Combining factual biography with the imaginative structure of the novel, Anthony Joseph gets to the heart of the man behind the music and the myth, to present a holistic portrait of the calypso icon Lord Kitchener. Born into colonial Trinidad in 1922 as Aldwyn Roberts, ‘Kitch’ emerged in the 1950s, at the forefront of multicultural Britain, acting as an intermediary between the growing Caribbean community, the islands they had left behind, and the often hostile conditions of life in post-war Britain. In the process, Kitch single-handedly popularized the calypso in Britain. Joseph spoke to Lord Kitchener just once, in 1984, when he found the calypso icon standing alone in Queen’s Park Savannah. It was a pivotal meeting in which the great calypsonian outlined his musical vision, an event which forms a moving epilogue to Kitch, Joseph’s unique biography of the Grandmaster.
Combining factual biography with the imaginative structure of the novel, Anthony Joseph gets to the heart of the man behind the music and the myth, to present a holistic portrait of the calypso icon Lord Kitchener. Born into colonial Trinidad in 1922 as Aldwyn Roberts, ‘Kitch’ emerged in the 1950s, at the forefront of multicultural Britain, acting as an intermediary between the growing Caribbean community, the islands they had left behind, and the often hostile conditions of life in post-war Britain. In the process, Kitch single-handedly popularized the calypso in Britain. Joseph spoke to Lord Kitchener just once, in 1984, when he found the calypso icon standing alone in Queen’s Park Savannah. It was a pivotal meeting in which the great calypsonian outlined his musical vision, an event which forms a moving epilogue to Kitch, Joseph’s unique biography of the Grandmaster.
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Overview
Combining factual biography with the imaginative structure of the novel, Anthony Joseph gets to the heart of the man behind the music and the myth, to present a holistic portrait of the calypso icon Lord Kitchener. Born into colonial Trinidad in 1922 as Aldwyn Roberts, ‘Kitch’ emerged in the 1950s, at the forefront of multicultural Britain, acting as an intermediary between the growing Caribbean community, the islands they had left behind, and the often hostile conditions of life in post-war Britain. In the process, Kitch single-handedly popularized the calypso in Britain. Joseph spoke to Lord Kitchener just once, in 1984, when he found the calypso icon standing alone in Queen’s Park Savannah. It was a pivotal meeting in which the great calypsonian outlined his musical vision, an event which forms a moving epilogue to Kitch, Joseph’s unique biography of the Grandmaster.
Product Details
| ISBN-13: | 9781845234195 |
|---|---|
| Publisher: | Peepal Tree Press Ltd. |
| Publication date: | 01/01/2019 |
| Edition description: | None |
| Pages: | 296 |
| Product dimensions: | 5.50(w) x 8.25(h) x 0.80(d) |
About the Author
Anthony Joseph lectures in creative writing at Birkbeck College. He is the author of four poetry collections.
Read an Excerpt
CHAPTER 1
GREEN FIG
The stable hand in his rubber boots throws a bucket of disinfectant into the pig pen. Then he brush it down. Sun coming up slow on the market now, but a faint moon still in the sky. Black back crapaud still weeping in the gullies, corn bird flying from vine to river vine. Is Saturday. Donkey cart and wagon wheel coming down the main road from Valencia and Toco, leaning in the potholes and the lumps in the road, coming to the market, heavy with purple dasheen and pumpkin, plump with green christophene and lettuce by the basket, long brown cassava and breadfruit, mauby bark, yamatuta. The knock-kneed dougla woman sets her stall by the market side, near where the road slopes down into tracks and rickety cratewood stalls. She stirs her cauldron of cow-heel soup and hums holiness hymns. She has been there since dew-wet morning, from the first glimpse of light burst. Her pot bubbles and spits and the scent of wild thyme and congo pepper drifts through the market like a spell. Soon, in the damp woody spaces of the covered market stall, chickens will be swung by their feet, to flutter against the grip of the abattoir man, with his cutlass hand and his hot water boiling on a fireside, to dip and pluck them beating, from wing and narrow bone. Morning opening like a promise above Arima.
Miss Daphne sits on an overturned iron bucket shelling pigeon peas in the market yard, with rose mangoes and speckled breadfruit laid out on a crocus sack before her. She speaks to the full woman selling navel orange in the stall beside her – reels her head back, laughs – and peas fall from her crotch. Down the aisle, Ma Yvette selling bottles of black-strap molasses, Ma Pearl selling saltfish, smoked herring, pigtail and garlic, Madame Hoyte have nutmeg and mauby bark, Mr Chambers selling lamp oil, Picton have corn. Customers walk now among the stalls, choosing okra and sweet peppers, cow-foot, tripe and live crabs for Sunday callaloo.
Later, in that afternoon time, after the market has been deserted, when only the stink of fowl-gut and rotten fruit remains in the gutters, and the traders are packing their unsold goods, a team of long cars will roll slowly across the ragged field behind the market. The dry season has parched the ground there till the earth is veined with fissures. Dust. Buicks, Austins and bullet-shaped Chryslers are taking French Creoles to the Santa Rosa race track for that afternoon's races.
Up hill to the north, young Bean sit down on the worn wood of his front step with his head between his knees, making rhythm beat with a guava stick against the splintering edge and humming upright bass in the throat, comping with the high notes. Eileen, his sister, frying fish in batches in the outside kitchen behind the house. Bean could smell the flour and oil burning in the skillet. A bee start to inveigle the stick. Bean get up, dust off the seat of his pants, catch a vaps just so and walk down St Joseph Street, whistling, his slipper slapping the gravel. He wave to the hornerman Deacon sanding cedar crooksticks in his shed, he say hello to the black-tongued soucouyant hanging white sheets on a line flung between her lime and barbadine tree, to Baboolal the one armed tailor, needle in his mouth.
Crossing the main road, by the dial, he passes the market vendors dragging their carts home, then he walks across the dusty field beyond the market to the old Samaan tree near the paddock. Its branches spread over the wild yard where horses roam. He sits among its raised roots where a rage of ti-marie bush waits with leaves that shut to the touch. From where he sits he can see the jockeys walk their horses from the paddock to the races. He can smell the horse dung, hear boots kick dust. With his head resting on his forearm, and his forearm across his knees, he takes a stick and starts interfering the poor timarie bush. But is bass for a tune what humming in his head. He watching how the ants and batchaks live in that little jungle down there, between the picka bush. Each frond he touch folds like a shy shutting fan. It take him right there by the paddock and he didn't even know it take him. One thing he thinking and another thing thinking behind, melody spring before the words reach the rim of his mouth, like something telling him each time what the next word or note would be, the song singing itself fully formed in his head, as if he had been working on this song even as he worked in the field that morning, even as he walked through the village at night and waved, stuttering to the hunters going uphill with flambeaux and lances, cocoa milk and cigarettes, black-back crapaud bleating in the bush.
He looks up through the diamond patterns of leaf and light, to see if the song has fallen from the saaman trees' canopy. His lips move to whisper, his ears shut out all sound but the song. And not even the thoroughbred gallop along the dirt track with its high ass pumping, the splash of dust it kicking, not the whip or the rustle of savannah breeze through the leaves, or the announcer on his megaphone, or the sky- blue Buick engine's roar can shift him from where he is.
Mary I am tired and disgust doh boil no more fig for me breakfast
It come out whole. He never have to write it down. Gone back home now and have to keep it in his head, trap it in there, like a humming bird in a bottle, seal it in by repetition, stitch and tie it into creation.
CHAPTER 21941: GASTON AUBREY
WHEN I FIRST SEE Kitchener is in Arima I see him.
My band used to play a lot in Arima and it had a dancehall upstairs the Portuguese laundry, right by the old racecourse, where they used to have christenings and wedding receptions. Was right there I used to play piano with Bertie Francis band, Castilians. We would play, a lil' Count Basie, Glen Miller, calypso music. And after we done play we go looking for Chinese restaurant, for cutters, or the souse woman by the market.
Right by the dial there was a tailor shop, an' sometimes, if you there in the day, you may see Kitch, always dressed well; he very tall, a good looking brown-skin fella, always with the open shirt an' the neck tie, an' he singing calypso.
The first tune I remember Kitchener singing was 'Green Fig'. I see him sing that right in Arima, one evening, Carnival season, when he stand up under the dial, light on him, an' he singing this song an' people start to gather round. 'Mary I am tired and disgust, doh boil no more fig for me breakfast.'
People calling 'Kaiso! Kaiso!' So he sing a next verse.
An' when he finish he say, 'Gus boy, I feel I going down town. I going down Port of Spain to m-m-m- go make my name. Arima eh have n-n-nothing for me.'
I watch him. I say, 'Bean, town not easy, you feel you ready for town?' He wasn't Kitchener yet, he was 'Bean'.
He say, 'Yes, I ready.'
I say, 'Well, if you need a piano man, ask for me when you reach down; I living Belmont Valley Road.' An' you know when that man reach in town he really come up Belmont and look for me. And is so we start to play music, from then, for years.
CHAPTER 3TOWN SAY
BEAN STANDING IN THE MORNING YARD under the kitchen window where the earth was slippery with mud from washbasin water, scent of stale soap, swill, and cow dung and frangipani in the fields. He washes his face in the enamel rainwater bowl, wrings and flicks the water from his hands. In the bedroom he combs his hair in front of the mirror. He wears the white shirt he has starched and ironed himself, the brown trilby, pinched in the peak, the school blue suit his father left behind, the one with the pants a lighter blue because his mother once washed the thing with coal tar soap on the river rocks and it faded. The black shoe cracked across the axle of the instep from walking long and hilly places.
While dew still drying, he leaves the wooden house on St Joseph Road with his grip and box guitar in a burlap sack, grease from two fried bake oozing grease through brown paper in his inside jacket. His sister watches him from the front door, as he crosses between the fowl shit and the mud and onto the government road. Bean turns back to wave, sees the house leaning to one side like it want to fall, the wood corroded, termite in the ceiling, wood bug in the rickety balustrade, and his sister stand up there silent and proper, reserved. But is gone Bean gone.
When the people of the village see Bean walking along the gravel road with his suitcase, they come to their fences to wave. Sister Mag stops from sweeping her yard to smile broad and whisper a prayer for Bean. The Deacon stop bulling he craft, to watch the young man go, and Pundit, who old, turn from throwing his bowl of rancid urine on the breadfruit tree root. 'Bean boy, is you dress up like a hot boy so? This early morning, where you going? America?'
Bean grin like horse teeth, 'Is town, in town I going.'
Bean walking the slow incline, remembering down what Lord Pretender tell him. 'Good as you is,' the younger veteran say, 'you not really a calypsonian till you sing in Port of Spain. That is where the angle does bend, me boy, that is where real calypsonian does get born. You could win all them country champion, but you must, you must come in town.'
Down from the east through rustling villages, brisk with raw country on either side, and the black wavering line of the main road stretching out in the bright morning. Bean sit on a smooth wooden bench in the back of the rickety Darmanie bus, and six cents to town he gone rocking in the bounce and swinging tug, with his long mango head leaning against the window watching the sun cast its buzz across so much wild countryside.
D'Abadie Tacarigua Five Rivers
over iron bridges, through pasture land with churches hid in bush, a pink orphanage beside a river, the mint and white minaret of a mosque ...
Arouca Tunapuna St Augustine St Joseph Mt D'Or
A wire-veined man sits in the seat across from Bean with reddened eyes that bulge in the leathered cage of his head. Two red fowl cocks caw and flutter in a wire cage between his knees. He wears raw brown linen trousers with frayed hems, a sky-blue shirt. His corns and mud- stained feet slip between rubber slippers. He shifts nervously, tapping his feet in some hidden rhythm. Bean lowers his gaze when the man turns towards him, then he catch the scar on the side of the man jaw. Entering the village of Champs Fleur, a song begin to compose itself in his head:
Pa pa dee, pa pa dee-o Ah come from the country Pa pa dee, pa pa dee-o cock fight in the country
The man fowl cackle and cussing, but nobody will say anything. What you expect people to do? Bring complaint? And get cuss or badjohn beat them? But a middle-aged woman, sitting in the back, just wringing her wrinkled hands over the beaded purse on her knee. She wears a green lamé dress of her dry season menopause, patent leather court shoes, her feet shut at the ankles, church hat tilted on her head. When the chickens fuss and flutter and fowl shit start to funk up the bus, she put one dark gaze down heavy on the cock merchant, so he could feel the full weight of her stare, then she turn back, with the same pious gaze, suck her teeth to steups and summon a hymn.
Mt Lambert Petit Bourg Silver Mill San Juan
The bus trembling, troubling the road. Bean, rocking between the fowl thief and the Adventist, leaning in the corner side the back seat with suitcase between his knees.
Barataria Morvant Laventille
These northern hills of Port of Spain, laden with wood-shacks and galvanize roofs, sparkle in the sun. Open sores of ghetto ravines. Slum wood. Hillside tenements where the heat burst like pepper in a pot. Driving down past the La Basse, on with its stinky sweet smell of black mud rotting in swamp land, and the rum and coconut oil factory, citrus scent, distilleries, and the sky extending out to brightness over Port of Spain, where human cargo spills out into the streets like ants from under a hessian sack of forgotten meat.
Policemen in white custodian helmets measure the traffic. Jay walkers and small-island market women stroll past carrying baskets on their heads. Walk a mile and a half. Bats in the garret of the big house, big men playing wappie there, slapping harsh cards down, and the drain in the abandoned land behind the barrack yard festering with thick black-blue love fly hissing, so the air there always have muscle. A dog licking salt from the edge of the world, in Marine Square where the tamarind trees grow high and wide, and black dravidian beggars stew in heat and piss at the roots.
Bean puts down his grip on Henry Street, letting the city rock him in its river of flesh and concrete. He not sure what to do. Not sure how to move. Road running left, road running right, and he now come to town on the Darmanie bus. He step to cross the people road and a jitney near bounce him; was a Yankee Willys jeep that pass and splash a puddle on him; US Navy. One stink puddle, funk up with rancid water and genk that run 'way from the Syrian steam laundry, wash up on his foot, like baptism in the city.
'The Champion, boy!' The voice startles him. This man, Mr Gary, waving, crossing the road towards him. Bean notices his wide bandy gait, like the curving limbs of a calliper, the unlit cigarette between the fingers of his right hand, and his voice pitched high and almost girlish, to cut through the noise of the street. Mr G puffing from the exertion of running behind the calypsonian, but he is the kind of man who seems to wear a permanent grin. 'Where you going, Saga boy? I tell you wait for me by the bus depot and you walking like you know where you going?' Extending a hand for Bean to shake, patting the young man's shoulder at the same time. 'Ha, you walking like a drake, like you know Port of Spain, but you don't know town no arse.' Now he laughs, his head slung back.
'I just s-seeing what I could s-see. I thought maybe you did come and gone,' Bean says.
'If I say wait is to wait, man. How you mean? You feel you could just come from country and start perambulating up here? You want these vagabond rob you? Anyway ...' He lights a cigarette, whipping the match shut, then flinging the wick to the ground. 'Come with me.' But it is this word 'perambulating' that Bean considers as he follows Mr Gary through the mess of black shack alleys and thoroughfares that is eastern Port of Spain. Unfinished wooden houses, barrack yards. The promoter stops grinning at the corner of Observatory Street. 'Now, champ, let me tell you from now,' he says, 'don't think because I bring you down from the country it mean I have hotel room for you, eh. You eh make a red cent yet, much less to pay rent. Once you start working in the tents, you can rent bungalow, but for now you could stay in the Harpe.'
Bean turn. 'La Cour Harpe? Is there you-you carrying me? I hear that place very terrible.'
Without turning to face Bean, Mr Gary says, 'Don't worry yourself, people does say it bad, but it not so bad in there.'
So they walk the slight incline up Observatory, cross a bridge, past the poor house and turn left into a yard, the entrance marked with a hand-painted wooden sign: La Cour Harpe. All this time Bean quiet, he just watching the yard; the Baptist flags in the far corner; the lush long zigar bush grown from the moist land near the latrines; the mud-walled bungalows; the sandy, snot-nosed children pitching marbles in the communal centre – kax, pax, patax – against their knuckles to punish; the young men knocking iron to music in the shade of a gru-gru bef tree; the laden belly of washing lines strung from shack to shack; the hot tin roofs and the rustling of leaves; the grief water stagnant and pungent in cesspools; the women sitting on front steps scandalising, with their dresses drawn down between the valley of their thighs; the fisherman returning from the sea with a bottle of English gin; a cacophony of whores; rats in the attic and the soldier van passing; panty wash running in the ravine; moss like phlegm on the ravine bed like strands of something blown by water.
In the far right corner of the yard, just before the abandoned land and the dry river running under the silver bridge, by the palm tree in a tenement garden, a brown pot-hound barks and rolls in the rugged dirt to scratch mange from its back, and a big-headed boy runs out from behind a barrack house in khaki short pants; the fly undone, barefooted and barebacked in the government sun, to see the Arima champion coming his come with the grip and the guitar, just reach from country, smelling of earth and perspiration, laying his grip down. Watch how he pushes his hat back with the wrist, water pouring from his head. Bean 'fraid to stutter, but he somersaulting in his skin, and Mr Gary, standing there next to the country singer, hands on hip, his gut puffing out, clears his throat and spits, 'This a place they used to keep slave,' he says, 'and when the slave get free they stay living here. But these is good people here, is no problem if you live good with them, plenty calypsonian living here.'
(Continues…)
Excerpted from "Kitch"
by .
Copyright © 2018 Anthony Joseph.
Excerpted by permission of Peepal Tree Press Ltd.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Table of Contents
Part One: Bean,
Part Two: Lord Kitchener,
Part Three: The Grandmaster,
Epilogue,
Afterword,