Let’s face it --- island music is made
for dancing! Most people come up with a
melody or words
and then compose a song. Not me. I start with a rhythm that I feel from the
energy around me at the time, or the energy and rhythm from a memory. I then start fooling around with it until
the beat, syncopation and general feeling is right for the mood. I then add, change instruments and drum
types, add background instruments, and fool around with the beats per
minute. When the various instrument
octaves, tuning and echo are where I want them, I finally think about
the solo
instruments and their accompaniment instruments. With
these in place, I work on a melody that fits that rhythm.
Memories of things, nature’s sounds, the
history of the places I’m thinking of bring the melodies to life.
Island Dancing evolved this way. Every song went through this evolutionary
process. “Dancing in the Veracruz
Square” comes from watching all the Mamas and Papas in their finery
dancing to the
City Orchestra playing on the balcony of the Government Building: Papa looking so stern and Mama’s eyes
sparkling and flirty in her ecstatic dancing mood, the children,
dressed up and
watching their parents and then bravely dancing with their friends. Once in a while the little girls would dance
with Papa by standing on his feet.
“The
Sirens are Calling Me Sailing” is a provocative
sea chantey type song where the hustle and bustle of life takes us away
from
our boats from time to time to meet the financial and family
commitments of
life. But, sooner or later, the Sirens
win out and we return to Mother Ocean.
“Let’s Go to the Carnival” is in a similar vein but much
wilder. “Dueling Steel Drums & Horns”
typifies
Junkanoo where the bands battle each other by pairing off their soloist
against
each other while the bands who know each other’s music support the
competing
soloists.
Listen to Snippets from this Album