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Crazy (calypsonian)

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Name
  
Edwin Ayoung


Crazy (singer) wwwcalypsocrazycomwpwpcontentthemeseprom1

Crazy voice can t imagine a guy can sing vitas 2 like that


Edwin Ayoung (born 1944), better known as Crazy, is a Trinidadian calypsonian. He has been active since the mid-1970s and is one of the most successful artists from Trinidad and Tobago.

Contents

Crazy (singer) OMG Interview Crazy Edwin Ayoung YouTube

Career

Crazy (singer) Oh God Oh God 2017 Pan Tunes Steelband Panorama Crazy

Ayoung was born in 1944 at Maraval Road, Port of Spain, Trinidad, one of eleven children to a Chinese Trinidadian father and an Afro-Venezuelan mother. As a youth he showed promise as a cricketer, but chose a career in music. He initially worked under the names Wong Ping and the Mighty Arawak, but was renamed 'Crazy' by fellow calypsonian Fred Farrell due to his extravagant performances.

Crazy (singer) Ah Love it 2016 Pan Tunes Steelband Panorama Crazy Carnival 2016

Crazy made his solo carnival debut in 1975 with "The Electrician", which was also released as a single. He followed this with "Satan's Coming" and "A Great Achievement", before signing for Eddy Grant's Ice Records label, for which he had his first hit, "Dustbin Cover"/"Listen Joffre Serrette". The two songs from the single gained him second place at the National Calypso Monarch finals in 1978.

Crazy (singer) Crazy 4 Discography at Discogs

Crazy was the first artist to sing a "Parang Soca" song (mixing soca and hymnal Latin music) in 1978. His debut album, Crazy's Super Album, was released in 1979 and sold over 35,000 copies in his home country.

Crazy (singer) Crazy Oh God Oh God 2017 Soca Trinidad YouTube

Crazy acted in the Trinidad All Theatre Productions' shows Cinderama (1980) and Snokone and the Seven Dwens (1981), and in 1982 toured Europe with the company in their re-enactment of carnival's traditional J'Ouvert opening ceremony.

Crazy (singer) CRAZY Listen and Stream Free Music Albums New Releases Photos

In 1982, he finished joint second at Road March with "Uncle Crazy". In 1984 he became one of the first soca artists to perform at Reggae Sunsplash. He won Road March in 1985 with "Suck Meh Soucouyant", and finished as runner-up in 1989.

Crazy (singer) Crazy Soca Hits

He pioneered the crossover genre chutney soca with his 1989 Road March entry, "Nani Wine", a big hit in North America and the West Indies in 1989.

After a relative lack of success in the early 1990s, which included an album recorded with Byron Lee, his fortunes improved in 1997 with the release of the album Still Crazy After 25 Years, the same year finishing third in the Soca Chutney Monarch competition and reaching the final of International Soca Monarch.

He continues to feature in major contests, and in 2007 placed 5th at Road March with "Cold Sweat".

In 2012 he pioneered another new style, "Trini-style reggae", releasing a Trini-reggae cover of "Hotel California".

In 2013 Crazy was named in a list of the top 50 calypsonians of the 20th century by the Trinbago Unified Calypsonians Organisation (TUCO).

In 2015 he headlined the Pan New England Steelband Festival in Blue Hill, Maine.

Lyrical content

Crazy's lyrics are often humorous, but have also incorporated political themes. While many of his lyrics have been risqué, in 2011 he appealed to parang soca artists to keep lyrics 'holy' in the run up to Christmas. In contrast to the homophobic lyrics of many calypsonians, Crazy's "Take ah Man", with its line "If yuh cyar get ah wooman, take ah man", was adopted as a gay anthem in Trinidad and Tobago. He wrote "Stop the Crime" in response to the murder of state prosecutor Dana Seetahal and generallevel of crime in Trinidad.

Albums

  • Crazy's Super Album (1979), Crazy
  • Madness Is Gladness (1980), Crazy
  • My Method of Madness (1980), Crazy
  • Mad Man Jam (1982), CCM
  • New Direction (1983), Kalico
  • Fire (1985), Crazy
  • Here I Am (1986), Crazy
  • Chief Crazy (1987), Crazy
  • Crazy Crazy (1988), Kai Soca
  • Nani Wine (1989), Trinity
  • Soca Beti (1990), Benab
  • Jump Leh We Jump (1991), Dynamic
  • Crazymania (1992), JWP
  • Let's Go Crazy (1993), JWP
  • Craziah Than Ever (1994), JWP
  • Crazy For You (1995), JWP
  • Wildness (1996), JWP
  • Still Crazy After 25 Years (1997), JWP
  • Ah Crazy Again (Back to Basics) (1999), JWP
  • Dangerously Crazy (2001), JWP
  • Masquerade (2002), JWP
  • Best of Crazy (2002), JWP
  • Crazy On De Loose (2003), JWP
  • Trnidad Crazy (2004), Hometown Music
  • Sweet Madness (2005), Hometown Music
  • De Maddest (2006)
  • Cold Sweat (2007)
  • Unstoppable (2008)
  • Crazylicious (2009)
  • Evergreen (2010)
  • The Recipe (2012)
  • EPs

  • Crazy 2011 (2011)
  • Crazy's Crazy Singles 2012 (2012)
  • Crazy 2013 (2013)
  • Singles

  • "Chinaman" (1974), Strakers
  • "Religious Procession"/"The Electrician" (1975), Crazy
  • "Satan's Coming" (1976), MAM/Charlie's
  • "Band Leaders Ain't Care" (1977), MAM/Bellini
  • "A Great Achievement" (1977), MAM/Bellini
  • "Dustbin Cover"/"Listen Joffre Serrette" (1978), Ice
  • "Parang Soca"/Guadeloupe Chick" (1979)
  • "Crazy’s Contribution To The International Year Of The Child" (1979), Crazy
  • "Muchacha" (1979)
  • "Don't Try That" (1980)
  • "Sweet Daisy" (1983), Kalico
  • "Ain’t Boung For You" (1984)
  • "Drive It" (1988)
  • "Christmas Parang Parti" (1990), Charlie's
  • "De Party Now Start" (1992)
  • "Parang Soca" (1992), Cahrlie's
  • "Dis Is How" (1994), JWP
  • "D'Ride" (1998)
  • "Qualified Cashier" (2003), Hometown Music
  • Digital singles/tracks
  • "Phone Card" (2008)
  • "When Steel Talks" (2009)
  • "Rub It Up" (2010)
  • "Patrick Manning Must Go" (2010)
  • "More Percy" (2010)
  • Crazy 2012 (2012)
  • "I For Kamla" (2013)
  • "Big Band" (2013)
  • "De Bull" (2013)
  • References

    Crazy (singer) Wikipedia