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'Sufferers Heights' comes from the heart

Published:Wednesday | September 15, 2010 | 12:00 AM
Reggae crooner Duane Stephenson thrills the crowd at St Elizabeth Technical during the Gleaner Champs 100 tour on Friday. Stephenson, who is seen here wearing a shirt from tour sponsors COOYAH, was a big hit with the crowd.

"This song is my way of being the voice of people in communities like Sufferers Heights and August Town."

Not many internationally renowned artistes are able to speak from an authentic space where their words directly mirror their life experiences as much as Duane Stephenson.

Stephenson, a resident of the sometimes volatile community of August Town, and one of reggae's most talented sons, is soon to release his second album Black Gold.

If the first single Sufferers Heights is anything to go by, the pedigree of this new compilation is clear.

Sufferers Heights, the first single off the album, with lyrics written by Duane Stephenson and production by Duane, Lamont Savory and Dean Fraser advocates the plight of the residents of Sufferers Heights, a depressed community in St Catherine now known as Windsor Heights.

Duane's feelings

One line of the song sums up the feelings of Duane: "Things could be better, things could be worse, much worse ... take a look around maybe you'll break the curse and we will live and let live. Why must the sufferers die, sometimes I cry for the youth dem that try inna Sufferers Heights."

The name Sufferers Heights captures the place perfectly and only knowledge of how it came into being fully ventilates the context and gravity of the song.

Life began in the area as early as the 1970s, a volatile and violent period in Jamaica's history when many fled war-torn enclaves in Kingston because of political violence to seek a place of peace and safety.

But like many squatter settlements in Jamaica, dreams of a home and prosperity led to the same problems the residents were fleeing.

General decay

The song Sufferers Heights mirrors not only that geographical area but speaks to a general decay of inner city communities which are home to poor people, it also speaks to exploitation and oppression by greater powers who the people have no choice but to depend on for survival. Another line says: "Inna Sufferers Heights politicians dem naah flex right, dem only a sponsor the fight."

Duane believes this song is the best song to be the first single off his second album: "When I say 'Inna Sufferers Heights the youths dem can't find no dinner and a pure old clothes dem dress up inna', it's a reflection of not only that place in St Catherine but many areas in Jamaica and around the world."

The song's rockers version is number five on Stephenson's 15-track album and appears on the album also as track number 15 in ballad version.

Duane Stephenson's sophomore album, Black Gold, will be released on September 28 and distributed by VP Records.