Chalkie's Master-Class By Keith Smith
Editor-at-Large, Trinidad Express
Thursday, February 10th 2005
Well, long before the competition Explainer, whose own season had its
own success what with his collaboration with Bunji Garlin bringing him
back into the Carnival fetes (Ah, that Lorraine!), told me that
Chalkdust was going to win and this titan of the calypso tradition gave
one of his most assured performances ever which, given that this is his
seventh crown, is saying something.
I hope some of the younger folk in the competition were looking and
learnt this important thing, which is that calypso is more than a yakety-yak
of words, that the craft, at the level of greats like Chalkdust, calls
for a special kind of imagination which is not to say that it cannot be
a dissertation on some high issue only, if it is to make a really
lasting impact, the lyrics have to move comfortably along the carry-on
melody, Winston "Joker" Devine's work on "Progress" being, perhaps, the
classic example.
I suspect that "Chalkie" was blowing dust in their faces from the
very first song, the veteran bard in fact singing two songs in one, the
first giving him the opportunity to show-off his relationship with
long-time Trinidad and the second the opportunity to comment on things
in the Trinidad and Tobago of today.
The link (listen up here, would-be calypsonians) is the chorus
assertion that he "down here too long" to be made a fool of now, the
whole thing coming together as a coherent calypso that couldn't fail to
impress old and young and if you feel, now that I have laid out the bare
bones, that this is easy, well, all I can encourage you to do is to try
it, nuh.
The second calypso was the clincher in that it brought the entire
Dimanche Gras audience-as it did in the tents-into the song by the
creative conceit of having them supply the chorus rhymes, the kaisonian
having set up the process by affirming that when he is vexed his chorus
cannot rhyme the rhymes, in the chorus, though, so obvious that man,
woman or child listening would have to be ignoramuses not to guess-or,
indeed, shout them to the high guffawing heavens.
This is the kind of calypso craft that makes Chalkdust difficult to
beat-unless you are coming from a completely different direction such as
a Sparrow or a David Rudder or a Stalin and even Sparrow, at one time,
confided that of all his calypso colleagues Chalkdust was the one he
would least like to bounce up in a competition, the three stars I have
here mentioned capable of dethroning him by a combination of lyrics,
melody, presentation and sheer charisma and, as we all saw, there was
none of these four-in-once calypsonians on the stage on the night.
Not that Cro Cro didn't put up a brave fight. He, too, is
well-schooled in the calypso craft but to beat Chalkie, given the
teacher-calypsonian's two offerings, he would have had to have two very
strong songs instead of one strong song in "Chop Off Dey Hands" and an
all-right one in "Oh, Grenada". I am sure there will be all kinds of
objections to the former but even as I acknowledge that Cro's Cro's is a
searing humour I'd think that the thing is people have to lighten up and
stop talking stupidness about Cro Cro encouraging violence, the conceit
here so completely absurd, in that Cro Cronian way, as to make it
impossible for the punch line to be considered seriously.
Still though, even if they are not inclined to go to his Cro Cronian
extremes, would-be calypsonians, including some of those waxing wordy on
Carnival Sunday night, should have sat up and taken notice of Cro Cro's
craft because he managed to put a new, totally unexpected spin, on an
enduring theme of recent times-the supposed underperformance of
Afro-Trinidadian children when compared to our Indos and the only reason
he didn't win was because Chalkdust was there to stop him, not a single
one of those tuneless declaimers with their dreary, tuneless or barely
melodic dissertations able to dismiss the thought that they were misfits
mystified by the wiles of these two old masters Challkdust (did you
hear?) finding space to throw a glancing jab at the familiar tune of
Cro's Cro's nursery-rhyme chorus-words to the effect that Cro Cro
couldn't win crown with another man's song.
The line was sung as a put-down of the new craze that is "sampling"
but, in the context, it was a put-down, too, of the song that Chalkdust
feared the most on the night, all being fair not only in love but
calypso war. |