Friday, May 29, 2026

Signatures Vol XV: Destra

My Father loves music. Outside of a very select group of people (and maybe an animal or two), he probably doesn't love anything else more than music. My Father's also from Trinidad and I grew up listening to a variety of different sounds with Calypso/Soca amongst them. I didn't particularly like it though which may be hard to believe if you've spent any time around here. What changed?? Maybe when I was in my... let's say very early 20's, I stumbled across the amazing Destra. Sure, she was easy on the eyes, and if I'm being completely honest, that likely had something to do with it - but you cannot listen to LOOKS. What you can listen to is what remains some of the most damn near NAUSEATINGLY INFECTIOUS music that I have ever heard from someone who would not only make me a fan of hers but a fan of an entire genre. Here's a long overdue homage to she who wears the crown. Signatures: Destra 

1. 'Bacchanal'

They call me Bacchanal. I wouldn't go as far as to call it a "rebirth" (suggesting that she needed such a thing) (she did not) but 'Bacchanal' could definitely be seen as a rebranding for Destra. Thereafter (and still) she would adopt the Queen Of Bacchanal moniker and it was, at least presumably, partially due to the strength and success of 'Bacchanal'. The tune was exactly what its title suggested. It was the heights of ridiculousness and chaos and it was BEAUTIFUL! Belonging to a very small group of tunes that can lay claim to being the single greatest Destra has ever done, 'Bacchanal' was absolutely masterful and over fifteen years later, it has not lost a single thing.

"It's in my blood
It's in my veins
Can't wash it off, I'm forever stained"

2. 'Carnival' featuring Machel Montano

So special. Destra has worked well with a number of different artists throughout the years but perhaps no one to greater effect than the incomparable Machel Montano. For some reason their styles have always clicked and the results have been spectacular. Arguably none have been greater than 'Carnival', which I THINK was also their first combination. The nearly quarter-century old tune has long reached legendary status (right along its creators) as it paired together, undeniably, two of the greatests to ever do it in a devastating form -  both of them. What is here is hypnotic and virtually impossible to shake as on a list of addictive musical substances THIS is the most hooking of them all.

3. 'Welcome Back'

Anything goes. You know, I don't rightly remember what was going on prior to the release of 'Welcome Back'. Can't remember if she took it easy for a season and this tune was marking her return (and I don't feel like looking it up) or if it was just an idea she had for a song. Regardless of its origins, however, from the second I initially heard it, 'Welcome Back' became an instant favourite of mine from Destra and has remained so, fifteen years on. This is so despite the fact that there's nothing really unusual about it. It, ostensibly, doesn't separate itself from the proverbial pack much at all. The magic here is in the MEAT of the tune. When really dig into 'Welcome Back' it GLOWS. From its energy to its very subtle level of cleverness, not only was it not lacking on any front but it excels on ALL of them. Quietly (not really but you get what I mean) one of the strongest songs she's ever done, without question (and personally, the beginning of 'Welcome Back' is downright ICONIC for me. IT IS SPECIAL!).

4. 'Up In D Air'

Can't beat we yet. Much like the next entry on this list, 'Up In D Air' was very clever, whether we realized it or not (we definitely did see it in the next tune, one of her most celebrated and deservingly so) in its day. It was also as cool as it could possibly be. 'Up In D Air' was downright FROSTY! It just has such a sweet vibe to it and that goes on top of what is, again, a rather sagacious piece of writing from the QOB. Resting comfortably somewhere between Power and Groovy, the tune had all of the "jump & wave" styling that you would expect but that came in a way that wasn't... a bludgeoning. 

"Cause when it comes to fete
They can't beat we yet
So put your hand in the air, rag in the air"

5. 'I Dare You'

I dare you. I DARE YOU! Easily one of the biggest hits of Destra's entire career, 'I Dare You' was and remains an absolute DIAMOND of a song. It literally had EVERYTHING! It touched every vibe and hit ever nerve in the listener, making for an undeniably all-encompassing track. Another feather in its cap was the fact that it sits (without question for me) as one of the finest WRITTEN songs that Destra has ever done as well. For what it was, 'I Dare You' was pretty much fucking PERFECT and it's no wonder at all that it reached the heights that heights that it did, looking back.

6. 'Fly'

Up in the sky. 'Fly' and maybe two or three others on this list are DIFFICULT songs for me. These days it's fully DRIPPING nostalgia for me as another one of the first Soca songs from anyone that really got me. She would have to do more work to KEEP me (here's a list full of that work) but to put it simply: 'Fly' and songs like it made me a fan of a Destra in the first place and, by extension, the entire genre of Soca music. TEARS! 

7. 'Lucy'

I loose! Similar to the first song here, 'Lucy' marked another kind of rebranding of Destra as she took on what would become another popular nickname (and if you REALLY think about it, such things are pretty damn common in Soca). The song behind it, aside from the new name, was as hooking as it could possibly be. On a post FLOWING OVER with such selections, 'Lucy' is even catchier than most of them. Again, this is another song that benefitted from a multi-paced sound. There is SO much going on in here. It, literally, sounds like you're hearing the most melodic thunderstorm that you've ever encountered. Furthermore, if you listen to what she's actually saying, you'll get something out of it as well as Destra kind of paints Carnival and Soca music as this great revelation in her life which saw her go from growing up "as a real good girl" who was "always home" and "didn't go nowhere" to Lucy and to The Queen Of Bacchanal.

"THIS CARNIVAL HAVE ME SO DAMN LOOSE!"

8. 'Bonnie & Clyde'

I'm Your Queen! From beginning to end, 'Bonnie & Clyde' was frenetic.... ridiculous, wholesome goodness. More than twenty years on, it has not lost a single thing and it's even aged quite well and gathered quite a bit of international attention all of these years later. Absolutely gorgeous from the moment it released, 'Bonnie & Clyde' is simply one of the finest songs the entire genre has ever produced and it also does a mighty fine job in demonstrating what sets Soca apart from every other genre of music. You do not get pageantry and festivity like THIS anywhere else. It just does not exist anywhere else and it never will.

9. 'Mash Up'

We ready! I'm almost embarrassed (not really) that it took me a minute to come up with the name of this one because what I had in my head was what turned out to be the intro and then:

"WE READY!
WE READY!
WE READY!
WE READY!
WE READY!
WE READY!
To MASH UP everything!"

'Mash Up' was absurdity and ridiculousness of the absolute highest caliber. The reaction to it was fierce as well as the tune proved to be a nice sized hit in its day and, as you can tell, it remains EXCELLENT a dozen years later. 

10. 'Savage'

LOSE. ALL. MY. CONTROL. 'Savage' was the crowning jewel from Destra's debut album release, "Red, White, Black" back in 2003 (an album which included the aforementioned 'Carnival') and, like 'Fly', it would have been amongst the very first Soca songs that really drew me in and kept my attention for awhile. These days, it's also brimming with nostalgia for me as it may not have been such a giant hit so I don't run into 'Savage' unless I'm looking for it, typically. You won't find it on many mixes and it won't be in the background of virtually anything but make no mistake about it: 'Savage' is EASILY one of the finest songs Destra has ever done. 

11. 'Max It Up'

Reach the top! 'Max It Up' is another lovely knockout punch from Destra of a song. It peaks pretty much INSTANTLY and spends the next three and half minutes or so at the same place or relatively close to it. Although at times it threatens to be fully overwhelming, 'Max It Up' never overdoes it (well... okay it kind of does overdo it but in a good way) (in a PERFECT way) and finds such a wonderful balance. ALSO [!] if you listen to what's going on here -- as hard as it is to do -- Destra rewards you with an eye looking forward for herself and the whole of Soca music.

"Oh Father, finally, you set di Soca free
Wi own category inside of di Grammy
And now you blessing wi internationally 
So when you watching wi feel proud a wi
On MTV & BET and di Grammy, it's alla wi
Support di Soca music, it's yuh identity"

12. 'Jumpin'

Defying gravity. The now twenty years old 'Jumpin' is another tune on this list that has a claim to being my absolute favourite Destra has ever done. Perhaps if you are a corpse you could pull this off but for my living readers, I'd challenge you (even in the wickedest of moods you may be in at the moment) to listen to this one and NOT smile. Something in here is sure to spark some sort of happiness in you. The mixture on 'Jumpin' is as impressive as ever. There's an undeniable melody here but in order to hear it, Destra kinda had to punch you in the face... DEAL! 

13. 'Link Up'

Step aside. For some reason, 'Link Up' has always reminded me somewhat of the next song that I'm going to tell you about and I've made a personal 'link' between the two over the years. For its part, I hear 'Link Up' these days and a couple of things stand out. The first is that entirely EPIC beginning. Maybe [probably] I'm the only one who feels this way but how that electric drumming ascends into:

"EVERYBODY GET WILD"

Has carved out a very comfortable and lasting place in my memory and it isn't going anywhere. The other thing which I hear more these days from 'Link Up' is just how damn crazy it is. So many of these songs -- and Destra at her best, in general -- combine elements of Power Soca with Groovy and though 'Link Up' is the same (it even has a little old school textures to my ears) but when it pinnacles, 'Link Up' is a TRUCK of a tune, rolling right over any and every one in its way. 

14. 'We Own It'

It's wi property. In retrospect, one of the most compelling assets of 'We Own It' was the fact that it kind of put its feet into two very different categories. On one hand, there's a very old schoolish, almost Calypso, sort of vibes to it while on the other, it will... 'We Own It' has no problem at all punching you in the face (and making you love it). Both of those work for me which is probably why the Jus Now steered track makes this list. This madness had a certain maturity and refinement to it.

"I feel to wine on a policeman
I ain't fraid incarceration"

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