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by Basil Walters Observer staff
reporter
"Me
no gone noweh
Me deh yah same way
De gangster dey yah pon de
gully side
If
yu waan know whe fe fin'
me"
- Mavado
David Constantine Brooks is
in the best of places at the
worst of times. And he seems
to be everywhere (or not being
allowed to go someplace) all
at once.
He was prevented from entering
the Unites States after being
brought to book for gun charges
in Jamaica, banned from a St
Vincent performance and his
often violently graphic lyrics
deemed in various quarters
as just about the closest thing
to Salman Rushdie's Satanic
Verses.
That is just about the worst.
Musical rise
The almost unheard of has
happened to Mavado, the approximation
of the high-end timepiece by
which David Brooks is more
widely known.
His On The
Rock has not only caught
the attention of hip-hop
mega star Jay-Z, but Beyoncé's
husband (not a bad woman to
be known by, if a man must
be known by his connection
with one), but the rapper has
done an unsolicited remix.
But Mavado's musical magnitude,
stunningly rapid since his
2005 breakthrough with Real
McKoy, is not to be measured
by the attention of a rapper.
It is to be gauged by the
frenzy which greets his live
appearances and songs from
a youth population which has
found its hero, poet and bard,
the frequency with which his
music pops out of speakers
in cars, at bars and sound
systems - and telephones, too.
Fantasy
Mavado is the dancehall lovers'
and dancehall haters' fantasy.
For the lover (at least, those
who can deal with his lyrics),
Mavado's piercing, unforgettable
voice, soaring languidly over
rhythms after his trademark
'gangster for life' and then
speeding up effortlessly though
not losing a smidgen of clarity
as he destroys all notions
of distinctions between deejaying
and singing are all they could
ever hope for.
For the hater,
he is the ultimate target;
young, black, from
the Cassava Piece 'gullyside',
calmly informing "infrared
upon him head it was de las'
sight" and dismissing
any thoughts of a song's sanctity.
And the run-in with the law
does not hurt either.
It is this run-in that, at
the moment, seems will prevent
him from going to New York
in June for what would have
been a call-up on stage by
Jay-Z, at one point unthinkable
for a youth from the 'gullyside'.
It is, after all, the best
of times in the worst of places.
And, yes, David Brooks is
27 years old.
Early years
An hour with
Mavado rambles through his
early years (he
was called 'Master David Brooks'
when he was singing in church
at Grant's Pen when four or
five years old), his hook-up
with Bounty Killer ("a
me general"), Red Stripe's
withdrawal from live music
events, his family (he points
to a very good relationship
with his now deceased father)
and, among many other things,
the graphic nature of his lyrics.
The Sunday Gleaner asked how
he got the name Mavado.
"Yu know how me really
come fe sey Mavado, a me fren
Flexx, him gi me a watch mark
Movado. Me sey da name yah
bad, eh? An de space come till
me start sey Mavado, an' Killer
sey 'No, yu cyaa name Movado
like de watch, yu haffi put
a changes to it.' An we jus'
sey aright den, we jus' sey
Mavado. Mos' people might no
think a Mavado, mos' people
might tink a Movado," he
said.
The Sunday
Gleaner asks if the watch
people have ever
said anything to him and Mavado,
who is calm and contemplative
throughout the interview, says "Mmm,
mmm. Cause me no name Movado.
Me name Mavado. Yu understan?"
As for the
trademark 'gangster for life',
he says: "How
me come wid de tagline, as
a artis' an yu a come inna
de business, yu haffi come
wid yu own ting. We deh pon
de gully every day an dem ting
deh. An yu know mos' inn de
gully yu hear de yute dem talk
bout gangster an dem talk bout
dis an' dem talk bout dat.
Dat's how we come up an we
talk bout gangster for life,
see it."
When asked
how long he has been saying
it, Mavado says "Couple
years well, man, couple years.
SOURCE
published: Sunday | April 27, 2008 | Jamaica Gleaner
http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20080427/ent/ent4.html
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