Calypso in New York

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Album Information
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Total Tracks: 26   Total Length: 73:12

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Alex Abramovich

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Calypso's consummate professional.
Label: Smithsonian Folkways

Lord Invader (aka Rupert Westmore Grant, born in Port of Spain in 1914), who spent long stretches abroad and tailored many of his best songs to the concerns of West Indian expats, also had immense potential as a crossover artist. His "Rum and Coca Cola" was covered by the Andrews Sisters in 1945 and sold four million records. (Invader sued, and won $150,000 in royalties, but lost his rights to the composition.) In 1946, he began recording for Moe Asch's Folkways Records, which presented him, misleadingly, as a rough-hewn, avuncular folk artist. In fact, like his labelmate Lead Belly, Invader was a consummate professional, and — for his day — a surprisingly candid lyricist. "Some passing you empty/ And yet they won't stop" he sang (on "New York, Subway"). "I had money but I had to roam/ I couldn't get a cab to drop me back home." Like the best calypsonians, Invader (who died in 1961) had a way of smiling through clenched teeth.

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Intention of war

JeanPoole

I don't know much about Calypso, but this is incredibly powerful stuff, some recordings with a full band, some of it raw kitchen jam recordings, going from serious and tragic ('My inetnion is war') to, for me, ironicaly very, very funny ('My experiences on the Reeperbahn'). Great perky Caribbean melodies, upbeat old testament singalongs, serious lyrical intent, yeah!

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They Say All Music Guide

All of the material on this 26-song, 73-minute CD was recorded for Moe Asch of Folkways Records between 1946 and 1961; half of the tracks were previously unreleased. It may be that many of the arrangements he used were more accessible to American ears than those used by some of his calypso peers, or just that the fidelity on many of these numbers (particularly those from the later 1950s and early 1960s) is superior to that heard on many vintage calypso recordings. But Lord Invader does seem more comfortable with full-band, slightly jazzed-up calypso arrangements than some other calypso performers, without compromising the verve and bite of his lyrics and vocal delivery. Occasionally these recordings have minimal backing, as on “Ten Thousand to Bar Me One,” on which he’s accompanied only by drum, bottle, spoon, and chorus; sometimes the songs are traditional, such as the arguably overdone “Brown Girl in the Ring,” on which again he’s backed only by percussion and chorus. More often he combines calypso with instrumentation reminiscent of pre-war jazz, especially on the cuts on which he’s accompanied by Felix and His Internationals, featuring Gregory Felix on clarinet. The topicality of his songs actually isn’t too overt, but it’s there to hear on songs about taking the New York subway, his experiences in Chicago, and “Yankee Dollar” (about his frustration question for compensation in his “Rum and Coca-Cola” plagiarism suit). “God Made Us All,” prefaced by a speech from the ubiquitous Pete Seeger (a staple of Smithsonian Folkways releases), is a gentle anti-racism admonition. Whatever he’s singing about, however, Lord Invader conveys easygoing nobody’s-fool charm, in a manner that’s less strident than some other calypsoites of the time. – Richie Unterberger

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