"Out of a muddy pond, ten thousand flowers bloom" David Rudder ( Dedication, 1986)
By IRA MATHUR
A man with a tattoo of Trinidad across his back told me once that David Rudder was the greatest lyricist of our time.
We had been listening to music, talking poetry. The usual names came up: Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, Derek Walcott, Bob Marley, Gil Scott-Heron, Sparrow.
Then the man with the tattoo said:
"David Rudder."
Not one of the greats.
The greatest.
"Why?"
"He just is," he said. "David Rudder is Trinidad."
"A whole country?"
"A whole country."
I thought back to when I first discovered Rudder: Christmas nights at Moon Over Bourbon Street, in West Mall, where Rudder and Charlie’s Roots made a hardcore group of us feel more ourselves than we dared to be in public.
Our faces lifted to the moon and the rain in the carpark, the music washing away the careful masks Trinidadians wear—the snakeskin of race, politics, class and fear. In this country, under every government, the wrong words can cost a job; the right ones can bring favour. Rudder strips the Trini to the bone.
He made us love this country, but he never lied to us about it. Rudder’s songs have become an unofficial archive of our people, our region. I didn’t get it until, like fine wine, he got into my head and then became some kind of truth, and, as a journalist, I was astonished. His songs predicted stories. Something came together.
He got there before the newspapers, Hansard or the journalists.
We are living under another State of Emergency. The murder figures have fallen sharply—from 626 in 2024 to 369 in 2025—but the deeper anxiety has not.
T&T remains among the Caribbean’s highest homicide societies outside war: guns, a shrinking pie, rising unemployment, a state held hostage by so-called community leaders, the transatlantic drug trade, deepening desperation, and young male bodies piling up in the mortuaries.
We thought oil and gas made us immune. It paid for free education, highways, subsidies, scholarships, industrial estates, public-sector jobs and, under every government since Independence, political patronage.
We have been here before. It has long been reported that Rudder wrote "1990" before the attempted coup, a song that afterwards came to seem eerily prescient.
It has long been reported that Rudder wrote "1990" before the attempted coup, a song that afterwards came to seem eerily prescient.
It became a kind of anthem, a lament for those of us at Radio 610 taking turns to keep the station a pipeline between a broken state and the people. It’s too easy to call him prophetic. He listened more closely than the rest of us.
Born in Belmont on 6 May 1953, one of nine children, David Michael Rudder grew up in what he later called the "University of Belmont": a district of pan yards, Shango yards, churches, mas, gossip, oral tradition, musical instruments, and the rhythm and tone of people of every arrival, of every race. Belmont produced figures such as Sir Ellis Clarke, Stokely Carmichael and David Rudder, but its greater distinction lay in the overlapping worlds that shaped them. Belmont, climbing towards Laventille, carried layers of Trinidad’s history—from Africans rescued from illegal slaving ships to the Black professionals who later made it known as "the Black St Clair."
Rudder later said that in Belmont, "everyone had a story."
Rudder survived polio, spent much of his childhood with his grandmother, read voraciously at the Public Library by the Savannah, apprenticed with Ken Morris, worked in PTSC accounts, sang backing vocals in Lord Kitchener’s tent, and joined Charlie’s Roots in 1977. Belmont gave him his ear.
Kitchener’s advice stayed with him: every calypso should be "an editorial".
He took that seriously.
Rally ’Round the West Indies (1988) imagined a Caribbean unity that the failed Federation had never managed to sustain, carried instead by cricket and by men such as Frank Worrell, Clive Lloyd and Viv Richards.
Haiti (1988) returned Haiti to the centre of Caribbean memory, reminding us of the dignity of the revolution that created the first Black republic before poverty, earthquakes, coups and aid came to define it in the world’s imagination.
Panama (1987) drew on the O’Halloran money scandal to expose public corruption.
Later, in Madman’s Rant (1996), Rudder captured the anxieties of rising violent crime, kidnappings and the transatlantic drug trade, giving Trinidad the unforgettable warning about "somebody letting the cocaine pass".
Rudder returned to mend the cyclical political divide between Africans and Indians in The Ganges Meets the Nile (1999), demonstrating unity beyond politics.
The Hammer came out of steelband’s origins: the clashes, arrests and neglected communities in panyards that made Trinidad celebrate the music while fearing the men who played it. Rudder gave that history a man’s name, Rudolph Charles, and brought him out of the shadows into the glory of pan.
Then came 1990. It has been reported that Rudder wrote the song before the Jamaat al Muslimeen stormed the Red House and Trinidad and Tobago Television on July 27. Rudder had heard something changing in the country: distrust of government, talk of guns, growing anger of the disenfranchised.
Afterwards, Rudder’s 1990 sounded haunted and prescient. We had swayed and sung through what turned out to be a warning. The insurgency had been forming for years in unheard grievances, sermons, rumours, guns and failing institutions.
Under the present State of Emergency, Rudder’s music feels as cyclical as our history.
Again, the country is divided between those willing to trade civil liberties for fewer killings, those who warn policing alone cannot solve violence rooted in poverty, organised crime and political neglect, and those whose civil liberties are already gone—seized not only by the state but by gangs, guns, hunger, fear, and by criminal networks that recruit armed young men while the powerful men directing the violence remain invisible, never standing at the roadblock, never holding the gun, never burying a body.
Like Walcott, Rudder aced metaphors. In 1990, the unease lay in accrued damage: rising tension and people catastrophizing. In Madman’s Rant, the apparent madness becomes the country’s sanity, exposing truths respectable society refuses to acknowledge. His best songs use Calypso to construct dramatic monologues, public essays, and unforgettable editorials.
Rudder’s honours followed the work. He received Trinidad and Tobago’s Hummingbird Medal (Silver) in 1992, was appointed a UNDP Goodwill Ambassador in 1996, received an honorary Doctor of Letters from the University of the West Indies in 2015, was given the Keys to the City of Port-of-Spain in 2018, and, in 2022, received the Order of the Caribbean Community, Caricom’s highest honour. Gordon Rohlehr called him "a mighty poet".
But Rudders' real distinction lies elsewhere. His songs have entered our hearts and minds and are part of our collective psyche. In lyric after lyric, he peeled away the masks—race, ambition, party loyalty, piety, bravado, shame, brutality- and gave Trinidad back its own voice. Once that happens, the songs no longer belong to the singer. They belong to the country.
Listen to Rudder. He has been warning us for years, still warning ahead. Rudder has been saying the same thing in different keys: nothing here comes from nowhere. Not the killings. Not the race talk. Not the corruption. Not even the beauty, nor the unexpected truth and grace. Guardian columnist Tony Fraser has said of him, "Rudder is Martin Luther King, not the early Malcolm X.” In 2023, Rudder disclosed that he had Parkinson’s disease and said Rudder 7.0 would be his last major marathon show. The tears of hundreds of people were like a benediction of gratitude for restoring us to ourselves.
In 2026, Bocas Lit Fest opened its Kaiso Conversations series with him, putting calypso like his where it belongs: in great literature that both reflects and defines our nation. The man with the tattoo is right. Rudder is the greatest.
Ira Mathur is a freelance journalist, a Guardian columnist, and the winner of the 2023 OCM Bocas Prize for Non-Fiction.
