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GenX Carnival ready for Miami mas - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Many carnivals were postponed or cancelled due to covid19 pandemic last year and even into this year. But mass, global vaccinations have seen the entertainment industry and carnivals revving up again.

The first off the blocks is Miami carnival which is scheduled to take place in October.

Four Jamaicans, who took over leadership of one of Miami’s Carnival bands in 2019, after 20 years of Trinidadian leadership, hope to make it a unifying Caribbean force in the post-pandemic carnival space.

GenX is directed by Jamaicans Tagyei Belinfante, 39; Marc Christian, 40; Adrian Jones, 37; and Matthew Waddell, 38.

Gregory Antoni founded GenX Carnival, formerly known as Generation X, in 1999, a media release said.

After the pandemic break, the band is looking to make a “much-anticipated return,” it added.

[caption id="attachment_901400" align="alignnone" width="512"] GenX Carnival masqueraders -[/caption]

Christian said in the release, “Before acquiring this role as co-director, I served as a GenX committee member. When I presented the opportunity to Tagyei and then Matthew for us to take on this venture, they were all in. The rest is now history.”

The band launched its 2021 presentation Immortals: Gods Never Die on June 26.

Waddell said in e-mailed responses to Newsday that the band’s new leadership aims to be a lot more inclusive.

“We want to acknowledge all regions and make sure that everyone feels recognised. The space is growing in multiple regions and even though there may exist an innate bias to Jamaica, as that is home, we want to include all regions and all Caribbean cultures as we feel that is the fabric of south Florida and specifically Miami where our carnival is celebrated.”

Waddell said when the opportunity presented itself, they thought it was a unique one. The former management wanted to move on for personal reasons and GenX found the brand to be appealing and simply needing new energy.

However, Waddell, Christian, Jones and Belinfante also really loved and appreciated carnival and wanted to be involved.

Jamaica is globally known for its reggae and dancehall music and the band will infuse that in its presentations.

[caption id="attachment_901399" align="alignnone" width="640"] Aerial shot of GenX at Miami Carnival 2019. -[/caption]

“Our styles, tendencies, (and) sounds tend to influence on a global scale and I would expect this inclusion of Jamaican tendencies to occur on multiple levels within the carnival stratosphere: from music to culinary arts to design,” he added. GenX’s offering will include Jamaican dishes too. Waddell noted dancehall and reggae artistes have been “fusing sounds” with soca artistes.

The band has also worked with Jamaican designers such as Jessica Campbell, “bringing their visions and renditions of what costumes could look like to life,” he added.

Waddell said Campbell worked with carnival bands in Jamaica and designed the section Kalypso, her interpretation of

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