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The
Origin of Calypso
Calypso
rhythms can be traced back to the arrival of the first African
slaves brought to work in the sugar plantations of Trinidad.
Forbidden to talk to each other, and robbed of all links
to family and home, the African slaves began to sing songs.
They used calypso, which can be traced back to West African
kaiso, as a means of communication and to mock the slave
masters.
Trinidad
was colonized by the Spanish, received large numbers of
French immigrants, and was later ruled by the British. This
multi-colonial past has greatly impacted the development
of calypso in Trinidad. Many early calypsos were sung in
a French-Creole dialect called patois ("pat-was"). These
songs, usually led by one individual called a griot, helped
to unite the slaves.
Calypso
singing competitions, held annually at Carnival time, grew
in popularity after the abolition of slavery by the British
in the 1830s. (It was the French who brought the tradition
of Carnival to Trinidad.) The griot later became known as
the chantuelle and today as the calypsonian.
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