Rupee
is one of the foremost artists in
the intoxicating musical movement
known as soca (soul + calypso) - the
supercharged party music of the Caribbean.
With his debut Atlantic album, "1
ON 1," slated for release in
the fall of 2004, Rupee is now poised
to capture the global mainstream audience.
Rupee's soca sound is rhythmically
complex yet instantly catchy, a non-stop
blending of the flavorful, tuneful,
and irresistibly danceable. With "1
ON 1," he becomes a major force
in the eruption of innovative urban-influenced
Caribbean artists who are changing
the face of music worldwide.
"Caribbean
music as a whole has had a marvelous
resurgence in the last two years,"
Rupee notes. "The likes of Sean
Paul, Shaggy, and Elephant Man have
opened doors for soca to walk through.
It's a beautiful thing. With the background
I have, it's natural for me to experiment,
and I think it's necessary and good
for the music."
Rupee,
born Rupert Clarke, is the multi-ethnic
son of a Barbadian father and a German
mother. By the age of nine, he had
lived in three completely different
cultures - German, English, and Barbadian.
"My two older brothers were performing
rap in Germany and England,"
Rupee recalls. "They would always
take me out with them, and I'd scribble
down my little verse or two!"
Rupee's
first success came as a teenager,
when he won a popular Barbados talent
competition. His performance stole
the show and fueled his desire to
be an artist. The public's response
to Rupee was tremendous, and in 1997
he was invited to join the top Barbadian
band, Coalishun. With no formal musical
education, but an adventurous and
well-tuned ear for hooks and vocal
arrangements, Rupee became a natural
innovator. As a result, he stoked
the progress of soca music - especially
in expanding its reach to the young
- by fusing it with hip-hop and dancehall.
"In Coalishun, my role was to
chant [rap]," he explains. "When
one of the vocalists was unavailable
for a session, I ended up singing
a calypso song, even though dancehall
was really my thing".
The
following year, Rupee hit it big with
"Ice Cream," which blew
up the Caribbean charts and put him
in the spotlight. He had found his
musical comfort zone and started composing
in earnest. "Performing ëIce
Cream' onstage, seeing it touch the
audiences at Barbados's Crop Over
Festival, in Trinidad, England, Canada,
and New York, made me realize the
power of my own pen," says Rupee.
"I was blessed that my household
was very diverse, musically. My mom
loved Bob Dylan, the Rolling Stones,
and the Beatles, and at my dad's house,
I heard Bob Marley, Jimmy Cliff, Sparrow,
and Red Plastic Bag (the Barbadian
calypso monarch). I absorbed all those
forms of music and they became a part
of me. When I began writing soca full
time, I called on all these influences.
"Ice
Cream" was followed by a string
of smashes from three self-released
solo albums. The scorching up-tempo
song "Jump," from his first
album, won Rupee repeated Road March
titles at carnivals in Barbados, New
York, Miami, Boston, and Toronto.
"Tempted to Touch," from
his second album, enjoyed over two
years of international club play,
spreading to urban and pop radio in
Toronto and Miami. It became the catalyst
for Rupee's worldwide deal with Atlantic
- as well as the first single from
"1 ON 1."
"1
ON 1" celebrates both Rupee's
sense of his multi-national heritage
and his brimming, forward-looking
confidence in his original music.
He generously and enthusiastically
credits Caribbean-based producers
like Chris Allman (Slam City Studios),
Peter Coppin (Monsta Piece Studios),
and Darron Grant (Underground Studios),
as well as his recent work with New
York-based hip-hop fusion hitmaker
Salaam Remi (Fugees, Hot Stepper,
Miss Dynamite, Nas) for their important
contributions to his musical growth
and the progressive direction of the
album.
"I
wanted to accomplish a diversity in
this album, and expose different sides
of soca music," says Rupee. "I
didn't want to tread a fixed line.
We used a lot of acoustic guitar and
percussion, and a lot of universal
sounds: you can hear rock, R&B,
and hardcore reggae, as well as pure
soca. I think it's possible to bring
various elements of music to the soca
art form, and that can bring it to
a wider audience."
Before
deciding to pursue music full-time,
Rupee explored other aspects of his
creative nature, "After college
I worked as a graphic artist for two
major ad agencies in Barbados,"
he says. "I really needed to
make a decision about working in advertising
or music. So in 2000, I became a solo
artist." Rupee has kept all of
his creative sides busy by playing
an active role in the design of his
web site www.thisisrupee.com and the
visual marketing of his self-released
projects.
Initially
acclaimed in the competitive and fertile
culture of the yearly Caribbean carnivals,
Rupee has gone on to win over masses
of jubilant fans through his high-energy
performances at festivals and concerts
throughout North America and Europe.
Supported by his vibrant Caribbean-based
band, he is a charismatic and inspiring
live performer.
"I
try to have as much fun as possible,"
says Rupee, "but I always also
inject positivity. There are sensual
moments, but it's never overdone.
I try to be responsible and create
a vibe that's about love and upliftment.
While I tell the audience to jump
and wave and get all crazy, we also
have to give thanks, and acknowledge
the Almighty."
August
2004