Culture Matters
Carnival Love
DARA E HEALY
When the music fills you up
Let we jam in this party show the love to somebody
Iron of we life yeah, everybody nice yeah
Come and join the line, heal all that is hurting
- Nailah Blackman, Iron Love
THE CURTAINS lifted gently on the breeze, floating the sounds of the steelband practising into my bedroom. The sounds of pan were comforting, but at the same time exhilarating, creating that familiar pounding in my chest. Carnival was coming.
My love affair with pan is enduring, an important part of my personal Carnival ritual. But my love affair is specific. I would brave Laventille Road, dodging speeding cars, stray dogs and weary residents trudging uphill with their groceries. The slightly treacherous journey did not matter - my reward was near. 'Come dahling. Lock back and come back!' Safely parked, I would head towards where the pans were set up, find a spot and settle down to listen and appreciate. Desperadoes.
Imagine a time when it was inconceivable that anyone could listen to steel pan in concert, or that pan players could travel the world showcasing our national instrument. Today, such reactions are normal, expected. But acceptance did not come without significant struggle. The Mighty Sparrow provided a graphic description when he sang, 'If your sister talk to a steelband man/Your family want to break she hand/Put she out/Lick out every teeth in she mouth.'
Historians point out that playing pan was a form of resistance against the way members of the fraternity were treated. They beat out their frustrations over impoverished circumstances and being relegated to the outside of accepted society. It was a typical vicious cycle. The more pan players were ostracised, the more they rebelled and the less they were accepted.
The 1930s-1960s were particularly challenging, with labour uprisings for better working conditions, as well as the sociopolitical strife that focused on race and class inequality. Indeed, in 1935 calypsonian Tiger sang that anyone with money could 'commit murder and get off free/And live in the governor's company.'
But the reality for pan players would slowly improve. Eventually, 'many middle-class persons (and a few white elites) employed the pannist to provide music at their weddings, baptisms and other similar social engagements.' Soon, politicians also began to incorporate the steel pan into their official functions. The pan began to be associated not just with national pride, but would become an integral aspect of the desire to move our nation away from colonial norms.
Incredibly, in spite of the negative environment towards the pan and its players, the innovation and experimentation within the pan community continued. Ellie Mannette stands out as one of the supreme innovators of the instrument, conceptualising the convex shape and the ability to