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Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Dancehall artistes in PoS peace talks

by

Joshua Seemungal
1723 days ago
20200707
Dancehall stars Toppy Boss, left and Prince Swanny shake hands after last Saturday’s dancehall peace meeting at the plannings at George Street, Port-of-Spain.

Dancehall stars Toppy Boss, left and Prince Swanny shake hands after last Saturday’s dancehall peace meeting at the plannings at George Street, Port-of-Spain.

Joshua Seemungal

One day be­fore lo­cal dance­hall artiste Kyle “Rebel Sixx” George was mur­dered, a group of Trini­bad artistes from op­pos­ing sides, some with al­leged af­fil­i­a­tions to the Ras­ta City and Mus­lim gangs, had come to­geth­er for a peace deal.

At George Street in Port-of-Spain on Sat­ur­day, nine artists, some among the most pop­u­lar in the genre, shook hands, call­ing for an end to long-stand­ing ten­sions be­tween mu­si­cians from op­pos­ing sides.

Ac­cord­ing to those present, it was a move to en­sure the genre ad­vanced, as well as to pro­vide a bet­ter ex­am­ple for the coun­try’s black youth.

Res­i­dents, most with phones in hand, gath­ered at the plan­nings at 54-56 George Street to wit­ness the truce.

In a tes­ta­ment to the enor­mous pop­u­lar­i­ty of the artistes, some res­i­dents called it his­to­ry in the mak­ing and a day they would nev­er for­get.

The artists present in­clud­ed Prince Swan­ny, Top­py Boss, Medz Boss, Law­less, Mag­ic, Siah Boss, Bra­vo, Leo King and Leroy.

A peace deal was made pos­si­ble by the en­tourages of Prince Swan­ny and Top­py Boss, who were al­so present at the Plan­nings.

Among the mem­bers of the en­tourage were Kevin “John­ny Bra­vo” Da Cos­ta, ra­dio per­son­al­i­ty Kwe­si “Su­pa Hype” Lee, so­ca star Or­lan­do Oc­tave as well as man­ag­er Dr V.

Pri­or to the meet­ing, the artistes had a long-stand­ing beef but on Sat­ur­day they swore to put that be­hind them.

“We are the voice of the ghet­to. It’s the right thing for the up­com­ing gen­er­a­tion. This is a big move right here. I hope it lasts and we do the right thing,” Prince Swan­ny, whose re­al name is Taryll Swan, said.

“It’s re­al­ly no gang thing or noth­ing but this is some­thing every­body was to agree with. Some peo­ple might not like it. Cer­tain peo­ple might not agree but we’ve come to one de­ci­sion and agreed.”

Top­py Boss, short­ly af­ter shak­ing hands with Prince Swan­ny, said, “It’s good for the coun­try. It good for the mu­sic. Trinidad in Trinidad, right now, is the move­ment.”

The agree­ment came days af­ter scores of young peo­ple from com­mu­ni­ties in East Port-of-Spain protest­ed through the streets of Port-of-Spain, de­mand­ing jus­tice for the killing of three men in Mor­vant on June 27.

While there have been claims that gangs have unit­ed to tar­get po­lice, there was no sug­ges­tion of any threats of vi­o­lence at Sat­ur­day’s meet­ing.

The mes­sage was uni­ty and peace.

“This is the right thing to do. The whole of Trinidad want­ed to see it, so we came out and rep­re­sent,” dance­hall artiste Mag­ic said, stand­ing next to Medz Boss.

Members of the Trinibad stable mix with fans and residents during a dancehall peace meeting at the plannings at George Street, Port-of-Spain, last Saturday.

Members of the Trinibad stable mix with fans and residents during a dancehall peace meeting at the plannings at George Street, Port-of-Spain, last Saturday.

Joshua Seemungal

Prince Swan­ny, whose video Dreams has 5.8 mil­lion Youtube views, urged dis­il­lu­sioned youth to stay pos­i­tive what­ev­er their cir­cum­stances. He said he him­self has sur­vived or­deals peo­ple would nev­er be­lieve, but through hard work he’s been able to carve out a suc­cess­ful mu­sic ca­reer.

“Pray. Stay pos­i­tive and do the right thing all the time. Be­lieve in your­self. In any­thing you do, do the right thing,” he said.

Sia Boss called for the youth to con­tin­ue fight­ing for their rights, even if it costs them their lives.

“Every youth has to make it at the end of the day. So it’s one love. One uni­ty. Let every broth­er push one an­oth­er. No more gang. No more war­fare, be­cause if you re­alise, at the end of the day, the sys­tem treat­ing we un­fair,” the Trini­bad artiste said.

Trini­bad, or Trinidad Dance­hall, is ar­guably now one of the more pop­u­lar mu­sic gen­res in the coun­try. Artistes with al­leged links to gangs have huge fol­low­ings on so­cial me­dia. In de­mand, Trini­bad songs play dai­ly on ur­ban ra­dio sta­tions, while some mu­sic videos amass mil­lions of views on Youtube.

How­ev­er, the genre has now lost two of its most pop­u­lar artistes in the last month.

On June 10, Kwin­ton “K Li­on” Thomas died from car­diac ar­rest in the Unit­ed States be­fore George was mur­dered in Bon Air, Arou­ca, on Sun­day night.

TrinidadDancehall


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