Surely, dance is one of the oldest forms of
cultural expression for human beings that can be applied to a variety of
settings: Voltaire said that it could do
no harm to the world, Shel Silverstein, in the poem A Light in the Attic, implores us to do a looney- gloomy dance that has not been
done before across the kitchen floor, literary icon Rumi stretched the
reason that we should dance to the margins with an audacious set of instructions.
He opined , . . . dance, when you're
broken open. Dance, if you've torn the bandage off. Dance in the middle of the
fighting. Dance in your blood. Dance when you're perfectly free. Our own
Jamaican reggae icon Bob Marley left us with the most straightforward of
narrative, Forget your troubles and Dance. Contemporary academic Donna P. Hope writes that
dancehall culture is a space for the
cultural creation and dissemination of symbols and ideologies that reflect the
lived realities of its adherents, particularly those from the inner cities of
Jamaica.
How then can we
continue to slate the Jamaican Dancehall genre as purely a cultural aberration
and a transmitter of debauchery? To what extent does Dancehall music eclipse
the success of the Bob Marley influenced Roots Rock Reggae?
Dancehall has made no pretence to be the
transmitter of good moral values; it is a hedonistic movement. This short discourse
examines the historical trajectory of the genre, mired in controversy yet it
constantly defies its critics and rebounds frequently from its low moments.
Dancehall music and lifestyle are becoming a mainstay of world popular culture.
This discourse examines the characters, controversies, casualties, ambiguities
and alliances forged in the Dancehall movement who are the contributors to its
success.
This music genre is a Jamaican current popular
music form that evolved from reggae in the late 1970s. It has spawned a number
of creative and rapidly changing dance moves that has merged with youth popular
movement globally. The music itself has
generated a number of other
varieties of dancehall flavoured influences globally, on the back of its crossover
success outside of Jamaica during the mid-to-late 1990. It is inextricably
linked to the social and cultural processes by which the Jamaica society
reproduces itself internally and externally. Young people in the Jamaican urban
centres and across the ethnic enclaves of North America and Europe have grafted
the dance hall lifestyle to their persona as they compete for a prime socio
cultural space that is often highly competitive lifestyle marketplace. To be a
young Dance hall fan bear nuances with being a rocker, a punk or a hippie. To
be able to master the art form on the dance floors holds valid social currency
and cements your dance hall credo. What once started as seedy underground
movement in Kingston Jamaica in the 1970s then extended to a underground
movement in North America and Europe and has now been elevated to world cult
status across the major dance venues of the world.
Dancehall music and dance movements are inextricably
bound; both movements bubbled to the international surface in the 1990s but it
was a reasonably long time in the making. It has spawned about three or four
generation of Jamaican reggae musicians and dancers in the mid-1980s. It was
made famous among the sound systems followers by Lincoln Sugar Minot and Wayne
Smiths digital version of Sleng Thing produced
by the legendary King Jammy’s. The 1990
saw a shift in style and context of the genre and Shabba Ranks took the Dance
Hall movement to dizzy heights internationally.
Towards the end of the 1990s the genre received bad press when it
descended into verbal clashes laced with violent innuendoes and homophobic
name-dropping. Initially, there was
friendly competition between DJs and Sound-systems which then descended into an
orgy of misogyny, glorification of guns and violent tirades. Towards the end of
the 1990s Shabba Ranks and Buju Banton successes had waned as a result of a
backlash from the gay right’s lobby across Europe and North America. This
period was one of Dancehall’s lowest moments and many commentators predicted
that the genre could lose its’ international podium.
By 2000 the genre emerged from its dogmatic
slumber with artists such as Elephant Man and Sean Paul achieving massive
crossover success in Europe, North America and Africa. A new generation of
young music lovers had arisen and the dancehall movement was conveyed to them
culturally by music videos and the internet; the hard-hitting bassline and the
dances proved irresistible. Once again,
dancehall was the music of choice for a whole new generation in love with its
raunchiness and rebellion as an art form.
Meanwhile, in Jamaica, a debate began to fester that the music had
become commercial and intellectually shallow and a host of young cultural and
talented reggae artists were being stifled.
It was generally felt that roots rock reggae was becoming a dying
vocation. In the early 1990s Tony Rebel inspired a resurgence of cultural reggae
music that was accepted by Dancehall aficionados. A number of hard-core
Dancehall artists experienced a cultural epiphany and converted to the
Rastafarian movement. It was felt at the
time that Dancehall music was inspiring violence and material fetishism; a new
moral direction was needed. As a result,
artists such as Garnett Silk, Luciano, Buju Banton and Sizzla enjoyed both
international and local notoriety during this period. Their success may well have extended to the
new millennium but it was restricted by the continual opposition to accusations
of homophobia from the anti-gay lobby in Europe and North America. Thus the international spotlight was thrust
upon artists who toed the line and stuck to a feel good brand of Dancehall that
could merge seamlessly with global popular culture.
One of the reasons why reggae music in its
purest form (roots rock reggae) has lost its international hold to Dancehall
music is as a result of Dancehall being a more flexible and liberal art
form. Cultural reggae music is
puritanical and in some cases, laced with conservative values and
narratives. In contrast, Dancehall is a
more dynamic genre that can fuse with numerous music genres such as Pop, R
& B, Latino beats, Garage, Drum ‘ Bass, Jazz and Grime. Dancehall‘s commercial success is stymied by
narratives of hegemonic masculinity and by
the same token it offers the female protagonist a social space to escape and
rebel . Women gyrate their hips, dress, and dance outrageously in an ever
expanding corpus that fits neatly into
the capitalist wold view of commodity fetishism.
The future of Dancehall is very promising as
the new millennium has seen the development of professional reggae dancers
earning a living from live videos and teaching the dance moves to a global audience.
Many professional Jamaican dancers point to Gerald Bogle Levy as the first internationally acclaimed superstar who
brought choreography, ingenuity, excitement and a creative and catchy
inflection to the dancehall movement. Mr
Wacky as he was often called was the Dancehall
Master. He had the ability to create
dances without exertion and his dances became exceedingly popular and catchy.
He created dance styles such as Willie
Bounce, Wacky Dip, and Bogle Dance and these dance moves still hold
sway over the dance floors globally; they are a timeless rhapsody that has
contributed immensely to the magnetic pull of the ever expanding genre.
Unfortunately, on 20 January 2005, forty- year old Bogle and four others were
in his car at a petrol station when two men on a motorcycle rode by, shooting
into the vehicle. Bogle died from the
bullet wounds. Dance hall like Hip Hop music has its fair share of tragedy
sparked by rivalry. In 1990 two reggae icons Pan Head and Dirtsman
died by the gun in separate tragic incidents in Kingston Jamaica. Contemporary
Dancehall artist Vybs Kartel is now serving life imprisonment
for the murder of Clive 'Lizard' William at his home in Havendale, a suburb
north of Kingston. He was sentenced on 3
April 2014 and will not be eligible for parole for 35 years. Vybs Kartel is a
hugely talented Dancehall artist who is revered internationally for an
impressive catalogue of hits that generated a huge fan base. His trial was the
longest in the history of Jamaica and his conviction plunged the Dancehall
genre in a reputation freefall.
Nevertheless, the reputation of dance hall has
emerged from the Vybs Kartell saga unscathed with Tessanne Chin, one of the latest reggae fusion artists. She rapidly achieved international fame
following her win on The Voice, a U.S. television singing competition. A
positive development in Dancehall is the collaboration of the art-form with
other music genres; every Pop, R&B and Hip- hop artist in in North America
and Europe that’s worth their grain of salt has sampled reggae tracks. It’s the
current trend. Searching for the next Bob Marley to emerge is a romantic idea
that is not entirely impossible but difficult to realise at this time. The world
dance music market is receptive to hedonistic feel good vibes although this
news might be an anathema to the left leaning music loving liberal. Conversely,
Dancehall has brought joy and electricity to the feet and hips of a young generation
who are politically apathetic to message music.
This article was
written jointly by Donovan Reynolds CEO and edited by Ann Smith Managing Editor
of Kingston-Mouth .com. Donovan Reynolds
is an Independent Blogger and Human Rights Activists who is of a Jamaican
descent and a legal academic that has an interest in Human Rights,Culture and
International Development Issues.
nuff love star keep up the stellar work
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