Soca...anyone here an expert?

Birdman9Birdman9 5,417 Posts
edited April 2005 in Strut Central
So I may be DJing a friend's BBQ this summer. The only problem...I am Soca-defecient, and the vast majority of folks will be West Indian, specifically Trinidadian. Now I am slowly getting my weight up on Dancehall, but I confess an ignorance (outside of old calypso-Lord Kitchener,Sparrow,etc) of any current Soca coming out of Trinidad. We have some of the yearly Carnival hits, but I don't think my wife has even picked any of those up recently.

So can anyone make some suggestions, both online and in the real world? Some artists to check for, maybe a line of comps cds or vinyl too.

Your expertise is most appreciated!

  Comments


  • Options
    Go heavy on Byron Lee and the Dragonaires, the older heads will truly know the deal. As for current soca, I'm not up on it.

  • The_NonThe_Non 5,691 Posts
    Look up records on the Charlie's Records label. Some of the better Soca I've heard is on that label...

  • soulmarcosasoulmarcosa 4,296 Posts
    For real, there is a GRIIIIIIIIP of 80s-90s soca 12"s at the Nice Price stores here in Raleigh/Durham/Chapel Hill for a buck or two apiece. You should call the owner and make a deal for the entire lot...

    ...if only to make it so DigDug and I don't have to look at them ever again!

    - Not A Soca Fan* in NC

    *Still, I'm willing to admit that I might be spinning Hindi/Panjabi-sung "chutney" soca in the future. So invest in Marco ZING! futures by copying the above email and staying tuned to Soulstrut over the next few years to see my love for soca develop as my musical tastes, uh, "mature." Don't miss this chance to catch Marco in a reversal of opinion that is sure to happen sooner than later! (see disco, Roy Ayers, crunk, et al)


  • The_NonThe_Non 5,691 Posts
    Babla soca is trash Marco, good "chutney soca" is slightly raer.

  • soulmarcosasoulmarcosa 4,296 Posts
    Babla soca

    I've come across at least four Babla 12"s recently "in the field." Priced at a minimum of $10/each, I chose not to partake of the full Babla experience.

  • The_NonThe_Non 5,691 Posts
    Good move, trust in your record chakras...

  • Soca: The House Music of the West Indies.

    People that love it (I'm looking in your direction, Trinidad) really, really love it.

    People that aren't that into it (I'm looking in the mirror) really, really don't get it. I'll admit that I'm on a slippery slope with some of the dancehall I'll admit to liking these days. The lines between the new wave of hypertempo bashment and straight-up soca are getting blurrier all the time. Just add a whistle and you're there.

    For all your reggae, dancehall, and soca needs, look no further than www.ebreggae.com. Ernie B is the largest distributor of reggae music in North America, and I've never had a single problem ordering from him.

    I refer about one person per week to his site.

  • soulmarcosasoulmarcosa 4,296 Posts
    OT - Yo R*ss thanks for the cross-continent rush-hour trafficjam computer help on Friday. I copped that joint within minutes of you hollering at me



    It's actually not that great but for $6.99 it might come in handy soon.

  • I am not an expert and am happy to be corrected on any of this.[/b]





    Some current artists you could check for:



    -bunji garlin - in the ragga-soca vein. kind of like the bounty killer

    of trinidad.



    -michael montano/xtatik



    -alison hinds



    -kevin lyttle and rupee - these guys had big songs long before mtv caught

    on. they can definitely be poppy and venture into something that's less

    soca and more just kind of generic international dance-pop.





    VP puts a comp called Soca Gold each year that's like a roundup of some of

    the year's bigger hits. Same as dancehall VP'll also put out the occasional

    7" of a big song. These come out on a subsidiary of VP called Waist Line Musik.

    Modern Soca (and older?) sometimes follows the dancehall riddim model so if

    there's an instrumental you like there's liable to be singers and dj's/rappers.



    This is a song I've always liked. If anybody knows of stuff with a similar vibe

    please speak up:



    Red Plastic Bag - Jouvet Jam




  • Birdman9Birdman9 5,417 Posts


    -bunji garlin - in the ragga-soca vein. kind of like the bounty killer
    of trinidad.




    Some of the guys at this party I was at this weekend wre discussing seeing Bunji live, so I have heard of him(but I was too embarrassed at my Soca-ignorance to really ask them about it)...and I know I heard several Kevin Lyttle joints that night.

    Thanks so far for all the info...I will indeed follow up on this.
    I admit that so far I find myself in Ross' shoes, enjoying Dancehall but feeling a bit reticient about a lot of the Soca. Thankfully, as long as I can pepper the two together I should be ok with the Trini crowd. But they can be a demanding party crowd, that's for sure!

  • Thankfully, as long as I can pepper the two together I should be ok with the Trini crowd. But they can be a demanding party crowd, that's for sure!



    Can't hurt to bring one of these:




    If you start blowin' on that thing when you drop a so-so record (pogomaniacal jumping is also encouraged), you might trick them into thinking it's a really hot song.


    BTW: T.O.K. does a soca version of Jr. Reid's "Bubbler" that'd probably go over huge. Of all the current dancehall acts, I think they have the best chance of crossing over big into soca. Well, them and Ele.

    Speaking of, you should pick up the new "My Swing" riddim for that party. It's really big in JA right now and I think it'd probably work well for a soca crowd.

  • Big_ChanBig_Chan 5,088 Posts
    Go heavy on Byron Lee and the Dragonaires, the older heads will truly know the deal. As for current soca, I'm not up on it.

    Word. Their versions of "Live and let die" and "Soul makossa" are BANANAS!!!!!

  • faux_rillzfaux_rillz 14,343 Posts
    Thankfully, as long as I can pepper the two together I should be ok with the Trini crowd. But they can be a demanding party crowd, that's for sure!



    Can't hurt to bring one of these:




    If you start blowin' on that thing when you drop a so-so record (pogomaniacal jumping is also encouraged), you might trick them into thinking it's a really hot song.


    BTW: T.O.K. does a soca version of Jr. Reid's "Bubbler" that'd probably go over huge. Of all the current dancehall acts, I think they have the best chance of crossing over big into soca. Well, them and Ele.

    Speaking of, you should pick up the new "My Swing" riddim for that party. It's really big in JA right now and I think it'd probably work well for a soca crowd.

    This has nothing to do with anything, but I wanted to tell you guys about the older West Indian lady at my laundromat who sometimes wears a t-shirt with a pornographic Limonius-style drawing on it that says "small pin jook the hardest"...

  • ElectrodeElectrode Los Angeles 3,135 Posts
    Ed Watson's "Just A Little Bit" is very good. Check out the versions of "Baby Come Back" and "L.A. Bound". The Charlie's label was based out of D.C.


  • GrafwritahGrafwritah 4,184 Posts
    soca =

    music

  • Birdman9Birdman9 5,417 Posts
    soca =

    music

    more like

    soca=









    whatever it is, it gets the women bubblin' up something crazy.

  • GrafwritahGrafwritah 4,184 Posts
    Yes, hot chicks abound, just not in those pictures... yikes


    This is more like it:



  • Soca is some straight up party shit!




  • aleitaleit 1,915 Posts
    Ed Watson's "Just A Little Bit" is very good. Check out the versions of "Baby Come Back" and "L.A. Bound". The Charlie's label was based out of D.C.

    Charlie's was actually out of Brooklyn. And Charlie himself would still be there on Fulton Ave. always in a suit.

  • Options
    Soca is some straight up party shit!

    I have a lot of fun dancing to soca at my girl's family events, it goes off kind of lovely.
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