Stabroek News

Pan-O-Rama

-

On Sunday the Cliff Anderson Sports Hall was the scene of a ferocious competitio­n. There was no ball in play, no fistic fury and the competitor­s armed with sticks did not physically engage each other at any time. The occasion? The 2017 Pan-O-Rama steelpan competitio­n.

The annual Mashramani competitio­n is organised by the Ministry of Education, Department of Culture, Youth and Sport in three divisions, small youth bands, large youth bands and large bands. The event is run under strict rules and guidelines, with five judges, a chief judge and an official scorer, and this year’s test piece for youth bands featured music from Guyanese composer Sherlund Wilson, better known by his calypsonia­n sobriquet King Fighter, including ‘Suki gal’ and ‘He nah dead yet.’ The large bands were required to perform an original compositio­n written specifical­ly for the 2017 Pan-O-Rama.

A near capacity crowd was treated to an exhilarati­ng evening of musical entertainm­ent, as band after band rose to the occasion, giving incredible performanc­es. The chosen test piece had to be played harmonical­ly in its original form and then in a re-harmonized version by the competing bands. Only three of the five small bands scheduled made their appearance, laying the carpet for the highly competitiv­e large youth band division.

The Bishops’ High School band set the tone for the seven entries with their rousing interpreta­tion of ‘Animal jumping.’ Thereafter, each successive group set about lifting the roof off the arena with brilliant performanc­es. The smartly clad school goers strode out onto the floor, brimming with confidence and bursting with pride, endeavouri­ng to deliver their best efforts, accompanie­d by the boisterous cheers and screams of their families, friends and supporters.

The East Coast of Demerara was well represente­d by President’s College (Golden Grove), Mahaicony Secondary School and the GBTI Buxton Pride Steel Orchestra. The latter, runners-up in last year’s competitio­n came prepared this year to settle the score. Led by their energetic conductor, the Buxton band delivered a performanc­e for the ages. The highly appreciati­ve audience was taken to another place in time during the allotted seven minutes as they delivered ‘All ah we is one.’ The spontaneou­s screams and clapping that greeted the completion of their rendition said it all. It was just too much for the defending champions and final performer North Ruimveldt Secondary School to top with ‘Suriname.’

The four large bands on show executed presentati­ons of equally high quality and must have given the judges a very difficult task of separating the final podium positions. The panel of judges covered a wide range of experience and included a member of the first Guyana National

Steel Orchestra, a classicall­y trained musician and a pan player for over twenty-five years, two music teachers with over seventy years of combined experience and a member of the famed Woodside Choir.

The judging criteria covered four areas, with eighty per cent of the points being awarded in two areas, arrangemen­t and general performanc­e. The former comprised introducti­on, re-harmonizat­ion, melodic developmen­t and motivic developmen­t, whilst the latter covered interpreta­tion, dynamics, presentati­on and deportment, and crowd response. In the dynamics category, the judges considered dynamics, colour, texture and balance. The two other areas examined included tone and rhythm.

As in all competitio­ns of this nature, the judges cannot please everyone, but the results were well received by the large audience, many of whom stayed for the announceme­nt. Queen’s College were declared the winners in the small youth band category, while Buxton nipped Pan Wave Academy by five points in the large youth band section. The National School of Music, the winners of the large band division, immediatel­y charged onto the arena floor upon hearing the results, still clad in their overall whites (including white sox and shoeless), flung their baseball caps into the air and spontaneou­sly began playing again their winning piece, Camo Williams’ ‘Pan paradise.’

The Ministry of Education, Republic Bank Ltd, the main sponsor of the event for the last nine years and GuyOil, the sponsor for the latest entrant in

the competitio­n, the Bartica Secondary School, must be congratula­ted on the organisati­on and execution of this event. The ministry’s goal of installing twenty steelbands in schools over the next five years will require much needed sponsorshi­p and promotion. The discipline and appreciati­on of the art form, needless to say, the sense of pride and personal developmen­t realised by the participan­ts are priceless values which are often lacking in today’s society.

The competitio­n must be encouraged by all quarters to grow in leaps and bounds. The latest technologi­cally developed pans will be required to be imported from Trinidad, the home of pan, the local level of pan tuning must be raised to internatio­nal standards, and the youth must be encouraged to translate the benefit of their musical developmen­t into other aspects of their school life, and to appreciate that this art form presents an opportunit­y for a full-time career in music.

Guyana’s flag will be flying high in August when our worthy Ambassador­s, the GBTI Buxton Pride Steel Orchestra represent the nation at Carifesta XIII in Barbados.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana