Power 96 Presents Dancehall and Reggaeton 2005
(Sequence)
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When all else fails, there’s always Jamaica. Other
genres wax and wane (and right now, most seem to be in doldrums) but dancehall
doesn’t really have “off” years. Jamaica has the world’s highest per
capita rate of music production--a statistic that reflects not just the
centrality of music in the island’s culture, but the fact that the dancehall
industry is one of the few avenues for ghetto youth to achieve prosperity and prestige.
The ferocious competition between sound systems, producers, and performers
ensures a steady--at times, torrential--flow of creativity. Dancehall is
simultaneously radical and conservative, reflecting its audience’s twin demands
for novelty and continuity. There’s an insatiable hunger for fresh beats,
sharper rhymes and ever more idiosyncratic MC stylists. But the basic function
of the music--a soundtrack for sexual display and letting off steam--abides.
Judged as electronic musicians, the leading dancehall
producers are easily as inventive as any critically-feted techno artist from Koln that you’d
care to nominate. Just check the madcap twists and nutty nuances woven into the
Bionic Ras riddim (a term that refers not just to the beat but everything in a
track that’s not the vocal). Produced by the brilliant South Rakkas Crew,
Bionic Ras appears in three different versions on this compilation, ridden successively
by two top MCs, Sizzla and Capleton, plus legendary reggae singer Frankie Paul.
But while dancehall’s form is constantly mutating, the expressive content is
unchanging. The narrow but enthralling scope for MC artistry resides in finding
new twists on the same-old same-old: raunchy sex-talk, gangsta menace,
blinged-out swagger, and incitement to shake-that-ass. On “Scooby Anthem,” Tony
Curtis combines the last two, rhyming “Dom Perignon” with “Louis Vuitton” with
“break-a-dawn”--as in, “gonna party til the…”.
Subject matter-wise, dancehall hasn’t really evolved since
the early Eighties, when slackness and gun-talk displaced the roots ‘n’ culture
era. True, there are “conscious” dancehall artists, Rasta-ragga types like
reformed bad boy Buju Banton. But at sound systems their Babylon-bashing serves
as a brief interruption of piety amid the profanity. On this collection, the great Vybz Kartel
mischievously adapts the childhood taunt-rhyme about a girl and a boy kissing
in a tree with his chorus “picture you and me/under the tree/F.U.C.K.I.N.G.”.
The rest of the lyrics are so patois-thick they’re indechipherable, although I
could swear Vybz says something like “spurt up ya belly like Nesquik.” The gals
dem don’t go in for euphemisms either: on the insanely catchy “I’ve Got Your
Man,” Lady Saw jeers at her defeated
rival-in-love, “he likes it tight and says your [digital bleep effect] is just
a little slack”.
As for the “reggaeton” part of the comp’s title, that’s
basically a Latinized version of dancehall that’s spread from Puerto
Rico all over the Caribbean and
beyond. The genre’s slender claim on
distinctiveness is its bumpety giddy-up beat, which makes me think of that
“here comes the galloping major” game where you bounce a toddler on your
leg.. Dominating the middle-section of
the compilation with tracks from Ivy Queen and Papichulo Crew, the style is
enjoyable enough in small doses. But then so was the macarena.