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Dancehall: Barbados Education Minister

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  • Dancehall: Barbados Education Minister

    Barbados shuts out dancehall

    Published: Sunday | March 14, 2010


    Vybz Kkartel

    A BARBADOS minister of government has moved to shut out toxic Jamaican dancehall music from his country.

    Ronald Jones, the minister of education and human resource development, said the heavy diet of dancehall artistes performing in Barbados is an overkill and doing more harm than good.

    "Even though we share the same Caribbean space, it does not mean we have to welcome everybody. Vybz Kartel and Mavado can stay in Jamaica," Jones said.

    His statement came a day after the country's police commissioner denied the notorious Jamaican artistes permission to perform in the Caribbean nation.

    "As a country, we must say enough is enough," the Barbados Nation quoted the minister as having said.

    "This is Barbados. It must not go down the path of some other Caribbean societies. If reaching First-World status means we have to embrace all and sundry, then let us keep the status that we have," Jones added, according to the Nation.

    The education minister said there was a linkage between dancehall music and some of the increasingly aggressive behaviour exhibited by young people in Barbados.

    "Barbados is becoming loud, and some of our people are becoming uncaring, uncharitable. There are places in the Caribbean that they don't want Barbadians to come anymore. There are planes in the Caribbean that don't want to transport Barbadians to and from here. What is that saying?
    "It is saying that we are loud and aggressive, but it is part and parcel of the diet that we are being fed as a people and as a nation. People like the music, so be it. But we don't need the transplantation of all the negativity that comes around that genre of music," Jones said.

    Grange responds
    Olivia Grange, minister of youth, sports and culture, responding to this latest saga in dancehall, said: "I am concerned and I have expressed concern about the content in some dancehall songs. I believe strongly in freedom of expression, but that comes with great responsibility. We can do without some of the lyrics, not only in dancehall recordings, but soca and hip hop too, and that is why we took steps to clean up the airwaves. This is an ongoing process."

    The Sunday Gleaner
    (http://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/2...ead/news1.html )

  • #2
    Good luck to him. The young people in Barbados will continue to love and absorb the latest dancehall acts from Jamaica.

    Comment


    • #3
      More so now!


      BLACK LIVES MATTER

      Comment


      • #4
        Hopefully the spate of visa denials to these clowns will get them to realize that they need to clean up their acts. Frankly, I think it has started to make an impact.

        Why do you think Movado is trying so hard to avoid the rap in the MoBay incident. A few years ago he would be up front beating his chest after the altercation with the motorist and his son. Remember these goons dont care about the art of music, they simply care about the bottom line, and they will do or say anything on a mike to achieve that narrow goal. Denying them that platform internationally is the way to go.

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        • #5
          When Rihanna buss with her first dancehall where was he?

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          • #6
            Well that was Bajan dancehall, you see. A much more refined product.
            "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

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            • #7
              Ah....my bad.

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              • #8
                Planes dont want to transport barbadians cause they're gay and di pilot dem nuh want God strike lightning pon d plane

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