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Monday, July 14, 2025

Black Sage ends 21-year wait for 4th Extempo crown

by

137 days ago
20250227

Ian Wa­son

Free­lance Cor­re­spon­dent

Phillip “Black Sage” Mur­ray won all his Ex­tem­po bat­tles and the Ex­tem­po war on Tues­day night, de­feat­ing Bri­an Lon­don in the fi­nal round of the Na­tion­al Ex­tem­po Monarch Com­pe­ti­tion to claim his fourth over­all ti­tle.

Black Sage, who won his last ti­tle in 2004, tore in­to Lon­don from the jump in the fi­nal at the Radis­son Ho­tel, Port-of-Spain, blam­ing him for fel­low com­peti­tor Win­ston “Gyp­sy” Pe­ters’ vo­cal is­sues, af­ter ques­tion­ing why Lon­don had his arms around Gyp­sy’s shoul­der dur­ing their semi­fi­nal show­down.

Lon­don strug­gled to re­cov­er, al­though he had some good mo­ments as he claimed Black Sage was in as­so­ci­a­tion with Amer­i­can hip-hop mogul P Did­dy.

Sage was un­for­giv­ing in the war, how­ev­er, and poked fun at Lon­don’s clothes, say­ing it was fit for lit­tle girls in ref­er­ence to the pink colour of the garb.

It was clear who the au­di­ence backed and they were sim­ply wait­ing for the judges to for­malise their choice.

An elat­ed Mur­ray lat­er told the me­dia how sig­nif­i­cant the win was.

“Bri­an Lon­don is so good. He beat Gyp­sy,” Mur­ray said.

He ex­plained that even if a ca­lyp­son­ian won the Ex­tem­po Monarch, beat­ing Gyp­sy was the ul­ti­mate goal.

“You win noth­ing un­less you beat Gyp­sy. Now, we all (Lin­go, Bri­an Lon­don, La­dy Africa) won, be­cause we beat Gyp­sy in the fi­nal. He is the hall­mark. He is the stan­dard bear­er,” the 2025 Ex­tem­po Monarch ex­plained.

Mur­ray al­so ex­plained that in ex­tem­po, what is said is left on the stage and there were no hard feel­ings to­wards Lon­don.

Mur­ray won the Ex­tem­po Monarch in 1995, 1999 and 2004 be­fore wait­ing 21 years to claim his fourth ti­tle. Gyp­sy has the record with 11 wins, sev­en of them be­tween 1991 and 2000.

Dur­ing the ear­li­er rounds, Gyp­sy skil­ful­ly in­cor­po­rat­ed his voice is­sues dur­ing his ex­tem­po. Hit by the flu, he was se­vere­ly hoarse through­out the night and laboured through his set. Pick­ing the top­ic Obeah in Ca­lyp­so, Gyp­sy in­sin­u­at­ed it was the use of obeah that was be­hind his vo­cal trou­bles.

Mur­ray’s top­ic in the first round was Ja­maican reg­gae artiste Bee­nie Man’s crit­i­cism of lo­cal dish, dou­bles. He sang that Trinida­di­ans did not talk down on Ja­maica’s ac­k­ee (part of Ja­maica’s na­tion­al dish of ac­k­ee and salt­fish) de­spite the high lev­el of tox­ins con­tained in the fruit.

Lon­don coast­ed through the first round with his top­ic—The State of West In­dies Crick­et. It was a rel­a­tive­ly man­age­able top­ic, and Lon­don was smooth dur­ing the set in which he used the ‘Mary Ann’ melody and rem­i­nisced on the good days of the 80s when the West In­dies were on top of the crick­et world.

In the Freestyle seg­ment of the show, Preedy cap­tured the ti­tle from Squeezy Rankin when he de­feat­ed Or­lan­do Oc­tave in the fi­nal war.

Preedy, the los­ing fi­nal­ist at the in­au­gur­al com­pe­ti­tion in 2023, when he was beat­en by Ca­lyp­so Nite, used his ex­pe­ri­ence against Oc­tave, who was in his de­but ap­pear­ance.

The pair threw punch­es at each oth­er in a bat­tle that was fit to be called a fi­nal and was more keen­ly con­test­ed and com­pet­i­tive than the ex­tem­po fi­nal.

Even be­fore the mu­sic start­ed, Preedy told Oc­tave “ladies first,” to set the tone for what was to come.

Preedy, who left the venue twice in be­tween per­for­mances to ho­n­our oth­er en­gage­ments, took aim at Oc­tave’s short dread­locks and re­ferred to them as a “strug­gling ras” and called him short.

Oc­tave then re­spond­ed, “Napoleon was a short man, Im­bert is a short man and he de­stroyed the whole is­land (that brought loud cheers), don’t take short man just so.”

Af­ter the two ex­changed lyri­cal blows, they em­braced be­fore they ex­it­ed the stage.

Ear­li­er in the Freestyle seg­ment, Preedy threw his sup­port be­hind Ter­ri Lyons to win the Na­tion­al Ca­lyp­so Monarch on Sun­day. He told Yung Bred­da that he had to first pay his dues be­fore he could claim any ti­tle and told de­throned Freestyle Monarch Squeezy Rankin to do work on his voice “or the judges won’t pick you.”

The ex­tem­po monarch walked away with $200,000 while the freestyle cham­pi­on pock­et­ed $50,000.


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