Jamaica Farewell

jamaicafairwell

🌴 About the Song

First recorded in 1956, Jamaica Farewell is a slice of laid-back beauty that brought calypso to living rooms far beyond the Caribbean. Written by Irving Burgie (aka Lord Burgess) and made immortal by Harry Belafonte, it paints the story of a man leaving Jamaica — torn between adventure and the love he’s leaving behind.

It’s wistful but not tragic — you can feel the warm breeze, the scent of rum, and that bittersweet smile of someone pretending they’re fine. The song was a global hit and helped Belafonte’s Calypso album become the first LP ever to sell over a million copies.

It’s the perfect combination of island rhythm and emotional simplicity — equal parts travel postcard and goodbye letter.


🎸 Ukulele Playing Tips

  • Chords: C – G7 – F – C, with an occasional D7 for the turnaround.
  • Strumming pattern: Classic island bounce — Down–Down-Up–Up–Down-Up with a gentle off-beat emphasis.
  • Tempo: About 90 bpm. Chill but not sleepy; you’re on a slow boat, not a bar stool.
  • Feel: Keep your strum light and rolling — imagine waves lapping at your ankles.
  • Tone: Strum near the neck joint for that warm, woody calypso tone.
  • Optional flourish: For each verse ending, pause half a beat before the final “sad to say I’m on my way” — gives that easy-going swing room to breathe.
  • Harmony idea: The call-and-response lines (“Sad to say I’m on my way”) work brilliantly if you’ve got another uke player or vocalist.

🧠 Trivia You Can Drop Casually

  • Irving Burgie wrote several hits for Belafonte, including Day-O (The Banana Boat Song) — the man basically invented the tourist soundtrack.
  • Calypso was the first album by a single artist to sell over a million copies, beating Elvis to the punch.
  • Belafonte said the song’s bittersweet tone “reminded people that joy and sadness can dance together.”
  • It’s been covered by everyone from Jimmy Buffett to Carly Simon — and it never stops sounding like a warm evening by the sea.

🌈 Final Word

Play Jamaica Farewell like a postcard to somewhere you’d rather be. Keep it slow, sincere, and sunny, and let each chord sway like a palm tree.
By the time you hit the last line, everyone in earshot should be day-dreaming of rum punch and a one-way ticket south.

Album:CalypsoYear:1956Artist:Key:CDifficulty:Easy Download PDF
Song Sheet (PDF)
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