The pattern that resonates in the 1985 reggae hit by
“It’s really like my first child, and the child turned out so well it’s outright moving,” said Okuda, honored as “the mother of Sleng Teng” among the hard-core reggae aficionados.
Sleng Teng is a form of digital Jamaican music that began in the mid-1980s, part of the rich repertoire of the disco-like genre called “dancehall.” No one contests the key role played by artists like Smith and
One of the rhythm patterns Okuda created called “rock” on the MT-40 evolved into “Sleng Teng riddim.”
As legend goes,
Davey was toying around with the MT-40 and chanced upon the beat that’s in Smith’s megahit “Under
And the rest is history, so to speak.
“You don’t plan,” Davey said, when asked about that moment.
There are so many buttons on the MT-40, he was “fooling around,” found it, lost it, then had to look for it and found it again.
“It was a searching process,” he said from
The power of reggae comes from its healing effect, like “therapy,” being a music for the poor, for those moving up against apartheid, for the people, he said.
Davey, who has never been to
That groove went on to inspire much of subsequent reggae, distinctly heard in works by
Michael “Megahbass” Fletcher, a musician in
“It has its place,” he said, demonstrating Sleng Teng on his bass. “A good song is a good song.”
Fletcher said other keyboards were also used to play Sleng Teng, such as Casio CZ-101 and Yamaha DX100, from Casio’s Japanese rival.
“Sleng Teng will never die,” said Fletcher, who has performed or produced songs for Shaggy,
Okuda, whose graduation thesis at
The company didn’t have very many musicians, and she was the one with background in world music. Okuda had immersed herself in reggae in the late 1970s, including going to Bob Marley’s concerts in
Okuda worked out six kinds of rhythms for the MT-40, including samba, swing and waltz, creating a bass line and a beat.
She also created two licks called “fill ins” to be played between sections of a song — or at the start of a song, as it is in “Under
For the prototype, she initially had an even more brash punk-rock-like rhythm called “avant garde.” The managers killed it as “too crazy.”
At least the “rock” pattern got approved, Okuda recalled with a laugh.
Casio’s main business was calculators, not keyboards, and so Okuda’s invention didn’t make much of a wave at her company. Okuda said she was usually among a handful of women in a room filled with men.
“I was a pioneer in so many places, and there were Japan’s old ways everywhere I went. I had to put up a fight each time,” she said.
She was never promoted to managerial positions, and never chosen for a business trip abroad. She has not traveled to
When asked if she has any advice for working women, Okuda pointed out having a special skill tends to help. She also has an extremely supportive husband, who took on much of the child-care responsibilities.
That definitely helped, she said.
The family shares a love for music, and music is always playing in their house. When they were younger, Okuda did feel a bit sad when her daughter and son would see her off at the door, singing, “Heigh-ho, heigh-ho, it’s work she loves to go,” to the tune in Walt Disney’s “Snow White.” These days, they joke maybe she’ll win the
A more recent Casio technology Okuda has worked on is Music Tapestry, which translates music being played into a fluid visual image on the computer. Flowers float and swirl in time to the notes. Circles, squares and triangles dance about on the screen. Its sale date is undecided.
She doubts any of the reggae musicians know she is behind the MT-40. And how her MT-40 became part of such great music is nothing short of “a miracle,” she said.
“If I can ever meet them, I just want to express my deep gratitude. I want to tell them thank you so much for finding the rhythm and for using it,” she told The Associated Press.
Casio still sells keyboards. The CT-S1000V, set to go on sale in March, turns words into vocaloid-like singing. The smaller portable versions come with dozens of preset rhythms.
In the 2010 model, the rock pattern was called “MT-40 riddim” in honor of where it all began.
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