tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-22112793.post1251350788274790422..comments2023-09-24T03:18:15.557-04:00Comments on Guanaguanare: the laughing gull: Um Ba Ya Oh [Song]Guanaguanarehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16633889363662650322noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-22112793.post-91626843703587981782011-05-29T14:33:42.428-04:002011-05-29T14:33:42.428-04:00Max,
Thanks for visiting and the comment. I reall...Max, <br />Thanks for visiting and the comment. I really had not thought about these observations that you've made and I am certain that others would have other ideas about what inspired Merchant to sing this song. <br /><br />In my opinion, I don't think that he is saying that he cannot realise his potential in Trinidad and Tobago. I think that this is just a dream about Africa and I welcome it because it is a refreshing counterpoint to all the negative associations about that continent, some expressed even by the descendants of migrants [whether forced or voluntary] from its shores. <br /><br />I don't know if the dream is just an invention and I do not know if Africa comes to persons who are not of its diaspora but I have had two such dreams in my lifetime. Since Africans are among my ancestors, I assume that there is a tie that had not been broken and I accept Merchant's dream as plausible. <br /><br />I don't think that Merchant is romanticising Africa but I do get the sense that he is acknowledging that his present existence is more removed from the closeness to nature and community that his ancestors might have known. I get this from his references to the bountifulness of the land and the stability of a situation where women and men seem to have clearly defined roles. Maybe he is comparing this to our present situation where, unless we are descendants of First Nations, the rest of us are not quite yet at the stage where we naturally see T&T as our "ancestral" home. Africa was clearly that for his ancestors.<br /><br />I don't know if the chant that he uses in the chorus actually means something in another language but it is the unifying thread that runs through the song, whether celebrating the hunt, expressing the joy of living, celebrating conflict resolution and the promise of stability. The "infighting" is just a part of power-seeking which is to be expected when a vacuum is created by the death of the chief. As I said, I could be missing some context that would give this song some deeper message.<br /><br />I really like the simplicity of this song and its clean energy and these qualities reflect a way of living that has not moved too far away from attending mostly to the necessities of life.<br /><br />Thanks again for your thought provoking comment.<br /><br />BlessingGuanaguanarehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16633889363662650322noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-22112793.post-12746833327765996612011-05-29T05:02:07.432-04:002011-05-29T05:02:07.432-04:00Interesting song, not easy for me to understand. O...Interesting song, not easy for me to understand. On the one hand, I thought that all of the things Merchant associates with freedom and being back in Africa could be achieved in Trinidad, if Trinidad were remade in the image of freedom that he imagines. Having to go away to gain freedom is almost fatalistic, like deferring salvation to the afterlife, never here, never now.<br /><br />Then the final section, about infighting, which does not seem to fit the other two that precede it. Why do you think he took that detour?Maximilian C. Fortehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11209329841918356753noreply@blogger.com