Archive for May, 2007

Interview with Ce’Cile (Bad Gyal)

Posted 05 May 2007 — by MrDixon
Category Best of Jamaica, Entertainment, Interviews

by: Jud Benjamin
Dancehall ReggaeJud: The name “Bad Gyal” is said to be your self proclamation. How did you came up with such an alias and does this mean that you are an uptown girl or a ghetto girl?
Ce’Cile: I think the name Badgyal has been wildly used since I’ve began using it as my alter ego. The name for me signifies another “persona” than the real CeCile and for me this was my on stage “being.” It simply meant the person I became when I took the Stage (sassy and saucy, maybe a lil naughty, pro feminine) wasn’t a class thing neither was it a bad gyal who will get physical or anything like that. I don’t consider myself ghetto, in any definition of the word. I’m not sure what up town is. I’m a classy badgyal!

Jud: I understand you have a life’s motto.
Ce’Cile: “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.”

Jud: Why do you put so much faith in this motto of yours?
Ce’Cile: Because if you don’t put yourself in other person’s shoes, anyone of us can become very destructive, after all we are only humans and susceptible to human ways and sins (jealousy, deceptive, devious, physical and verbally abusive etc). Read More

Interview with Chris Thomas

Posted 05 May 2007 — by MrDixon
Category Interviews

cMr. Chris Thomas is the son of Tommy Thomas, a member of one of Reggae/Rock Steady foundation groups called The Chantells who is also one of the directors/producer for Mixing Lab Recording Studio who made their mark in Europe in the early rock steady era. Mr. Chris Thomas is himself a talented producer, songwriter and performer who picked up the trail after his dad in his earlier years. As an artist, Chrisie-D as he is artistically known then, did elite New Kingston night clubs such as The Carnegie Hall, The Epiphany and Pegasus John Coonuh Lounge doing cabaret. He and his crossover group (SAC) did back-up singing for Bobby Smith on shows build with Diane King.

Mark: Where in Jamaica are you from?

Chris: I am originally from a small community in Tryall Heights, Spanish Town.

Mark: How did you handle the transition from life in Jamaica to life in the United States?
Chris: It was pretty difficult – new culture, new environment, new situation but I knew what I needed to do.

Mark: At what age did you realize that you had a musical talent?
Chris: As early as I can remember seeing my father with his group playing their guitar. I was fascinated with how happy they were as they rehearsed and how they affected the people around them. Read More

Suggestions on how to live a Healthy and Productive Lifestyle

Posted 05 May 2007 — by MrDixon
Category Channels

by: Mark Dixon
healthSmoking Kills - TThe average person in this day and age should have some idea that smoking can be very harmful to their health and that it is one of the leading causes of respiratory illnesses and cancer of the lung. If you are a smoker that is seriously considering to get help, my best advice to you is to make an appointment with your doctor as soon as possible and ask him the explain various methods and programs that could be used to help you kick the habit. Read More

How Stella Lost Her Groove In Jamaica – A True Story

Posted 05 May 2007 — by MrDixon
Category Featured

by: Kerri-Ann M. Smith
DatingIt was a regular, sunny day in Negril. The sky was clear, the air was fresh, and the sun had kissed the sky blue water with its warmth. It was a perfect day for the beach. My friends and I were vacationing after a wedding and decided to take a trip along the 7 mile beach from for our favorite activities: swimming, jet skiing, and basic beach chilling. I revealed my pink, two-piece boy OP bathing suit and headed to feel the warmth of the Negril sea water. I was with my girlfriends in the water, when we noticed him walking towards a boat. Read More

Inner Plantation

Posted 05 May 2007 — by MrDixon
Category Jamaican Poets

The ancestors still toil within me
Their rough dark hands hold the cutlasses
labouring in the fields of my mind
clearing away the weed and bush of
negative thinking, before burning them
and then digging holes where they will plant
fresh thought suckers like cane tops
that they will manure as the thoughts grow
through minutes as long as the twelve to fifteen
months that it takes for the hard sweet grass to mature.

They set the field afire, burning the nests of
the poison snakes of my self doubt, while
searing off the leaves of unnecessary words,
and whittling down thought to its sweet tubers;
Then they use their cutlasses, to cut thought’s tubers like
cane stalks, before packing them into the neat bundles,
of stanzas on a paper page.

Then, spurred by the whip of my impatience
They harness their muscular black bodies
to the large stone wheel of my brain’s
mill to crush the hard grass of words to juice
which they will bring to a mull-like boil,
inside the steel pot of my cranium,
over and over, before finally fermenting it.

All this while I sit on the patio of my mind’s
Great House, made strong by the knowledge
of the sacrifices of slaves burning cane fields
in rebellion and taking task to their
oppressive Masters, ultimately paying
blood’s weight for their freedom.

And even after centuries of their physical non-existence
their work remains defiantly undone;
for this is essentially their offering-
somewhat of an intoxicant -
This equivalent of rum, on a page.

- Garfield N. Morgan