Showing posts with label Calypso. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Calypso. Show all posts

18.6.11

Nowhere Like Limón...

  
Calypso Limón Legends
Calypso Jazz Band

2006

Tracks:

01. Lobsterband - Cyril Silvan     6:26
02. Nowhere Like Limón - Herberth Glinton "Lenki"     4:23
03. Stop - Cyril Sylvan     5:24
04. Rum     - Roberto "Congoman" Watts     5:23
05. Maria - Reynaldo Kenton "Shanty"     4:55
06. You Are My Sunshine - Reynaldo Kenton "Shanty"     3:07
07. Baptism - Cyril Sylvan     5:07
08. Fire - Herberth Glinton "Lenki"     3:21
09. Skelintan - Cyril Sylvan     5:16
10. Zancudo - Cyril Sylvan     4:48
11. Please Help Me I'm Falling     Herberth Glinton "Lenki" & Emilio Álvarez "Junny"     3:58
12. One Pant Man - Manuel Monestel     6:37
  
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Calypso Limon Legends contains the tradition of the glorious age of calypso carnival bands, but it its strengthened by a New Orleans style jazz piano, which gives this recording a fresh new sound.

The band is the result of a long research of the parallel paths of calypso and jazz, which finished with the series of concerts entitled "Calypso - Jazz wednesdays", a periodical gathering directed by master pianist Manuel Obregon and calypso expert Manuel Monestel. They departed from a deep investigation and their enormous talents in jazz and calypso to experiment alongside some of the major living legends of Costa Rican calypso.


This CD is the fruit of a long research of the parallel paths of calypso and jazz, which finished with the series of concerts entitled “Calypso - Jazz Wednesdays”, a periodical gathering directed by master pianist Manuel Obregón and calypso expert Manuel Monestel. They departed from a deep investigation and their enormous talents in jazz and calypso to experiment alongside some of the major living legends of Costa Rican calypso. The research process, the concerts and their recording were possible thanks to the colaboration of the Costa Rican Ministry of Culture and the Spanish Cultural Center.

In this production recorded live, we revive the most famous songs from the 1950s and 60s, back when neighborhood calypso bands where the main attraction in Limón Carnival days. Calypso Limón Legends contains the tradition of the glorious age of calypso carnival bands, but it its strengthened by a New Orleans style jazz piano, which gives this recording a fresh new sound. Sound engineer Draxe Ramírez, is one more star of this production, thanks to his months of precision work to transform the concert recordings from rough diamonds into bright musical gems.


The Vocalists

The five singers we hear in this production are the authors of songs that became true landmarks of Afro Costa Rican culture.

Cyril Sylvan is one of the few singers who have kept the style perfected by Panamanian calypso legend Lord Cobra, one of the household names of Central American calypso. Cyrilo was a fisherman and butcher in Port Limon's main market for 40 years and lead singer for the carnival bands “Lobsterband” and “Skelintans” from the notorious Cieneguita neighborhood, where his brothers, nephews, his daughter and even his mother also performed.

After belonging to several calypso bands, Reynaldo Kenton “Shanty” has always been devoted to music. He was part of the canrival bands Lobster Band and Skelintan by Sylvan, and he continued to interpret calypsos of the great composers from Port Limon in groups like New Revelation, a band from the neighborhood of Cieneguita, founded by reknowned Julio Medina. This is one of the few bands from Costa Rica to be included in Radio France International's compilations.

Originally from Bluefields in the Nicaraguan Caribbean coast, Emilio Álvarez “Junny” has been a sailor and a boat mechanic, but he has also traveled Central America and the islands of the Caribbean with the group Bárbaros del Ritmo, predecessor of the famous Dimensión Costeña. His wide experience with contemporary calypso and his ability with the electric bass made Junny vital for Calypso Limon Legends.

Herberth Glinton “Lenkí” is also impressive on stage since you wouldn't expect a man so apparently fragile to be capable of producing the heartrendering voice he produces to sing his songs “Fire” y “Nowhere like Limón”. Besides, passionate fan of blues and country music, Lenkí also interprets a version of the classic country song “Please help me I'm falling”.

All the way to New York went Roberto “Congoman” Watts to record his “Carnaval en Puerto Limón”. Tailor and barber from Port Limon and raised in Panama, “Congoman” cofesses he has always been inspired by Clarence Martin “a grand musician” whose music taught him to appreciate jazz. Here, Congoman plays a song by Lord Kitty, who he met in Panama.


The Musical Directors

Manuel Obregón has turned his career into a sampler of the genres that exist on Central America. Obregón has researched deeply the historic relationship between Central American calypso, blues and New Orleans Jazz music. In New Orleans, he learned the musical forms and style of Jerry Roll Morthon, and Louis Russell, pioneers of swing and calypso jazz. He has also established a strong exchange between Central America and Louisiana, participating in the Internacional New Orleans Jazz Festival with Orquesta de la Papaya in the Festival Internacional de Lafayette, in the New Orleans Piano Night and he won the Best Concert Award in 2000 for his performance in Snug Harbor with the Calypso Jazz Trio with Jhonny Vidacovich. In October 2000, he is declared International Honorary Citizen of the city of New Orleans, and in August, 2005 he was selected by the University of Tulane to form the Institute of Culture of the Americas and the Latin Festival in New Orleans, but the project was interrupted by the emergency due to hurricane Katrina. In November 2005 he founded the First Calypso Festival in Bocas del Toro with Manuel Monestel and Romulo Castro.

Fine balance between academic knowledge and musical talent best describe Manuel Monestel. His deep interes for researching original Limon style calypso have permitted entire generations of Costa Ricans to get acquainted with this music and appreciate it. His vast musical production with several bands, especially as musical director of the band Cantoamerica during its more than 25 years of existance, competes with his numerous publications in his 30 odd years of curiosity. Due to this background, Manuel Monestel has perfected beautiful versions of songs by Walter Ferguson, Lenkí, Buda, and many other emblematic composers from the Limon province, apart from having built an ample repertoire of his own creations. His recently published “Ritmo, Canción e Identidad: el Calypso Limonense”, the most profound and most well founded book ever written about this music. Besides, he has participated in lots of international music festivals around the world, such as April in Managua, the Vancouver Folk Music Festival, the Olof Palme Festival, the Benefit Concerts for the Christic Institute in California, the Paul Masson Summer Series, the Cabrillo Music Festival, Concierto Mundial Por La Vida, Cali, Colombia, Festival de Cultura del Caribe 96 in Can Cun, México, Festival Musical Latinoanericano and Festival Musical Latinoanericano in Puerto Rico, the Central American Coffee Carnival in Taiwan, Festival Mundial de la Juventud in Panamá, New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, and in several editions of the Festival Internacional de las Artes in his native Costa Rica.
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get it here

 

rasta-girl painting on train car - puerto limon (costa rica)

 

Semi-abandoned train yard in Puerto Limon (Costa Rica). 
  

17.6.11

But callaloo, everybody love callaloo...

   
Calypsos Limonenses
Calypso songs in Spanish and English.
2005.

Tracks:

01. Herberth Clinton Henry - Nowhere like Limón
02. Leonardo Hadden Macfarlane - Nathy flee
03. Geelferd Alfonso Bantan Drowon - True born Costa Rica
04. Irving Burgie - Jamaica farewell
05. Wálter Gavitt Ferguson - Callaloo
06. Rodrigo Alexander Smith - Rice and beans
07. Anónima - Sweet calypso
08. Reynaldo Kenton Kenton - Juan Santamaría
09. Arnold Arnold Cleveland - Peace in Central America
10. Rolando Gurzón Solano - Costa Rica tierra de paz
11. Marcos Forbes Forbes - Playa Bonita
12. Junior Emilio Alvarez Alvarez - Reggae express
13. Harold George Belafonte - Banana boat
14. Herberth Clinton Henry - Mama come and take me home
15. Sergio Morales Alvarez - En El Tortuguero
16. Víctor Barrantes Montero - The Limón what used to be
17. Johnny Dixon Shields - Caribbean people
18. Luis Angel Castro - Puerto Viejo
19. Cantoamerica - Tacuma and Anancy´s party
20. Marcos Forbes Forbes - Where the Mana´s gone
  
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Puerto Limon’s big festival of the year is on Columbus Day (October 12th) when the whole town parties to the sounds of raggae, calypso and  salsa. Street parades, music, dancing and drinking go on for days and people come from all over the country to party with the Limonenses. Calypso music is also still popular, although since the 1970’s raggae has replaced calypso as Puerto Limon’s favorite kind of music. Such groups as New Revelation, Charro Limonense and Cahuita Calypso are still popular, singing in both Creole English and Spanish. A collection of their songs can be found on the excellent CD Calypso Costa Rica (1996).

 Most blacks in Limon speak both Creole English and Spanish. Many younger Limonenses speak only Spanish. Afro-Antilleans in Limon province number around 80,000, with 50,000 or so others living in other parts of the country, mostly in San Jose and in the larger cities of the meseta central. Creole English is spoken not only in Puerto Limon and in the areas where the Afro-Antilleans settled to work, but also in small communities scattered along the Caribbean coast south of Puerto Limon towards the Panamanian border. Small towns such as Cahuita continue to show off their Creole culture in music, dancing, cooking, language and the use of medicinal plants reflecting an African heritage. The village of Puerto Viejo de Talamanca is inhabited by both Creoles and native Americans who live and work side by side. 
 
  
 
  
Wálter "Gavitt" Ferguson
    
  
 EVERYBODY GOT ITS OWN OPINION
SOME MAY BE RIGHT, AND SOME MAY BE WRONG
BUT CALALOO, EVERYBODY LOVES CALALOO
A BLESSING FROM ABOVE

YOU EAT IT IN THE MORNING, AND YOU EAT IT IN THE DAY
YOU EAT IT IN WHEN YOU FEEL THAT YOU WILL BREAK AWAY
CALALOO, EVERYBODY LOVES CALALOO
A BLESSING FROM ABOVE

YOU EAT IT IN THE MORNING, AND YOU EAT IT IN THE NIGHT
YOU EAT IT WHEN YOU FEEL THAT YOU WILL LOSE YOUR SIGHT
CALALOO, EVERYBODY LOVES CALALOO
A BLESSING FROM ABOVE

I KNEW A WOMAN SHE NAME WAS SUE
SHE WOKE UP ONE MORNING ALL BLACK AND BLUE
SHE CALL TO HER SISTER HER NAME WAS LU
BEG HER TO COOK HER SOME CALALOO
CALALOO, EVERYBODY LOVES CALALOO
A BLESSING FROM ABOVE

GOOD FOR YOUR BELLY AND GOOD FOR YOUR SIGHT
TIGHTEN EVERY JOINT THAT IS GETTING SLACK
BUT CALALOO, EVERYBODY LOVES CALALOO
A BLESSING FROM ABOVE 
   
  
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16.6.11

Everybody love callaloo...

  
Calypso - Costa Rica
1996

Tracks:

1. Big Nose Jaral - New Revelation
2. Fire - New Revelation
3. Zancudo - Tin Tan
4. Fire - Cahuita Calypso
5. La Confianza - Junior Emilio Alvares
6. Pompaper - New Revelation
7. Jamaica Farewell - Reynaldo Kenton
8. True Born Costa Rican - Charro De Limon
9. El Gallo - New Revelation
10. Mama - New Revelation
11. Fiesta - New Revelation
12. Black Man - Charro De Limon
13. Paquiria - Junior Emilio Alvares
14. Violence - New Revelation
15. Caroline - Cahuita Calypso
16. Cabin In The Water - Walter 'Gavitt' Ferguson
 
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When someone says "calypso," one naturally thinks of Trinidad. But hidden here and there in the Caribbean are little pockets of the old calypso tradition, somewhat static, but still vibrant. This album looks at the virtually unknown English-speaking calypso community of Spanish-speaking Costa Rica. While these artists have a "frozen in time" sound to them, the music is nonetheless wonderful. In solo settings and small ensembles of percussion, guitars and voices, the older generation of Puerto Limon sets out a rootsy, gritty music with a generous dose of enthusiasm. The pop-influenced New Revelation offer pleasant tunes; the gritty Charo de Limon performs some good social commentary, accompanying himself with one of the rawest guitar sounds this side of Joseph Spence. The best of the lot is Cahuita Calypso: with a banjo and rhythm box courting the call and response of the vocals, they offer the most African-rooted sound. ~ Louis Gibson
  
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As winning as it is unexpected, this soundtrack to a French documentary uncovers a pocket of natural musical fusion on the coasts of Central America. Anglophone immigrants from Trinidad and Tobago brought their love of swinging story-songs with them when they arrived on the coasts of Costa Rica, Panama, and Nicaragua. The results remain unadorned and acoustic, ranging from the rough-and-ready New Revelation band, who harmonize in English and Spanish, to the itinerant Nicaraguan performer Tin Tan, who cleverly adapts calypso cadences to his Spanish lyrics. The instrumental "La Confianza" by Junior Emilio Alvares introduces Latin elements, creating calypso-rumba. Where a similar junket could yield hissing, ethnographer-pleasing field recordings, CALYPSO: COSTA RICA, by dint of being a soundtrack, is delightfully clear and modern-sounding. The extra-deep bass and percussion even lend an air of samba to the already heavily miscegenated mix -- what could be more joyous? ~ Mark Schwartz
 
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In Costa Rica, the calypso and other afro-caribbean rhythms are mostly important in the Province of Limón, where most of the Jamaican immigrations first came in the nineteenth century.