Monumental Movement Podcast
This episode explores the rhythms of resistance in the Caribbean calypso and soca continuum—where music functions as both social commentary and embodied celebration. Emerging from colonial histories and diasporic exchange, these genres transform rhythm into a vehicle for satire, memory, and collective identity. We trace the development of calypso through its early roots in Trinidad and Tobago, where lyrical wit and rhythmic invention became tools of political expression and cultural survival. Artists such as The Mighty Sparrow shaped the form into a sharp observational medium, addressing social conditions through humor, metaphor, and storytelling. From calypso evolves soca—accelerated, dance-oriented, and deeply connected to carnival culture. The music emphasizes groove, percussion, and bodily movement, extending the tradition of communal participation into high-energy performance contexts. Festivals become sonic architectures of release and unity. Technologically, the transition from acoustic ensembles to studio production expanded rhythmic complexity and global distribution. Recording practices amplified bass, refined percussion layers, and enabled international circulation of Caribbean sound. This episode analyzes calypso and soca as cultural continuum—where resistance, joy, and rhythm intersect. Through history, diaspora, and sonic identity, we explore how Caribbean music continues to shape global understandings of dance, politics, and sound. 【Related Column】Caribbean Soca/Calypso Culture Theory https://monumental-movement.jp/en/column-caribbean-calypso-soca/
200 episoder
Kommentarer
0Vær den første til at kommentere
Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af Monumental Movement Podcast-fællesskabet!