By: Dr. Jeannine Remy -- ( judges comments also included )
Trinidad and Tobago - The entire 2010 Panorama season was kicked off in the south on Coffee Street in San Fernando on January 15th with a preliminary competition for single pan bands. Only one band, Jah Roots, walked onto the judging venue with their traditional pans around their necks. It was refreshing to see that the art of carrying one’s pan is not completely lost, and that the crowd appreciated their efforts to preserve the tradition. There is something to be said about carrying the weight of the pan, moving, and playing at the same time. Although they played in a stationary position, Jah Roots was a pleasant reminder of the tradition of pan on the move. Jah Roots is a band that strives to participate in every traditional pan competition and they have vowed not to change their performance practices, regardless of how everyone is changing around them.1
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but there was one Tobago band - Natural Mystic - that went both on the road, and in the stationery competitions, in traditional round-the-neck style, and they were fabulous. i think they won one of the competitions too. and l gotta say i loved chipping along with them in the road, it made me feel like i got a tiny little taste of what it was like in 'old times'. purely delightful, magical, and wonderful -
all in all, the Tobago pan in its entirety was much less crazy, and much more old style, than Trini. one of the things i loved the most, was that the pan was not amplified in the Bago Panorama, we could really hear everything perfectly.
it was sweeeeeeet, for real-!
But if the single pan bands are now on racks what will be the logical reason for not allowing them to introduce conventional steelpan instruments? Is it not just a matter of time? Sounds like you're asking someone with two arms to only use one. Seems like it is just a matter of time before people forget why they are only using one arm and use both of them.