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Monday, April 14, 2025

Take 5 with the Mighty Shadow...'People say honorary award long overdue'

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2437 days ago
20180812
flashback September 2017, Winston Bailey , The Shadow performs Proverty is Hell at the Return of the Bassman The Shadow The man The Message The Mood The Music at the Cipriani Labour College.

flashback September 2017, Winston Bailey , The Shadow performs Proverty is Hell at the Return of the Bassman The Shadow The man The Message The Mood The Music at the Cipriani Labour College.

ANISTO ALVES

BO­BIE-LEE DIXON

(bo­bie-lee.dixon@guardian.co.tt)

In 1974 The Mighty Shad­ow born Win­ston Bai­ley gave the ca­lyp­so world Bass Man. He fol­lowed up just a lit­tle over a decade in 1992 with the run­away Caribbean all star hit, telling us mu­sic had no friends nor en­e­mies so every­one can Din­go­lay.

Some­where in be­tween, he called for us to help him ease 'd' Ten­sion in 1988.

And who could for­get his warn­ing to us to 'Pay De Dev­il' if you owed him when he sang of the then chang­ing face of Car­ni­val.

This ca­lyp­so po­et and philoso­pher was set apart by his style code in at­tire, likened on­to that of the Mid­night Rob­ber, his dis­tinct 'skip rope' jump or hop and his 'jumbie' beats. In 2003 he was award­ed the T&T Hum­ming Bird Medal (sil­ver) for his con­tri­bu­tion to the ca­lyp­so fra­ter­ni­ty.

Now at 77, the Bel­mont na­tive who grew up in Les Coteaux Vil­lage, Scar­bor­ough, To­ba­go, is set to re­ceive an hon­orary de­gree (con­ferred with an Hon­orary Doc­tor of Let­ters) from UWI St Au­gus­tine Cam­pus at its 2018 grad­u­a­tion cer­e­mo­ny in Oc­to­ber.

Bai­ley would be joined by sev­er­al oth­er hon­orees in­clud­ing R&B Bar­ba­di­an-born singer/song­writer Robyn Rhi­an­na Fen­ty and for­mer West In­di­an in­ter­na­tion­al crick­eter Shiv­nar­ine Chan­der­paul.

Bai­ley is fea­tured in this Sun­day Guardian's Take 5 as he shares with us his re­sponse to his se­lec­tion and what The Mighty Shad­ow has been up to late­ly.

You are re­ceiv­ing an hon­orary de­gree from UWI in Oc­to­ber. You now join fel­low ca­lyp­so­ni­ans and mu­si­cians like the Black Stal­in and Roy Cape. Tell us your ini­tial feel­ing re­ceiv­ing this ho­n­our. Is it long over­due?

That's the big ques­tion! My mu­sic was made for the peo­ple and T&T agreed I should ac­cept it, be­cause it is a long time now peo­ple say­ing I should get some­thing, which I nev­er got. It's a good thing. It's a long time I been do­ing what I'm do­ing and peo­ple say it's a long time it's been over­due, you know.

What has been Shad­ow up to late­ly? Is there some new mu­sic com­ing our way soon?

That is what I do. That's what I know…to make mu­sic.

Ca­lyp­so, what's hap­pen­ing to it? Do we even still au­then­ti­cal­ly have the genre?

Well yes, but every­thing is in its own way. We had one type of thing go­ing over­time, and then it changed to some­thing else and some­thing else again and just keeps on chang­ing. Peo­ple love what they love through the sea­sons as we call them. My thing is a spe­cial thing that peo­ple love and I think it has al­ways been that way.

How's your health these days?

Big ques­tion, yes. The last time I thought I was healthy, and then I was in the hos­pi­tal. That's how the health does move. I can't tell you how it will be to­mor­row.

As a ca­lyp­so pa­tri­arch in your own right, if you had to do your ca­reer all over again, what would you do dif­fer­ent­ly?

I would do the best I could do. I will do the same as I've been do­ing, mak­ing great mu­sic be­cause that lives with­in me.


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