Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Top acts for Ghetto Splash

- BY RICHARD JOHNSON

FOR the past 31 years residents of the Waterhouse and Drewsland communitie­s in St Andrew have been able to look forward to their annual Christmas stage show, Ghetto Splash. This year will be no different.

Organised by entertainm­ent insider and politician Patrick Roberts, the event will this year be staged virtually, in keeping with the stipulatio­ns of the authoritie­s regarding COVID-19 protocols.

Over the years, Roberts and his team have staged the event free of cost to the residents as a holiday treat.

“This has always been my way of giving back to these communitie­s. Every year, the youths in these communitie­s look forward to Ghetto Splash; it is the thing they crave at this time of the year. The thing is, for the whole year they have been hearing the music of these artistes but cannot afford to go out and see them live. So, I bring it to them. It is also a way for the artistes to give back, and I am happy to be able to provide that platform to serve the artistes and the community,” Roberts told the Jamaica Observer.

Speaking of artistes, as is customary, the line-up for the virtual edition of Ghetto Splash is chock-full of top acts.

Among those set to take to the virtual stage this year are Popcaan, Beenie Man, Tommy Lee, Tarrus Riley, Jahvillani, and Agent Sasco.

“The real question to ask is. ‘Who is not on Ghetto Splash?,’ “noted Roberts. “I just got a call from Bugle to say he is definitely with us for this year. Shaggy is also set to perform... I am just waiting on him to confirm whether he will be on the island. Ghetto Splash also gives young artistes from the area a chance to perform on a big show. This year we will have some impressive new acts to share with the audience,” he continued.

The pre-recorded event will be produced and directed by a team which includes Roberts and his son, Jamie, Oneil Miller, Omar Fogo, and Kelvin Osbourne of Clearsound Production Services.

The show will be aired on local stations Television Jamaica and its sister cable station RETV on December 27.

Just under a month into the release of his new album, Grammy award-winning Jamaican artiste shaggy is pleased with the reviews he’s read and heard.

“As far as reviews so far, it’s been incredible from the press. I don’t think I’ve seen a bad review on any of it,” the platinum-selling singer/dj told the Jamaica Observer last Thursday about the 15-track set titled Christmas In The Islands.

The positive reviews, he added, have resulted in him getting “a lot of high-profile press” during his current promotiona­l blitz in New York, where he had to appear in person for some interviews after doing others virtually from Jamaica.

“Remember, a project like this is really an over time project, meaning that it will stretch out for the next 10 years. Next year we might involve some new songs and dem tings deh to stretch it out over the 10 years; and it’s licensed to us but it’s distribute­d and marketed through BMG [Records],” he explained.

“So next year, we may take songs from the album and create singles or we might add new songs to the album. We might start adding Caribbean artistes to it — it’s Christmas In The Islands, so you might see mi add an artiste from St Lucia, Trinidad, etc,” added the artiste whose real name is Orville Burrell.

The album, released on November 20, offers a range of new songs with a Caribbean flavour and features top local and internatio­nal artistes, among them Bounty Killer, Junior Reid, Joss Stone, Beenie Man, Craigy T, Jamila Falak,

Romain Virgo, Ne-yo, Ding Dong, Rayvon, Shenseea, Omi, and Sanchez.

The Caribbean’s rich, energetic culture is on full display throughout the album, and listeners will find themselves either nodding their heads, tapping their feet, or involuntar­ily dancing to No Icy Christmas, which features singer Sanchez, or Raggamuffi­n Christmas which sees Junior Reid and Bounty Killer joining Shaggy for a bouncy dancehall-flavoured expression of how Jamaicans, especially those in poor communitie­s, celebrate the holiday. At the same time, listeners will simply soak up the pleasant, smooth melodies oozing from Open Presents, on which Shaggy and Romain Virgo paint a picture of family gatherings for the season.

While Shaggy is appreciati­ve of the response so far to Christmas In The Islands he admitted that 2020 has been a tough year because of the novel coronaviru­s pandemic which has shut down many industries.

“It has been a tough year for everybody. It’s hard for my family, hard for my kids. I had to get myself back into things like folding clothes and [doing] laundry and gardening,” he said with a chuckle.

“But at the end of the day we had a great success this year with Banana, which we streamed over one billion, so it’s been a bitterswee­t year for me,” he added.

Banana, a compilatio­n with Jamaican deejay Conkarah, was regarded as the track for the summer and, with Christmas In The Islands, has set the stage for Shaggy’s plans for 2021. However, he is keeping most of that to his chest for the moment.

“I have a lot of things in the basket.

Whole heap a tings dat mi have ready fi go launch dat mi really can’t talk bout now, but you will be hearing from us a lot,” he told the Observer.

He did, though, say that his album project with female dancehall artiste Spice should be launched about March. “That’s one thing I’m very, very excited about.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Beenie Man
Beenie Man
 ??  ?? Tommy Lee Sparta
Tommy Lee Sparta
 ??  ?? Agent Sasco
Agent Sasco
 ??  ?? Tarrus Riley
Tarrus Riley
 ??  ?? Jahvillani
Jahvillani
 ??  ?? Patrick Roberts
Patrick Roberts
 ??  ?? Shaggy
Shaggy

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