From: "Rick Dempster" <rick.dempster@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "Winslow Yerxa" <winslowyerxa@xxxxxxxxx>
CC: harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [Harp-L] Carribean Harmonica
Date: Fri, 13 Oct 2006 10:40:10 +1000
Hi Winslow;
Hope you don't mind the direct inquiry; if anyone else
on the list has anything to add, I'd be pleased to hear.
A few years ago, if my memory serves me, you responded
to a post I made regarding a Jamaican harmonica player called Roy Richards,
who worked with Baba Brook's band and had a hit in 1967 (probably a hit in
Jamaica and UK) called 'Contact'.
I've since tried to track down something else by him, but
there is nothing out there, apart from the odd bit of accompaniement.
Chances are that everything I want to here from Roy is
encapsulated on that one track anyway. But it has caused me to wonder what
kind of status the harmonica had in the West Indies.
I have heard the odd track here and there, one on a
chromatic, played in first position (Richards plays a tremolo model)
I wonder that there isn't more. You'd think a cheap
instrument would have found popularity in the Carribean.
I seem to recall you had some names, but I may be
confusing you with someone else.
If the harmonica (being British colonies they might have
called it 'mouth organ' in Jamaica & Trinidad) was not popular in that
corner of the world, I wonder what the reason was. The music of the old
Calypsonians might have been considered the preserve of more sophisticated
players who could play 'proper' instruments, but the area of music occupied
by steel pan players ie more 'street' style would have suited harmonica,
and Roy Richard's playing falls into that camp in my opinion.
Woddyareckon?
RD
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