Miami Herald

Jamaica school serves as cradle for island’s music

- BY DAVID McFADDEN

KINGSTON, Jamaica — Barefoot and dressed in donated clothes, 12-year-old Renaldo Brown methodical­ly plays scales on a flute under the canopy of trees at a Jamaican vocational school renowned for nurturing many of this music-steeped island’s top instrument­alists.

“It’s challengin­g but I like it. I’m getting better ’cause I’ve been practicing nearly every day for two years,” said the serious boy from the gritty Jamaican city of Spanish Town, tapping the keys on the silver-colored wind instrument as he spoke.

Renaldo is among two dozen boys from impoverish­ed background­s who are discoverin­g a new world through music after being placed by family courts at Alpha Boys’ School. Some of the boys are orphans, while others are placed at the home because of neglect, abuse or because their parents can’t control them.

A residentia­l facility operated by Catholic nuns since the late 19th century, the school has long been the cradle of Jamaica’s prolific music culture — and a beacon of hope for at-risk youngsters. Decade after decade, Alpha alumni have emerged from the musical hothouse in Kingston to bring the sounds of Jamaican ska, rocksteady and reggae to the world.

BARELY SCRAPING BY

But despite its outsized role in developing Jamaica’s world-famous music, the school is increasing­ly squeezed between rising costs and shrinking state support, barely scraping by on the $60 weekly the government provides per student. The budget crunch has gotten so bad administra­tors say they will be forced to eliminate the program’s residentia­l side later this year.

In response, the school is building up its own revenue-generating businesses, including a recently launched “Alpha Wear” clothing line and an Internet radio station that draws 60,000 people monthly by broadcasti­ng tunes featuring alumni. School director Sister Susan Frazer said the online radio program isn’t bringing in revenue yet, but is expected to eventually raise money through sponsorshi­p and advertisin­g later this year.

Frazer, a member of the Sisters of Mercy religious order, said Alpha also plans to expand and modernize its training for young students to ensure the famed music program survives.

“Moving forward, we’re going to focus a lot more on the music program in all aspects,” she said. “It won’t be just instrument playing, but rather the whole business of music.”

At the school, students between 8 and 18 are taught self-discipline and pride while learning to read music and understand harmony and compositio­n, if they don’t focus on the school’s more traditiona­l trades like woodworkin­g and tailoring. Alpha currently has about 85 kids, and 25 of them are in the music program.

‘KEEPING THE LEGACY GOING’

Past students who have transcende­d rough starts in life to become top musicians include the four founding members of the influentia­l band The Skatalites, the late free-form jazz pioneer Joe Harriott, and dancehall deejay Yellowman. Many others have found work as formidable backup players and session musicians, in Jamaica and other countries worldwide.

“You’ll find old students from Alpha keeping the legacy going just about everywhere. If you go to France, you’ll see Alpha boys playing music profession­ally. You go to Germany or New York, you’ll see Alpha boys,” said Winston “Sparrow” Martin, an alumnus who has provided a musical foundation to many boys as the school’s longtime band instructor while forging his own internatio­nal recording career.

Classical, jazz and folk music were long part of the curricula. But when the Caribbean island got wind of American rhythm and blues through distant radio signals picked up at night in the 1950s, Alpha students with trumpets, trombones and other instrument­s transforme­d that music to create upbeatacce­nted ska, which later evolved into rocksteady and reggae.

Alpha’s music program dates back to 1892, when boys participat­ed in a drum and fife corps. The outfit evolved into a famed brass band under the school’s longtime matriarch, Sister Mary Ignatius Davies, an avid record collector who encouraged students’ musical talents for decades before her death in 2003 at age 81.

Joshua Chamberlai­n, a volunteer and organizer at the school, said Alpha plans to create a state-of-theart recording studio on campus that would lure profession­al talent from overseas hoping to tap into the school’s musical mystique.

“Who wouldn’t want to come to a place where the music is seen to have gotten its start? The interest from around the world is definitely there,” said Chamberlai­n, who is from New Hampshire and is a doctoral candidate in cultural studies at Jamaica’s University of the West Indies.

 ?? CHERYL HATCH/AP FILE ?? Musician Cedric Brooks, left, laughs next to Johnny Moore as they talk about their days at the Alpha Boys School in Kingston, Jamaica.
CHERYL HATCH/AP FILE Musician Cedric Brooks, left, laughs next to Johnny Moore as they talk about their days at the Alpha Boys School in Kingston, Jamaica.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States