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First Flight: Early Calypsos from the Emory Cook Collection
Barnes and Noble
First Flight: Early Calypsos from the Emory Cook Collection
Current price: $17.99
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Barnes and Noble
First Flight: Early Calypsos from the Emory Cook Collection
Current price: $17.99
Size: OS
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True
calypso
masks hard, unflinching social commentary in bright melodies and rhythms, and although it is very much a dance music, its infatuation with sexuality, cultural inequities, street gossip, violent situations, and eye for an eye revenge scenarios coupled with its full use of bravado, humor, inflated rhetoric, and private metaphors means it has much in common with contemporary
rap
, right down to the "calypso wars" that pitted performer against performer in sharp, improvised insult battles.
Calypso
at its purest is a truly devilish style, since the galloping rhythms say "don't worry, be happy" while the lyrics bite deep and list all the things to be worried about. To borrow a phrase from
Phil Ochs
(who might have made a passable
singer),
is "all the news that's fit to sing."
Slinger Francisco
, the
Mighty Sparrow
, is perhaps the best known of Trinidad's modern
masters, and this fascinating set collects some of his earliest commercial recordings from albums he made between 1956 and 1959 for
Emory Cook
, who in turn licensed them to
RCA Records
. A cursory listen and these tracks seem bright and harmless, they bubble along on shining, horn-driven rhythmic arrangements that just make you want to move your feet. Underneath that sheen, however,
Sparrow
sang and rhymed away about taxes (
"No, Doctor, No"
), ghetto gun dealers (the oddly ambivalent
"Gun Slinger"
), personal revenge (
"Eve"
), international foolishness (
"Russian Satellite"
derides Russia for using a dog as a guinea pig in space exploration), and even, on occasion, the openly sentimental (
"Post Card to Sparrow"
is about being away from the one you love at Christmas while
"Dorothy"
is a straight up love song like
Brook Benton
used to sing). This is early
, and he would get better and bolder after all of this, but the origin of the Trinidadian phrase "if Sparrow say so, is so" starts with these recordings. ~ Steve Leggett
calypso
masks hard, unflinching social commentary in bright melodies and rhythms, and although it is very much a dance music, its infatuation with sexuality, cultural inequities, street gossip, violent situations, and eye for an eye revenge scenarios coupled with its full use of bravado, humor, inflated rhetoric, and private metaphors means it has much in common with contemporary
rap
, right down to the "calypso wars" that pitted performer against performer in sharp, improvised insult battles.
Calypso
at its purest is a truly devilish style, since the galloping rhythms say "don't worry, be happy" while the lyrics bite deep and list all the things to be worried about. To borrow a phrase from
Phil Ochs
(who might have made a passable
singer),
is "all the news that's fit to sing."
Slinger Francisco
, the
Mighty Sparrow
, is perhaps the best known of Trinidad's modern
masters, and this fascinating set collects some of his earliest commercial recordings from albums he made between 1956 and 1959 for
Emory Cook
, who in turn licensed them to
RCA Records
. A cursory listen and these tracks seem bright and harmless, they bubble along on shining, horn-driven rhythmic arrangements that just make you want to move your feet. Underneath that sheen, however,
Sparrow
sang and rhymed away about taxes (
"No, Doctor, No"
), ghetto gun dealers (the oddly ambivalent
"Gun Slinger"
), personal revenge (
"Eve"
), international foolishness (
"Russian Satellite"
derides Russia for using a dog as a guinea pig in space exploration), and even, on occasion, the openly sentimental (
"Post Card to Sparrow"
is about being away from the one you love at Christmas while
"Dorothy"
is a straight up love song like
Brook Benton
used to sing). This is early
, and he would get better and bolder after all of this, but the origin of the Trinidadian phrase "if Sparrow say so, is so" starts with these recordings. ~ Steve Leggett