Greetings to Jamaica and the Five Star General Rodney Basil Pryce in particular,
I
remember somewhere back in 1993, I had held this notion that Reggae was
the God and Dancehall was the bastard demi-god who had inane chatter
gibberish and nonsensical if not simply whimsical lyrics and rhyme
schemes like "zungy zungy a zunga zeng"! ABC 123... nothing too
intellectually challenging or vocabulary expanding... zeen come again,
wah di clock inna London name big ben, missa chin money name yen! Shabba
and Super Cat weren't so bad but Dancehall as genre lacked definition
and umph! Then comes PEEEEEEEEEEEOPLE DEAD! A man who would become the
archetype of what a DJ and social commentator in the Dancehall should
be.
I remember in 9th grade at the esteemed Cornwall
College in 9-1 to be "pre-xact" every session a teacher missed was an
opportunity for aspiring musicians. Long before the age of rising star,
the class would be a riot of drummers banging desks and chairs as we
cued up the main acts, those days the class was divided in two, the
school of Beenie-ites, and the House of Bounty. The best representatives
from the competing sides the likes of class mates named Clive Lawrence,
Romaine McIntosh, Winston Brown... they would represent the factions
and vocalize the discographies of Bounty which would be pitted against
the catalogue of Beenie ballads. I happened to be in the Bounty camp.
Why
some may ask? At the time I was a comic book junkie, whose favourite
hero was Spider-man, but in terms of social development and coping with
the teen world, and the Jamaican social context... well "with great
power comes great responsibility" as a mantra wasn't cutting it all the
way. And Spider-man a teen with superpowers and a horrendous social life
and the guy that everybody hated wasn't gonna save my psyche through to
10 grade. So when you need a local Superhero, and a most verbose
character, fearless, Jamaican, garbed in all black like Blade, Punisher
or the Black Panther... A man the people dubbed "the poor people's
governor" "the ghetto gladiator"... Titles not unlike "The Uncanny
X-men" or "The Spectacular Spiderman." Bounty Killer became to me the
very first Jamaican Super Hero, equipped with grand titles, monikers and
mantras, secret identity Rodney Pryce, with his Justice League or
Avengers, known as The Alliance. "Yeah Yeah Yeah" "Huh!" Bounty was the
Jamaican icon from he became one of the local champions of that Patrick
Ewing 33 sneaker, Jamaicans at home supporting Jamaicans abroad!
It
is no coincidence then that his 1996 album My Xperience impacted fans
at home and abroad spending six months on the Billboard reggae chart.
Personally that was my favourite album, and I didn't even realize it
till one day when a friend of mine Gavin Carey called me at home... yeah
back in the land line era... and when he called he said... "my yute a
one cd you have, and a one song deh pon di cd, caah everyday mi call
you, all mi here is 'dem get gun dung inna miggle of guntown, well mi
silent gun will emit no soun'" I then realized I had to rotate my
musical diet... not that it wasn't varied... I grew up on Bob Dylan,
Melanie Safka, Sam Cooke, Beres Hammond, Simon and Garfunkel... in he
90's I met Alanis Morrisette, Sarah Mclachan, Goo Goo Dolls, Alternative
Music from D. Shadow and Rick Dee's Top 40, interspersed with Jungle,
Techno World Beat... so my diet wasn't bad but in Jamaica Bounty was my
boss. At the same time he also expanded my musical ear... The My
Xperience album would introduce me to The Fugees, Busta Rhymes, Wu-Tang
and many others... subsequent albums in the 90's would introduce me
early to Kardinal Official on "The Bacardi Slang."
Bounty's
career too has been as layered and textured and storied just like a
comic book series, with arch-nemesis manifesting in Beenie Man and
eventually Vybz Kartel, clashes as epic as any Ridley Scott film, feat
and accomplishment that echo on in the perpetual street dancehall
discourse. I can only imagine the day when teens and adults read a
Bounty Killer comic book or graphic novel. Maybe when Ziggy Marley gets
time away from Marijuana Man he can bust me on the job fi draw and write
a Bounty Killer Comic. Once somewhere in 2005 I had wanted to write a
Bounty Killer Biography titled: Badman Bible! Even when close friends
debated that Bounty's Tale is not best seller material, I have absolute
faith to this day that it would be a mega success, accompanied by like a
documentary... the legend of Bounty would be immortalized.
Anyway...
this ratings of mine for Bounty Killer progressed as I entered into
academia, when while I was in KGN, Bounty was in my backyard in Mobay
donating computers to Albion All Age, giving public lectures at Mobay's
Civic Centre and generally impacting the youth of Jamaica in a major
way. His prolific work would not be forgotten by youth of Norwood,
Paradise, Albion, Glendevon even unto this day. I remembered when
Carolyn Cooper had held her usual Friday Dancehall Artiste lecture up by
UWI, Mona... I will never forget the particular Friday when Bounty
Killer lectured... as a Bounty fan since his career started... I would
be present at that lecture with my placard and signs BOUNTY FOR PRIME
MINISTER! A memorable biographical tale, topped off by a fan request
performance, nothing beats that.
Now flash forward to
current day Jamaica... 2016... Dancehall ain't what it used to be! Today
we watch the acidic career of Alkaline as he spits nasal inflections of
mundane lyrics on the hottest dancehall and pop chart rhythms. There is
even today an analogy in the dancehall that I think originates with
Aidonia... "mi bad like 90's dancehall," which to me Ithink is testament
to the current state of dancehall. The only saving grace for Jamaican
music is reggae revival as Kartel tries to holler from his cell
"Dancehall can't stall, woaheee dancehall can't dead yet"
But
there are some critical things I have been waiting to see in the
dancehall still... Maybe I am idealistic and a dreamer... but I had
imagined Bounty Killer having many more years... I was waiting on Bounty
Killer and Linkin Park, an era where Bounty's social commentary taps
into global youth angst and pain. Bounty and Eminem, Bounty and P.O.D.
(remix Youth of the Nation), Bounty and the Trini version of Bounty...
Bunji Garlin, I think they would make a booming earthquake combination
that would shake from both sides of the Caribbean and quake the world.
The romantic version of Rodney Pryce that was on "It's Ok and It's
Alright!" with the like of Emily Sande. Bounty from those 90's Jungle
Cd's on rhythms that Major Lazer builds, Bounty with Calvin Harris,
Bounty with those European producers... dubstep Bounty, Bounty on some
Ancient Tomorrow rhythms like Protoje, as a matter of fact mi a wait pon
Bounty-Chronixx, mi await pon Bounty and Kabaka...
I am not from
that school that says Bounty's days are over, I believe those that say
that have a failure of imagination. I see much more work to be done by
Bounty, Beenie, Sizzla, Capleton, Buju and the entire generation that
made the 90's great.