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Banned Songs and Government Fear
Description
In this episode of THE HISTORY OF THE CARIBBEAN, we explore the high-stakes era between nineteen seventy and nineteen ninety-nine when music became a battlefield for free speech across Jamaica and Trinidad. As governments in Kingston and Port of Spain realized the power of a three-minute track to expose corruption and mobilize the masses, they responded with heavy-handed censorship, radio bans, and the legislative weight of the Radio and Television Act. This documentary-style journey uncovers the secret history of the Frequency Killers at the Jamaica Broadcasting Corporation and the Calypso Censors who attempted to silence the social commentary of the tents, revealing a gritty reality where the state tried to sanitize our national identity by turning off the transmitter.