To begin with the disclaimers: Firstly, I've known and been friends with Louis Lee Sing for enough years to agree and disagree with him amicably and respectfully, and non-disruptively. Secondly, perish the thought that I would not want our homeless brothers and sisters to be well-accommodated and cared for; thirdly, I speak here more from a sense of personal reverie than from presumptuous representation of the views of others.That said, I make public the confession that I feel a palpable sense of disquiet about the proposal to convert the former home of 610 Radio into a shelter for the indigent.Rather, however, than perpetuate the gladiator-like combativeness that turns up in every encounter we have with each other these days, I would wish to suggest that should the proposal be actualised and the needy are moved into "Number 19" (as we remember it), a few thoughts should be deliberately raised in the consciousness of those who care, on all sides of the plan.
(Forgive me in this listing of "thoughts" for not including everything and everybody, and for sticking more or less to my own modest 11-year stint at 610 Radio, 1963-74.)I say, let the new tenants take up residence with the ghosts of those who first entered there in 1957 (a solid 54 years ago), and went on to give us a genuine golden era in broadcasting.Let them hear the gentle but firm voice of Larry Heywood delivering the morning prayer, (composed by him in what would be today considered a quaint effort to ask the Almighty's blessing on a workplace)...let them wonder if that happens today anywhere-especially at current radio stations.Let them hear the crisp Jazz of Desmond Bourne's Morning Show, to be followed years later by the enlivening effervescence of Dave Elcock who was everybody's infectious big brother in the morning.
Let them listen to news short, sharp and sensible, read every hour-on-the-hour by the likes of superb presenters: Frank Hughes, Leo De Leon, Freddie Wharwood, Yussuf Ali, Ashton Chambers, Jimmy Wong, Dik Henderson, Arnold Rampersad (Prof), Carl Buxo (Rev).The news was edited and radio-written by journalists of sterling quality: Ed Fung and Geoff Lewis out of Guyana, Jerome Rampersad out of "Magee" of the Evening News; John Babb of the Guardian; Raoul Pantin, a former customs broker assistant; Jimmy Maynard from the Guardian's subs desk, and later on Dennis Pantin, Carlisle Hinkson...all going on to become outstanding national and international figures otherwise, from poet to priest to Parliamentarian, from economist to entertainer to educator.Let them enjoy women's mid-morning programmes hosted by Lillian Fraser, then Ann Austin (Wharwood), Brenda De Silva, at times Astra Da Costa; a stunningly popular request show Open House, that broke new ground for what used to be the dead 1-4 pm period; a bubbly drive-time show Rolling Home, with hot local and swing music put together by the maestro Frisco Torrealba; Hans Hanoomansingh's elegant cultural bench-marker in Melodies of India and From the Silver Screen; Verne Allick's manly delivery of country-and-western fare in Country Roads; Carl Redhead's velvety baritones for the romantic sounds of Late Date.
As they wander through the building, they may hear distinguished specialities in Larry Heywood's Voice of One radio essay/editorials, which were unmissable and triggered an avalanche of requests for script-copies; the mind-builder Wonderful World, prepared by the gifted copy-writer Desmond Ahee (later mysteriously self-renamed Paul Rene) and voiced stentorianly by Leo De Leon. (These were programmes that, even in their somewhat vainglorious titles, could get away with the kind of innocent self-conscious melodrama that only a "friend" such as Radio would be allowed.)The homeless may be able to sit up or lay down for the echo of grippingly revolutionary current affairs shows that included: The Newsmakers, a first-time-ever one-hour nightly newscast, with unprecedented live reports and actuality inserts; Hotline, the country's first telephone call-in programme; The Nightpeople, pushing programming into the new zone of 11-midnight, dropping in on people who worked in the night-weathermen, air traffic controllers, sugar workers at Caroni factories, even streetwalkers in the city, at times given to live music from veterans as was Clarry Wears, and newcomers then as was Clive Zanda. They may be amazed by the sound of weekend spectaculars as in Horizons, with media crackshots such as Jones Madeira, Gideon Hanoomansingh, linking live select countries of the Caribbean every Sunday.
It would be good for them to hear again the live OBs (Outside Broadcasts), and the documentaries on countless vital matters: from exciting elections coverage, to sober and at times somber state events; the bringing of history as it was being made into the homes, cars, public places and the ear of every citizen near a radio-from man's first walk on the moon, to hurricane disasters, to local political upheaval in 1970; Grenada's debacle in the 1980's, Dennis McComie-et al's heroic service in 1990, Dr Eric Williams' death impact, with Erica speaking to the nation via a 610 microphone run up to her in the Red House; live presenting of the Wooding Constitution Commission from Chaguaramas Convention Centre; the visit of Pope John Paul II electrifying the country; the Black Power March to Caroni, the Mass for Private Bailey at Teteron Barracks under the eye of "mutineers," the telephone interview with Lt Raffique Shah in which he described the "mutiny"?as akin to a "labour strike;" the Bloody Tuesday March, whose courageous coverage led to outrageous action against Raoul Pantin, Jones Madeira, Jerome Rampersad and Tony Williams by the Communist-fixated chairman James Alva Bain.The new dwellers may discern in the corridors that it was the NBS of the 60s and 70s that first demonstrated the ability to be a Government-owned medium and yet be commercially successful and journalistically free and forward-thrusting (until the apocalypse of the "Bain of Radio"?who felt that scorched-earth was the best way to grow a crop of professionalism).
The homesteaders relocated to the 610 Building can revel in the playback of Sport and Cultural coverage by 610: truly glorious cricket from everywhere; an indefatigable Hollis Chin-Kee-Fatt reporting on every imaginable sport and revelling in its every controversy; coverage of football from as early as inter-Collegiate level, Olympic games as in Hasely Crawford's 1976 shining moment carried proudly by Tony Williams and Kenny De Silva in Montreal, cycling when a young Roger Gibbon paced the world, the multi-event Southern Games, horse races, and Great Races to Tobago.In culture, there was the eruption of first-time parang broadcasts, re-stimulating a joyous indigenous Christmas gift; Carnival colourfulness, from the enlightening at Panorama to the delighting at calypso and mas, on stage and on the streets, raising ad-lib commentary to a fine art; 610 becoming particularly formidable in producing and promoting the music and musicians of calypso, pan and ethnic mixes.A steady stream of entertainment, information and culture came from an eclectic range of sources: Johnny Boos hosting the American Top Forty; Sammy Bell giving folksy advice; the UWI students' programme that gave us a young Geddes Granger as well as Gordon Draper; farming help from two genial Guyanese overnight/early morning personalities, first Phil Viera, then later Joe Pires (father of BC, perhaps genetically drawn to the media); drama productions staged by Nobel Laureate Derek Walcott and his Theatre Workshop Group; John Cupid's ear-opening, spirit-enriching visits to villages across T&T; and innumerable events as they occurred and warranted public attention.
Our latest tenants will surely encounter proof that the building was the launch-pad for eminently historic take-offs and landings: the establishment of 610 Tobago, a prideful national expansion, as was the 610 South studio and office complex, spearheaded by the gregarious energiser Nazim Muradali; and equally ground-breaking, the launch of this country's first-ever FM service, Radio 100, in 1972.All this broadcasting set traditions and standards that were later carried on and no doubt improved on by flag-bearers including Tony Harford and Peter De Labastide (Fr), supported by a veritable "Google" service for things 610 in Vernon Allick.The ambulatory homeless can walk in the footsteps of not only great broadcasters who pleased the ear, but also technicians-cum-producers who wielded international standard skills with mikes and mixers, tape-recorders and turn-tables, as in Hamilton Clement, Tony Gomes, Ivan Seebarath, Ivor Ferreira, Hugh Phillip and Rudy Phillip; engineers who worked wonders in the face of limited resources, under sturdy leaders such as John Roe and Frank Thompson; business administration legends, as Peter Pitts (ole time calypso bonhomie), Phil Atteck (actual magician and the Lion who twinned Port-of-Spain with St Catherine's, Ontario) and Marion Borde (who added beauty to the brains trio-as a former Jaycees Carnival Queen, the then Marion Halfhide); and unpayable support staff such as the matriarchs Mrs Gamaldo and Ms Abraham.
These newly domiciled folks may find the time to spot the tracks of several world-famous figures who physically visited, from Geoffrey Holder to Arturo Sandoval; and hear the voices of stars in John Lennon as interviewed at the infamous Christina Gardens, Arima, home of Michael X who was later hanged for his "grave" deed; Diana Ross and the Supremes in Montreal, Sammy Davis in Miami. They may tune in as well to intrepid Jones and Gideon filing from various parts of the globe where they attended world-significant newsmaking events.While it would not be their doing to be so housed, the homeless in the NBS building may well appreciate knowing that 19 Abercromby Street was the birthplace of the cognitive dreams of a small group of men and women who wished to "inform, educate and entertain" their fellow nationals by way of competency, charm and companionship. This was a crucible for professionalism where workers created, wrote, produced, spoke, recorded and broadcast up to a level of world-classness clearly not in over supply for some time now.This was a fount where people brought their souls for making contact with other souls, through the magic of airwaves; and a single location where proud personnel gave up their lives to the art and function of broadcasting, doing so sometimes spiritually, at times near literally (as during the unrests of 1970 and 1990). Virtually every minute of every day was history-making as the station's performers reached out and touched, embraced and brought in, captured and covered, the endless stream of happenings involving every one within earshot.
And it can be testified without a blush: they did it with an unawareness of the greatness it would later stand out to be.On a more subjective note, those who came to work at 610 found themselves welded together in the manner peculiar to radio broadcasting-radio transmits a bond among its practitioners, humbling them in this serving of fellow-man, but edifying them to a forgivable level of "elite-corps"-ness as they sense how potent yet gratifying it is to give to faceless multitudes of people information, facts, news, opinions, wisdom, pleasure, stimulation, healing, encouragement, chastisement, guidance, a sense of distance brought near, happenings brought to you in the immediate, replays for the late-joiners and updates for the anxiously interested, a steady flow of pleasantness, care and Trini "good company," an ear willing to listen to them, and an opportunity to have their voices heard by many others...all of this in exchange for nothing asked of the listeners, not even a guarantee that they are listening!
And the listeners reciprocated. They became "fans," who in Hollywood-style were given signed photo portraits of announcers; and faceless voices on the air became household names that even some 50 years later still roll off a tongue when oldsters accidentally meet.Fan mail sometimes contained a marriage proposal, and there was the odd case of harmless stalking by some avid listener who fell in love with a voice.In those days, newspaperdom didn't attract such a personality cult, and the celebrityship of television had not yet arrived.Our tenants may perceive that perhaps stronger than the bond between performer and listener, was the camaraderie that develops between fellow-broadcasters. They derive an upgrowth as well as an expansion from sharing the job with each other. Often, working at 610 one would feel maturity evolving through multiple personae-emerging as a happy amalgam of missionary, medicine-man and messenger.In the 11-year period I know of intimately at 610, no practitioner ever really fell out of love with the job...and that had nothing to do with material rewards, since salaries were embarrassingly low!
My guess today is that few of us can go past the building at Number 19-dilapidated as it is, without feeling our precious memories being wrapped by those little plastic twists of sadness that comes from pointless neglect.It would seem to some of us that to consign those years of contribution to a dump of abandonment without a thought for effort to preserve, is an inflicting on our own body social yet another wound, so similar to the "historycide"?we perpetrate against our other architectural and environmental spaces. This becomes a wound that pierces our will to care, and our care for the will that passes on the best of ourselves to the rest of ourselves.Without over-sentimentality, we think of this building as being very much a sacred place, not too unlike a heroes' burial ground where the remains of meaningful contributors reside, or as an historic landmark where the spirits of a keepsake occurrence are honoured.Of the above mentioned in this piece, 24 of them are now deceased-and deserving of being commemorated as kindly and civilly as we must always treat with our departed.To see the building as being merely a physical structure is almost akin to thinking blasphemously that a mother is no more than a womb which bore us.As the newly sheltered are being bedded down, the authorities should know that they may be ignoring as well the deeply embedded cares and fears of innumerable relatives and friends of 610ers who had their own sacrifice and support stream through this building to make a Nation feel itself to be a family, radio activating the most ancient rite of socialising-gathering around a central object for talk and music, warmth and light, communion and joy, a sharing not meant for a while but for an unconstricted time.
Finally, the questions:
Can this building therefore not be allowed to be another instance of our forgetting, but be used as a sanctuary for: showing evidence of and tribute to the makings of our history-perhaps housing archives and artifacts, collections and contributions, testimonies and treasures...for others to see, hear, relive, relearn, re-imbibe?
Not only a monument to 610 Radio, but to all outstanding media houses (including Radio Trinidad by whom so much excellence was provided as a predecessor) and all those media practitioners who make our living good and our remembering even better?
Where lies their work now?!
Surely, the authorities sizing up this building can choose to put more emphasis on the Fourth Estate than on real estate.Would the British society-our favourite rearview mirror-allow their penny-pinching Government to convert the BBC's Bush House into a location for charity or money-saving?
Can the very valid search for accommodation for the homeless not be geographically broadened?
In total agreement with the sentiments of good-spirited souls-Fr Peter, Brenda-I feel without a shred of doubt, that our less fortunate folk absolutely should be provided the mandatory basics of a civilised society: food, clothing and shelter. But the price of doing this need not be at the cost of our civility's infrastructure.The memories of 610 Radio ought not to be made homeless themselves. (If this were a radio production, I may hear now rising the strains of Dionne Warwick's 1964 hit version of Burt Bacharach's A House is not a Home. Treacly, but true...as is so wont in Radio.)