Their�mu­sic is now play­ing non-stop in the stu­dio–loud­ly–and every­one is in high spir­its. Rawl­ston is down­stairs. It is more sub­dued there but sure­ly the good news will reach him. Af­ter all, as he stat­ed ear­li­er, "I am on­ly se­mi-re­tired. I still have one foot in the door."–Glenville Ash­by is�a New York-based jour­nal­ist


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored