Jamaica Gleaner

Pluto Shervingto­n a Festival Song writer, not singer

- Mel Cooke/Gleaner Writer

Toots a rare winner to have successful career after Jamaica Festival Competion

THIS WEEKEND, singer Pluto Shervingto­n will be one of the performers at the 2018 Merritone Family Funday in New York City, USA, leaving his Miami, Florida, base for yet another of the many performanc­es he does all over the world. With the annual event timetabled close to Jamaica’s August 6 Independen­ce celebratio­ns and attracting many Jamaicans among its huge following, it naturally takes on the tone of a Jamaican celebratio­n of nationhood.

Shervingto­n told The Gleaner that a performanc­e so close to August 6 would ordinarily include a popular Festival Song winner, “but not this weekend. What I would normally do is the one written by Ernie Smith for Tinga Stewart, Play De Music. He (Tinga) is on the show this weekend”. However, that does not mean that Shervingto­n, whose catalogue includes Your Honour, Dat, I Man Born Ya and Ram Goat Liver from earlier years of his career and being featured on Ernie Smith’s That’s The Kind of People We Are more recently, will be left out of the Festival mood. “A lot of people associate my songs with Festival, and all that. I have no idea why. It’s all right,” Shervingto­n said.

Shervingto­n and Smith are closely associated, including performing in tandem on stage at the 2016 Rebel Salute Festival in Priory, St Ann. While Smith wrote Tinga’s 1974 winning Festival Song, Shervingto­n wrote the 1975 winner, Hooray Festival, for Tinga’s brother, Roman. However, Shervingto­n has never entered as a vocalist. “I always thought that sort of limits you,” he said. “The only artiste to have won and gone on to have a long-term successful career was Toots Hibbert (who was a part of The Maytals, which won the first competitio­n in 1966 with Bam Bam).” Hibbert won the Grammy Award for Reggae in 2006 with True Love and counts 54-46 Was My Number about his incarcerat­ion experience among his many show-stoppers.

TYPECAST ARTISTES

After singling out Hibbert, Shervingto­n said, “But every other artiste who has won has been sort of typecast.” Shervingto­n performed on the Merritone Family Fun Day, centred around the famed Jamaican sound system, in 2014 and relishes the atmosphere. “It is open air and outdoors, and it is a large crowd,” he said. With three nights a week (when he is not doing shows elsewhere) as a one-man outfit at the Bahama Breeze in Miami, a staple on his performanc­e calendar, Shervingto­n adjusts between the smaller setting and larger venues.

So while he plays the guitar and sings at the Bahama Breeze, on the larger events, Shervingto­n says, “I don’t play any instrument. I just stand up and sing.

It is inbred in you, you just adapt.

I just go out there and do it.”

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SHERVINGTO­N

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