| |
|
Capleton

A
wise man once said that a prophet is never honored in his own
country. And so it has been with Capleton. While the veteran DJ's
words and works long ago earned him the title of “The Prophet,”
the respect and honor that should rightfully be his have been
a long time coming. „Anytime you try to uplift righteousness
and upliftment of the people them, then you ah go get a fight,
says the hottest entertainer in the worldwide reggae fraternity.
“Bob Marley come do it and them fight him. And when Bob
Marley dead, that’s when they start to endorse him. I already
aware of this, I am not unaware. So I know the more them fight
I is the more I get stronger”
In the fast-moving world of dancehall reggae, fame and success
are hard to obtain and easy to lose. Fans can be fickle, and trends
change in the blink of an eye, leaving most entertainers with
painfully short career spans. Only a rare few can remain relevant
from year to year, holding their audience’s attention and
leaving them crying for more. His lyrics are deep, precise, and
thoughtful. His stage shows are nothing less than dynamic, explosive
performances. But his remarkable staying power and longevity may
be Capleton’s greatest gift.
Born
Clifton George Bailey III on April 13, 1967, in the rural parish
of St. Mary, Capleton earned his future stage name from friends
who were so impressed with his sharp reasoning skills that they
named him after the most famous lawyer in town. From a tender
young age, he was a lover of the traveling sound systems, sneaking
out at night to catch the vibes until dawn. But it wasn’t
until he turned 18 and moved to Kingston that he was able to realize
his destiny.
It
was Stewart Brown, owner of a Toronto-based sound called African
Star, who gave the untested artist his first break, flying him
to Canada for a stage show alongside giants like Ninjaman and
Flourgon. The audience poured out their appreciation, and he never
looked back. When Capleton first burst on the scene in the late
1980s, the dancehall was a very different place than it is today.
Slackness and gun talk were the order of the day. This bright
promising newcomer announced his arrival with a string of hit
songs from “Bumbo Red” to “Number One on the
Look Good Chart” and “Lotion Man.” Everything
he touched hit the sound-good charts, and the youthful artist
with the nimble vocabulary and hardcore voice quickly established
himself as one of dancehall's most reliable hitmakers. But even
he could not have predicted that eleven years later, at the start
of the new millennium, he would be dancehall’s ruling voice.
“I
think the people dem see say me really deserve that because of
the amount of years me put in,” Capleton says, “and
we never really bow and we still hold the faith. We stand up for
whatever we a say. Yeah and we really work for it. And them say
by your works, a so you get your pay. The people them see the
amount of fight me face and the whole heap of accusation. And
me still never give up”
When
he dropped the tune “Alms House” in 1992, Capleton
established himself as more than an entertainer but as a guiding
light of righteousness through music. “United we stand and
divided we fall,” he sang for the benefit of his fans and
dancehall comrades. “Nuff of them nah go know themself till
them back against the wall.” A few years later he came back
with yet another antidote to the clashing and rivlary that had
taken hold of the dancehall business. “Music is a mission,”
he reminded his fellow artists, “not a competition. Some
man use the music to cause confusion.” The path of this
dancehall Prophet was clearly established in 1994 with a string
of songs that declared his newfound faith in Rastafari. “INI
sight up the light and see say really, yunno, Rasta is real,”
he recalls. “founder of the world, because Rasta did come
set the trend. Y'unnerstand. Rasta is life.”
The
first words of his mega-hit “Dis The Trinity” made
it plain that the DJ had experienced some kind of revelation.
“I was once lost but now I'm found,” he stated, “Selassie
I live every time.” Capleton became a strong advocate of
the teaching of the Jamaican National Hero, Marcus Mosiah Garvey,
founder of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and advocate
of universal black repatriation. “Babylon rewarded us with
hatred for our love,” he declares. “They taught us
to rape, steal and kill. For instance, they stole our literature
and taught it back to us in a different manner so as to infiltrate
our minds with foolishness and other misconceptions. Now we as
black men do not see ourselves as prince and prophets, but as
punks and guys. Our women do not see themselves as queens, princesses
or empresses anymore, but as harlots and concubines.” The
only solution, as Bob Marley advocated, is to emancipate oneself
from mental slavery.
“Over
the years INI as a nation and a people, them no really teach INI
nuttin' bout INI black self. You know I mean? Them teach INI them
give we European philosophy. So INI and some other youths a try
emerge now, we ask certain question and we ask fi certain things.
Caw we know say an institute, or in a college, or in a certain
organization we need we Ethiopian curriculum, we need the black
man thing. We need to know about weself. Becaw the prophet Marcus
Garvey did show we say, A nation without no knowledge of them
own history is like a tree without a root. And if you don't know
where you're coming from, you're not gonna know where you're going.”
Even
as he uplifts the black race, Capleton always makes a point of
clarifying that he does not seek to alienate any race. “We
are not being racial nor prejudiced star,” he says. “Becaw
we know Jah is for everyone. But where history and prophesy in
concerned, that is our witness and we have to be ourself, and
we cannot hide from the truth. Caw we woulda be a traitor and
a sellout to ourself. And you cannot sell out yourself.”
Soon
thereafter came the song “Tour” a blazing state of
the dancehall report written in the weeks following the slaying
of Panhead and Dirtsman, two of Capleton’s fellow artists.
That song not only became an anthem of the roots revival within
the dancehall, but a hip hop flavored remix of that song hit the
Billboard charts, opening up a huge new audience to Capleton’s
messages of righteousness.
There
followed a relationship with Def Jam records, who released two
Capleton albums, Prophecy and I-Testament, which featured memorable
collaborations with rap stars like Method Man and Q-Tip. Both
records were warmly accepted by the international audience, but
as the millennium drew to a close, Capleton sensed that it was
time to return to his core audience. He had work to do. “I
have to be myself, right? And I only can be me,” he reasons.
“So whichever way fi make me be me, I work with dat. Y’understand.”
Capleton
is now at the height of his powers. 1999 and 2000 have brought
a ceaseless string of sound system favorite and dancehall chart
toppers like the anti-violence anthem “Jah Jah City”
and “Good In Her Clothes,” a message of respect for
the sisters who carry themselves like Empresses rather than. But
even as he completes his mission of upliftment, Capleton has had
many critics. One of his biggest hits, in fact, is addressed the
naysayers in the press and the ivory towers of power. “Critics
won’t leave I alone,” chats the Prophet. “They
say they can’t take the fire weh me put pon Rome”
Many
of Capleton’s songs “and most of his critics”
make mention of this blazing fire. Capleton hopes to clear up
the confusion once and for all. “Is not really a physical
fire. Is really a spiritual fire, and a wordical fire, and a musical
fire. You see the fire is all about a livity. But is people get
it on the wrong term. People get confused.So when a man say ‘more
fire’ him think that mean say you fi go light the cane field
or go light the church.” Fire, Capleton explains, is a way
of reminding one's brother that they are going astray. “That
way a man know say him doing something wrong. That even give him
the urge to know say Yo check up on yourself. What you’re
doing is not right, or else him would not say ‘Fire fi dat,’
or ‘Burn dat’ or ‘More fire.’”
“If
we go check it back now,” he continues, “fire is for
the purification of earth, anyhow you check it. This earth itself
have to even emerge from the literal fire also, which is the volcanic
activity, we a talk bout lava. The hottest element to rise us
in the morning is the sun. The water cleanse, but it’s still
the support from the fire that burn the water, burn out of the
bacteria so the water coulda heal we fi cleanse. The herb heal,
but it’s still the fire fi burn the herb so the herb coulda
heal we also.”
Rob Kenner
|