Lion Says it Best . .
"Some say that in India they sing
a calypso when they're charming cobra. Some
say that Elisha sang a calypso in the chariot
of fire. A fellow said 'If you please, it
was sung by Espinoza and Socrates.' And
Hannibal sang a calypso when crossing the
Alps to meet Scipio.' But I told them, 'No,
no, no, no.' Trinidad is the Land of Calypso"
-- Roaring Lion
A Brief History of Calypso
Calypso is one of the many musical forms
that resulted from the collision of African
and European cultures in the New World.
It evolved from a concatenation of Kalinda,
a Yoruba call-and-response type chant, with
French ballad and Spanish string band music.
Due to the banning of drums during the era
of slavery, Trinidadian music did not maintain
the vigorous drumming traditions that survived
elsewhere - notably in Brazil and Cuba.
Instead, the emphasis was more on the melodic
and lyrical side although, needless to say,
it still retained a strong rhythmical element.
Calypso grew out of the songs that were
sung during carnival. After the abolition
of slavery in 1830, Carnival was a boisterous
and often violent affair with gangs of stick
fighters competing with each other and also
with the police. On more than one occasion
it degenerated into out-and-out riot and
was often banned.
Kalinda was sung as an accompaniment to
the stick fighting. Beginning as a jamette,
underclass appropriation of the Mardi Gras
celebrations of the plantation owners, Carnival
gradually became more respectable as more
and more middle-class Trinidadians began
to take part. By the turn of the century,
the original French Creole patois was giving
way to English as the language of calypso
and the songs were more often in eight line
verses rather than the more rudimentary
four lines of the so-called road marches.
Mastery of English was seen as a sign of
sophistication and calypsonians vied with
each other to cram as many polysyllabic
words into their songs as possible.
The institution of the calypso tent was
another factor in the development of calypso
as an 'indoor' music to be listened to.
The 'Golden Age of Calypso' was undoubtedly
in the 1930's and 40's when Lord Executor,
Atilla the Hun, The Growling Tiger, Lord
Beginner, King Radio and The Roaring Lion,
to name only the most prominent, were all
in their prime. The subject matter of their
songs was usually topical and even when
dealing with serious topics such as social
injustice they were usually humorous as
well. F.D. Roosevelt's state visit to the
island, or the particular calypsonian's
problems with women might equally well be
the subject of a calypso. The bands that
accompanied the singers usually consisted
of guitar, double bass, violin, trumpet
and clarinet and they played in a style
somewhat akin to Dixieland jazz - another
element to enter the calypso melting pot.
Recordings were made and calypso became
briefly popular in America, Britain and
even West Africa. There was a brief resurgence
in the popularity of calypso after the Second
World War when the Andrews Sisters had a
big hit with Lord Invader's Rum and Coca
Cola but this was a safe and sanitised sort
of calypso.
The history of calypso does not end here
(the entire career of the legendary Mighty
Sparrow is still to come for example) but
as in just about every other aspect of life
the Second World War seems to mark the end
of an era. It would be misleading to see
this past era as being an age of innocence
or even of excellence but the elusive charm
of old time calypso, both musically and
lyrically, has a distinct character which
differentiates it from post-war calypso.
Thankfully it has been preserved and remains
to delight further generations.
-- Peter Ridsdale
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