Chutney music
Chutney | |
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Stylistic origins | Bhojpuri folk and later fused with calypso, soca, and filmi |
Cultural origins | 19th century Indo-Caribbeans with indentured servant or immigrant ancestry |
Typical instruments | dhantal, dholak, harmonium, tassa |
Fusion genres | |
Chutney soca |
Music of Trinidad and Tobago | |
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General topics | |
Related articles | |
Genres | |
Media and performance | |
Music media |
Music television |
Nationalistic and patriotic songs | |
National anthem | Forged from the Love of Liberty |
Regional music | |
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Chutney music is a form indigenous to the southern Caribbean, popular in Trinidad, Guyana, Suriname, and the rest of the Caribbean. It's a mixture of Bhojpuri music, Western music and local music. It is increasingly popular in Canada, the United Kingdom, the United States and India.
History
This contemporary fusion of genres was created by Indo-Caribbean people whose ancestors were from Bihar and Uttar Pradesh They were taken as indentured servants by the British to replace laborers on sugar plantations after emancipation. Chutney music was established in the 1940s within temples, wedding houses, and cane fields of the Indo-Caribbean. There were no recordings until 1968, when Ramdew Chaitoe of Suriname, a small country in South America, recorded an early rendition of chutney music. The album was entitled King of Suriname and all of the songs were religious in nature. However, Chaitoe soon became a household name with East Indians not just in Suriname but throughout the Caribbean. Although the songs were religious, they had a dance vibe throughout each track. For the first time Indo-Caribbeans had music that spoke to them and was not Indian, or European/American in style. This was a breakthrough for East Indian Caribbean music but the fame was short lived.
Chutney music exploded again in 1968 with the female singer Dropati, who released an album entitled Let's Sing & Dance, made up of traditional wedding songs. These songs became huge hits within the East Indian Caribbean community. The album gained recognition for chutney music as a legitimate form and united East Indians, regardless of their birthplace.
1970 was a huge turning point for chutney music when record producer Moean Mohammed recorded Sundar Popo with Harry Mahabir's BWIA Orchestra. Sundar Popo modernized the music by including western guitars and early electronics into his music. Although Popo became known as the "King of Chutney," the art of singing songs in "Chutney" style was introduced by a singer named Lakhan Kariya, from the town of Felicity, who preceded Sundar Popo. Other artists, such as Sam Boodram, followed in his footsteps by adding new modern instrumentation into their music. Chutney music until then remained a local music in Trinidad, Guyana & Suriname. However, this was all about to change and Chutney music was about to become an Industry.
This change came about in 1979 when the manner in which chutney music was produced, marketed and distributed fell into the hands of a 17-year-old record producer and distributor name Rohit Jagessar.
Jagessar set a higher standard for chutney music and took it world wide by expanding the "old markets" and opening up newer international markets for this most beloved musical genre. Jagessar's production, marketing and distribution network handled recordings of such greats as Abel Peters, Ramdew Chaitoe, Dropati, Lakhan Karrya, Sam Boodram, Lily John, Isaac Yankaran, Anand Yankaran, Prematie Bheem, Sonny Mann (also credited as Sonny Man), Sundar Popo (produced by Moean Mohammed of Winsor Records), the 1980s Mastana Bahar Album Series (produced by Kamal, Sham & Moean Mohammed), BWIA Orchestra, Atiya, Babla & Kanchan among many other great chutney stars of the era. During the early part of the decade, Jagessar, Kanchan & Babla would fuse other world beat music to create Kuchh Gadbad Hai, the biggest selling album of the genre in the 1980s (highest chart position achieved: #1 on over 50 radio and print music charts in over 15 countries including the US, UK and Africa). Jagessar followed this with Babla & Kanchan Live in 1985 and numerous other hits during the decade. He would also go on to release the first ever chutney music CD.
As the 1990s turned, Jagessar went on to produce ten of the most memorable chutney hits with Kanchan in the classic album "Leggo Me Na Raja, the biggest selling album in the history of the chutney music genre. Jagessar recorded the album in the summer of 1991 at Weston Outdoor Studios in Mumbai, India on 8mm film, making this the first chutney album recorded digitally.
Chutney Music also got its first big impact commercially in live concert performances during the 1980's when Jagessar took the music into large stadiums and cricket fields in selected countries around the world. The 1985 revenue from these concerts surpassed US$1 million for the first time in the history of the genre and Jagessar signed Kanchan to a contract with Johnson & Johnson to produce and promote the popular brand in a most memorable television commercial that very same year.
Although chutney lyrics can be very suggestive, Jagessar was always careful to keep the lyrical content of all his Chutney music productions respectful and clean. Jagessars' commercial success with Chutney music inspired many other producers and artists to come on to the chutney scene.
In year 2007, 28 years after he pioneered and commercialized chutney music onto the world stage, Rohit Jagessar was awarded the Life Time Achievement Award for his creative and pioneering work in creating the chutney music industry, advancing it and bringing Chutney Music internationally.
After the success of Jagessars' Kuchh Gadbad Hai, other Chutney artists began to fuse calypso, soca and American rhythm & blues, naming their music Indian soca. A young female artist named Drupatee Ramgoonai from Trinidad emerged on this new scene. At first she was criticized for being "dutty" (rude or crude in creole), because she wrote about sex and alcohol. This was nothing new, as she was following in the footsteps of other calypsonians who they sing about issues in their life or what is happening within the community. Drupatee was later given the title "Queen of Chutney." By the end of the 1980s chutney music was introduced in Indian films. In the Netherlands, a new artist named Atiya exploded on the chutney scene on Rohit Records.
During the 1990s many mom and pop recording companies mushroomed and set out to cash in on the Chutney craze. Companies in The United States and Canada began to pick up chutney artists for their recording companies. These included the hugely successful Jamaican Me Crazy (JMC) Records, Spice Island Records, Mohabir Records and JTS Productions. The establishment of nightclubs such as Soca Paradise and Calypso City in New York and Connections and Calypso Hut in Toronto, coupled with these new recording companies were all factors instrumental in promoting Indo-Caribbean music overseas and in the West Indies.
The modern chutney artist writes lyrics in either Caribbean Hindustani or English, then lays them over beats derived from Indian dholak beats mixed with the soca beat.
Chutney is an uptempo song, accompanied by bass guitar, drum machine, electric guitar, synthesizer, dholak, harmonium, and dhantal, tassa drums played in rhythms imported from filmi, calypso or soca. Early chutney was religious in nature sung by mainly women in Trinidad & Tobago. Chutney is unusual in the predominance of female musicians in its early years, although it has since become more gender-mixed.
Chutney artists include Sam Boodram, Rikki Jai, Rakesh Yankaran, Devanand Gattoo, Nisha Benjamin, Heeralal Rampartap and the late Ramdew Chaitoe, who composed the Surinamese-based "Baithak Gana" in his album The Star Melodies of Ramdew Chaitoe. Among the best known examples of chutney music are Sundar Popo's "Pholourie Bein Chutney" or Sundar Popo's first recorded song "Nani And Nana", Sam Boodram's " Lalana Khoose" Sonny Mann's "Lotalal", Vedesh Sookoo's "Dhal Belly Indian", Anand Yankaran's "Jo Jo", Neeshan "D Hitman" Prabhoo's "Mr. Shankar", Ravi B's "Rum Is Meh Lova" and Rikki Jai's "Mor Tor".Additionally, K I's "Single Forever" His real name is Kris Veeshal Persaud.
The nature of current chutney songs are simple. They speak about life and love for many things, whether for a significant other or for an object of possession. Some chutney songs favor the topic of food or drink; however, like most West Indian music, there can be a hidden message found in the song if you read between the lines.
Instrumentation
Chutney music is typically played with the dholak, dhantal and harmonium. The melody of the music is provided by the harmonium, and the dholak and dhantal for the rhythm. More modernly, drum machines playing tassa have been incorporated into chutney as well. Tassa is drumming used in the Muslim Hosay festival, and is also played during Hindu weddings and other celebrations.
Languages
Chutney music is sung in English, Caribbean Hindustani (Bhojpuri), and other Indian languages. Although chutney music has Hindi words it has been deemed ownership by the locals and belongs to the Caribbean, it has not been recognized in the Indian music or film industry, it is of West Indian culture and mainly of the East Indian sector but accepted by all. Traditionally speaking, the lyrics of chutney are religious, but that has changed over the years. In modern chutney music, including the newer subgenres, the lyrics have evolved to be more contemporary.
Subgenres
The origin of chutney being in the Caribbean has meant that it's been in close contact with different peoples, traditions, and other musical styles since its inception. According to the government of Trinidad and Tobago, roughly 35% of the country's population is of Indian descent, another 34% of African descent, and the remaining 31% composed of a mix of European, Chinese, Middle Eastern, and other ancestry. This has allowed chutney to fuse with other genres and/or implement new instruments into its own style, creating an array of syncretic subgenres including ragga chutney, chutney-bhangra, chutney hip-hop, soca-bhangra, and chutney soca.
Chutney soca is the most notable of these, as it has become virtually indistinguishable from what is considered normal chutney in recent years. Drupatee Ramgoonai coined the term with the release of her album, "Chatnee Soca," in 1987. The style had an emphasis on Hindi lyrics and the beats of the dholak and dhantal. It was further popularized by the 1994 album, "Soca Chutney," by Sonny Mann. It was credited as the best selling Indo-Caribbean album ever, with its title track hitting the top of charts not only in the Caribbean, but in the United States, Canada, and England.
Modern chutney soca, like many chutney subgenres, has incorporated more use of keyboards, drum machines, and other electronic instruments.
References
- Broughton, Simon, and Mark Ellingham. "Trinidad: Chutney." World music: the Rough guide : [an A-Z of the music, musicians and discs.. London: The Rough Guides, 2000. 527-530. Print.
- Ingram, Amelia. "What is Chutney Music?." An Exploration of Music and Culture in Trinidad. N.p., n.d. Web. 3 May 2011. <http://aingram.web.wesleyan.edu/chutney.html>.
- Manuel, Peter, Kenneth M. Bilby, and Michael D. Largey. Caribbean currents: Caribbean music from rumba to reggae. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1995. Print.
- "Our People." Trinidad and Tobago Government Portal. N.p., n.d. Web. 3 May 2011. <http://www.ttconnect.gov.tt/gortt/portal/ttconnect/SharedDetail?WCM_GLOBAL_CONTEXT=/gortt/wcm/connect/GorTT%20Web%20Content/ttconnect/home/about+t+and+t/general+information/our+people>.
- Manuel, Peter. "Chutney and Indo-Trinidadian cultural identity." Popular Music 17 (1998): 21-43. Print.
- Ramnarine, Tina Karina. ""Indian" Music in the Diaspora: Case Studies of "Chutney" in Trinidad and in London." British Journal of Ethnomusicology 5 (1996): 133-153. Print. subscription-only link from JSTOR
- Saywack, Rajendra. "A History Of East Indian Chutney Music In The Caribbean." ChutneyZone.com | Wile Up Yuhself! 31 Aug. 2004. Web. 25 Apr. 2011. <http://www.chutneyzone.com/history.html>.
- "The History of Chutney Music in Trinidad and Tobago." CHUTNEY PULSE. N.p., 7 Oct. 2009. Web. 28 Mar. 2011. <http://chutneyontheweb.blogspot.com/>.