JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Jab Molassie sings a Faustian calypso

by

20130127

Three years ago bassist and Uni­ver­si­ty of Trinidad and To­ba­go (UTT) lec­tur­er Cait­lyn Kam­min­ga be­gan work­ing on an adap­ta­tion of L'His­toire du Sol­dat (The Sol­dier's Tale) by Russ­ian com­pos­er Ig­or Stravin­sky. The Sol­dier's Tale was writ­ten near­ly 100 years ago and is based on a Russ­ian folk tale about a World War I sol­dier who trades his fid­dle with the dev­il for a book that pre­dicts the fu­ture.

Kam­min­ga's adap­ta­tion, Jab Mo­lassie, is set thou­sands of miles away in Car­ni­val in T&T, to mu­sic root­ed in the ca­lyp­so tra­di­tion. In the piece, a mu­si­cian sells his in­stru­ment, and con­se­quent­ly his soul, to a jab mo­lassie.At first glance, the two sto­ries seem a far cry from each oth­er, but dur­ing an in­ter­view last week, Kam­min­ga said there were many par­al­lels be­tween the works. One is that Stravin­sky was heav­i­ly in­flu­enced by African rhythms and jazz at the time of writ­ing.

Kam­min­ga did ex­ten­sive re­search–with mas­sive amounts of help from lo­cal his­to­ri­ans, artists and oth­ers such as the se­cu­ri­ty guard at her son's school who helped her achieve some au­then­tic­i­ty in the di­a­logue."I brought him the script and he laughed at me and said, 'They might say that in New Or­leans but they don't say that in T&T.' So I sat with him and we went through it."

The nar­ra­tor, Cor­po­ral, is named af­ter the guard.Some of Kam­min­ga's main as­sis­tance came from UK-based com­pos­er Do­minique Le Gen­dre, who is writ­ing orig­i­nal mu­sic for the piece, and pho­tog­ra­ph­er Maria Nunes. Nunes' lo­gis­ti­cal as­sis­tance to both Kam­min­ga and Le Gen­dre mor­phed in­to the cre­ation of the Cal­abash Foun­da­tion for the Arts, which is fund­ing the project.

The "helpers" weren't al­ways pos­i­tive, how­ev­er. When Michelle Ay­oung Chee of the Tall­man Foun­da­tion first read the script, she found fault with the set­ting in Laven­tille. "She looked at me and said, 'Why does this have to hap­pen in Laven­tille? Why does it al­ways have to be Laven­tille?' And I said it's the truth and of course it could be set in West­moor­ings. You can set it any­where. It's a Faus­t­ian tale and that's what makes it so uni­ver­sal."

When Le Gen­dre first saw the text she was "im­me­di­ate­ly sold.""The most im­por­tant part of the piece is the text. The de­scrip­tion of the La­dy Young in the open­ing scene is fan­tas­tic and it re­al­ly cap­tures what it is and it's very po­et­ic," said Le Gen­dre. 'This sto­ry is a dilem­ma'

Nunes be­lieves the Faus­t­ian as­pects of the sto­ry lend well to adap­ta­tion."I think it's im­por­tant to un­der­stand that this sto­ry is a dilem­ma. It's a piece of the­atre that will in­vite the au­di­ence to ask ques­tions. That's what makes it very rel­e­vant to us in Trinidad–the mes­sage is what you take from it; it's not try­ing to tell you what the an­swer is but al­low­ing you to ar­rive at the an­swer."

Equal­ly as im­por­tant as the text is the mu­sic. Kam­min­ga and Le Gen­dre stress the de­scrip­tion "mu­si­cal the­atre." Le Gen­dre sees the work as a re­vival of what she be­lieves was the gold­en age of the­atre in T&T dur­ing the '60s and '70s."This is a very con­scious and de­lib­er­ate move to re­con­nect with all those who played a part in shap­ing our the­atre and us as per­form­ers, so it's very much in­tact with the tra­di­tions in which I grew up where there was a mar­riage of mu­sic and the­atre. The mu­sic I'm writ­ing is root­ed in our tra­di­tions. It's melod­ic. The mu­sic has typ­i­cal bass lines and riffs and it's a wrap­around of our mu­si­cal lega­cy from the chantuelle days come right up to rap­so be­cause there's a lot of chant­ed parts," she ex­plained.

Some of the no­table peo­ple who shaped this time pe­ri­od in­clude Derek Wal­cott, Beryl McBurnie and No­ble Dou­glas. Dou­glas has been brought on board as a chore­o­g­ra­ph­er. Oth­er no­ta­bles in­volved in the project are rap­so group 3Canal (Wen­dell Man­war­ren, Stan­ton Kew­ley and Roger Roberts), spo­ken word artist Muham­mad Muwak­il, and UK-based ac­tor Mar­ti­na Laird.

For Kam­min­ga the ben­e­fits of im­mers­ing her­self in T&T cul­ture through recre­at­ing Jab Mo­lassie have been man­i­fold."It's drawn me to things that I hope and dreamed would hap­pen. When I got in­ter­est­ed in this job (as a UTT lec­tur­er) my fa­ther said, 'Why the hell would you want to leave Lon­don to go to Trinidad?' But I told him that when I see my life in Lon­don, I feel like it's in black and white and sepia. When I see it in Trinidad I see it in tech­ni­col­or. There's such a rich ta­pes­try of cul­ture here. Every lay­er you peel back you re­alise there's more and more to peel."

Cal­abash Foun­da­tion for the Arts

Jab Mo­lassie gave birth to the Cal­abash Foun­da­tion for the Arts, a non-prof­it or­gan­i­sa­tion in­cor­po­rat­ed in Au­gust 2012, whose mis­sion is to pro­vide fund­ing and sup­port sys­tems to con­tribute to the de­vel­op­ment of new cre­ative works in T&T. Af­ter its first full pro­duc­tion in May, the foun­da­tion hopes to take Jab Mo­lassie on a sec­ondary schools tour fol­lowed by an in­ter­na­tion­al tour.

Part of the Cal­abash mis­sion is al­so to sup­port young artistes, which is why the work­shop process was so im­por­tant to the de­vel­op­ment of Jab Mo­lassie.In ear­ly Jan­u­ary a week-long work­shop was held at UTT which in­clud­ed in­tense ses­sions for the com­pos­er, li­bret­tist, mu­si­cians and vo­cal per­form­ers. The work­shop al­lowed the com­pos­er and li­bret­tist to hear the work and re­fine de­tails. An im­por­tant as­pect of the work­shop are the young artistes who par­tic­i­pate. Their par­tic­i­pa­tion is as both per­form­ers and un­der­stud­ies to the cre­ative roles.

At the Jan­u­ary work­shop par­tic­i­pants in­clud­ed Na­talia Dop­well, Rhi­an Guer­rero, Ger­maine Wil­son, Kendel Haynes and Muham­mad Muwak­il. The next work­shop will be held in May.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored