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Saturday, June 21, 2025

Ca­lyp­so world mourns The Mighty Duke

A gifted songwriter

by

20090114

Al­though I was a big fan, I was not one of Mighty Duke's favourite me­dia peo­ple. Our his­to­ry dates was back to the 1960s when mu­tu­al friends in­tro­duced us. Though al­ways cor­dial, our bone of con­tention dates back to 1986, the year David Rud­der swept the ca­lyp­so king­dom by win­ning three cov­et­ed ti­tles, in­clud­ing the Na­tion­al Monarch.

While I was singing prais­es to the art form's newest neo­phyte, Duke just could not see what I saw in this "up­start." We ar­gued and de­bat­ed this is­sue ad nau­se­am for years, well in­to the 1990s, es­pe­cial­ly about how the 1986 Road March–Bahia Girl–could be re­gard­ed as a ca­lyp­so.

Iron­i­cal­ly, what Duke did not con­sid­er at the time was that both he and Rud­der burst on the scene in al­most iden­ti­cal fash­ion, he be­ing a vir­tu­al un­known to ca­lyp­so com­pe­ti­tion when he won his first of four con­sec­u­tive his­to­ry-mak­ing na­tion­al ti­tles in 1968. The oth­er sim­i­lar­i­ty be­tween the two, one from Point Fortin, the oth­er from Bel­mont, was that they were both gift­ed song­writ­ers. While I, like thou­sands of oth­er ca­lyp­so lovers, en­joyed Duke's po­lit­i­cal and so­cial com­po­si­tions, I was pen­chant to his hu­mor­ous dit­ties, like Woop Wap Man, Freakin' Streakin', Visi­na, Horn Mih but doh Leave Mih, and Mrs Joseph, and his up­tem­po dit­ties, like Thun­der.

Es­pe­cial­ly for his sar­to­r­i­al el­e­gance and win­ning smile, Duke was wide­ly re­gard­ed as "the ladies man" of ca­lyp­so. No oth­er artiste, in ca­lyp­so or oth­er­wise, could colour-co­or­di­nate cloth­ing like Duke, and he was fas­tid­i­ous about this. I re­mem­ber one year back in the 1990s de­scrib­ing a Duke en­sem­ble as a dou­ble-breast­ed suit and, no soon­er as the pa­per hit the street, he called me, chastis­ing me for not know­ing the dif­fer­ence be­tween a suit and a de­sign­er, three-piece be­spoke. A tra­di­tion­al­ist and purist, in cloth­ing and de­meanour, but more im­por­tant­ly of ca­lyp­so, Duke is an­oth­er of the old guard who's been sum­moned to the high­er tent, to join sim­i­lar­ly mind­ed bards like Pre­tender, Roar­ing Li­on, Kitch­en­er and Ter­ror. He will be missed.


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