Caribbean Beat — September/October 2020 • Digital Issue

Page 24

playlist Rasanbleman (Red Moon) Paul Beaubrun (Ropeadope LLC) New York–based Paul Beaubrun is the son of Haitian music icons and Boukman Eksperyans founders Lòlò and Manzè. On his new album, the artist’s statement is succinct: “Rasanbleman [Kreyòl for ‘a large gathering’] is a project that was recorded LIVE at the Artists Institute in Haiti and includes many notable artists.” But that does not get to the heart of what the listener hears: a cornucopia of sounds from the New World

Soné Ka-La 2 Oddyssey Jacques Schwarz-Bart (Enja Records) “As long as I can remember, there was always gwoka and jazz music in my life,” says Guadeloupean saxophonist Jacques Schwarz-Bart. Gwoka drums are the basis of that island’s folk music, and on his new album Schwarz-Bart has fused the language of jazz with those native rhythms to forge a new aesthetic for the Antillean musician. This sequel to his original 2005 album updates that initial intent of making

Alive Rai (Whatsername Records) Looking at music created in the Caribbean outside of indigenous genres, one searches for clues to an exceptional character. Song lyrics sometimes provide hints for a new context to love, to awakening, to maturity. Rai’s debut five-song EP Alive, however, proves the universality and commonality of innocent emotions. As a young woman now living in Trinidad, she infuses familiar tropes that suggest modern Single Spotlight

Beautiful in June

Robert “Dubwise” Brown (Electrifying Grooves Records)

Instrumental smooth jazz has become a kind of soundtrack to the idea of escape to the Caribbean. Jamaican guitarist Robert “Dubwise” Browne has taken up the challenge of adding to the canon of earworms that define this sybaritic idyll. A slinky electric guitar with just enough echo recalls the signature sound of easy listening accompaniment to vacation and luxe exile. With a repeated lyric that says, “Beautiful in June / Like a summer 22

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African. Jamaican ska, Haitian kongo, rara, and rasin, African blues, jazz, and rock and more are all channelled into a recording that addresses the challenge of moving the representation of modern Haitian music towards a new standard. The album’s ten songs mindfully celebrate our Caribbeanness. Acknowledging the irony of releasing an album about gathering people together during a pandemic that demands social distancing, Beaubrun says, “Music can help you with finding yourself . . . at this moment. You can get together spiritually.” Yes! gwoka jazz a defining moment, and completes the journey of discovery that happens after fifteen years of travelling and playing music all over the world, and knowing one’s place in it. Voice (Malika Tirolien) and sax juxtapose to shine melodically over gwoka drum rhythms and harmonic dissonances provided by premier fellow Antillean jazz stars Grégory Privat, Arnaud Dolmen, Sonny Troupé, and American bassist Reggie Washington. Improvisation in the context of an Afro-Caribbean pulse long eschewed in modern jazz is a refreshing return to the centre. perspectives devoid of the tried-and-true. Guitar-driven pop-rock songs catalogue a life where desire, angst, and heartache reign. “My love is like a service station / Always helping all the time. / Your heart is like a bad reflection / Always yours but never mine.” With a local production that sparkles in its freshness, this short peek into a young life has the likelihood of becoming a template for the alternative rocker situated in an island life. It’s what’s in the heart that matters, not the surroundings.

afternoon,” one recognises that the island native who experiences no summer in these tropics is not the primary target for this song. The musical statement of instrumental verse and sung chorus featuring Brownie Bunch is repeated three times as if to desperately cement the idea of here being “a place to flee . . . that seriousness that comes only out of culture with four seasons.” The reggae bounce, the bubbling bass loop, the organ tone underneath are known to us here, and celebrate our islands effectively. Reviews by Nigel A. Campbell


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Articles inside

Popular artists at El Museo del Barrio

1min
page 21

Must try: the taste of invention

3min
page 20

The Caribbean's rarest stamps

4min
pages 18-19

The Covid strategy

7min
pages 76-79

Music reviews

3min
page 24

Book reviews

3min
page 22

Inside this issue

2min
pages 6-7

Adam Cooper — Anti-stoosh

8min
pages 70-75

Discover St Lucia

1min
pages 68-69

Discover Curaçao

1min
pages 66-67

Discover Tobago

1min
pages 64-65

Discover Barbados

1min
pages 62-63

Discover Grenada

1min
pages 58-60

Discover The Bahamas

1min
pages 56-57

Discover Suriname

1min
pages 54-55

Discover Trinidad

1min
pages 52-53

St Vincent and the Grenadines

1min
pages 50-51

Discover Cuba

1min
pages 48-49

Discover Jamaica

1min
pages 44-45

Discover Guyana

1min
pages 42-43

Discover Montserrat

1min
pages 38-41

Discover Antigua and Barbuda

1min
pages 34-36

Discover Dominica

1min
pages 30-33

Q&A with Esery Mondesir

3min
page 26

Terri Lyons' calypso favourites

2min
page 16

T&T arts festivals move online

2min
page 14

A virtual Labour Day Carnival

1min
page 12

Shark Hole, Barbados

1min
page 10

Our unfinished revolution

4min
pages 8-9
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