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Calypso Music is best known by the cheerful melodies sung by Harry Belafonte and the sound of the West African Kaiso rhythm better known as Calypso. In 1956 Harry Belafonte recorded his Calypso album containing the famous Banana Boat Song Day-O probably the most internationally known calypso song. His calypso album became the first to sell over one million copies. The 1970’s led to the popularity of the Steel Drum and dynamic tempo of the Soca Beat. Soca music originated as a fusion of calypso with Indian rhythms, combining the musical traditions of the two major ethnic groups of Trinidad and Tobago. In 1973, Ras Shorty introduced soca to the world with his hit song Indrani. By the turn of the 1980’s Lord Kitchener’s classic hit Sugar Bum Bum made soca more popular then ever. |
| Reggae Music is best known by the relaxing melodies sung by Bob Marley and the pulse of the one-drop beat. Originally reggae music took its form from Ska music that was developed in Jamaica around the 1950’s. Flavored with Mento, the music quickly assumed a uniquely Jamaican up-tempo beat that became known as ska. Mento is a Jamaican form of music similar to Trinidad’s calypso. By the summer of 1966 the birth of the slower, more melodic rock steady beat emerged. The slower rhythmic feel gave space for more complicated melodies while the Horns moved to the background and vocals became more prominent. The term reggae, pronounced “ray-gay”, was used to refer to a “ragged” form of dance rhythm popular in Jamaica. Reggae music traditionally deals with politics, poverty and Rastafarianism. A significant difference between reggae and it’s predecessors, ska, and rock steady, was its new spiritual emphasis. This traditional form of reggae is called “Roots Reggae”. This is the form of reggae that Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, and Bunny Wailer are famous for. In the late 1960’s Bob Marley and The Wailers were extremely popular only in the Caribbean and not internationally known. In 1972 this all changed with a recording of Catch A Fire, the Wailers first album. This album laid the foundation for reggae to become an international phenomenon and was the beginning of Bob Marley’s worldwide fame. | |